Transcript Document
Investor Presentation Mike Campbell, Kurt Hall & Amy Miles Forward-looking Statements #73397 v3 This presentation includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, included herein may constitute forward-looking statements. Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in such forwardlooking statements are reasonable, it can give no assurance that such expectations will prove to be correct. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the Company’s expectations are disclosed in the risk factors contained in the Company’s prospectus dated May 8, 2002. All forward-looking statements are expressly qualified in the entirety by such factors. 1 Overview of Regal Entertainment Group Complementary Growth Businesses Largest Domestic Theatre Circuit #73397 v3 $2.2 Billion LTM Revenues $461M LTM EBITDA 21% Margin 2 250+ Million Attendees Investment Highlights Exciting Growth Opportunities #73397 v3 + Industry Leading Theatre Operations Steady Industry Growth & Solid Fundamentals + = + Strong Free Cash Flow & Dividend 3 Long-Term Earnings and Cash Flow Opportunities #73397 v3 Steady Industry Growth & Solid Industry Fundamentals Positive Industry Rationalization ‘95 - ‘99: Unprecedented Screen Growth ‘00 - ‘02: Major Reduction of 1800+ Screens 2002+: No New Box, Reduced New Developments Screen Count – Year over Year Growth 2x LT Growth Rate 7.1% 7.4% 7.6% 9.0% 6.0% 3.7% 4.2% 4.5% 2.5% 1.8% 3.0% 9.1% First Screen Decline Since 1963 0.0% -3.0% '65 - '92 '91 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98 (2.3%) (2.3%) '99 '00 '01 #73397 v3 Screen Reduction Driving Box Office per Screen Source: NATO 5 Consistent Growth in Demand Steady Box Office Growth Healthy Attendance Trends – – – ($ in billions) $9 3% CAGR over last 10 years Growth in 3 of the last 5 recessions 1.5 billion patrons in 2001, up 5% $8 $7 Consistent Box Office Growth – – $6 10th consecutive record year $8.4 billion in 2001, up 10% $5 $4 Stable Annual Price Increases – $3 92 993 994 995 996 997 998 999 000 001 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 #73397 v3 Box Office Revenue Source: NATO 6 3% CAGR over the last 10 years Beneficiary of Fundamental Patterns & Upcoming Film Calendar Q4 2002 Solid Fundamentals Extended Release Calendar – Staggering releases reduces head-to-head competition, reduces seasonality and broadens patron traffic Increased Breadth of Films – Increasing appeal to a wider demographic Increased Emphasis on Theatrical Success #73397 v3 – Marketing Expenditures by Studios increasing at a 10% CAGR since 1995 7 Beneficiary of Fundamental Patterns & Upcoming Film Calendar 2003 Solid Fundamentals Extended Release Calendar – Staggering releases reduces head-to-head competition, reduces seasonality and broadens patron traffic Increased Breadth of Films – Increasing appeal to a wider demographic Increased Emphasis on Theatrical Success #73397 v3 – Marketing Expenditures by Studios increasing at a 10% CAGR since 1995 8 #73397 v3 Industry Leading Theatre Operations National, Geographically Diverse Footprint 5 Largest Domestic Exhibitor 37 5,711 Screens 6 26 1 7 4 4 9 13 2 2 8 13 15 20 11 51 As of 9/26/02 #73397 v3 9 10 2 25 8 29 530 Theatres 1 4 15 12 6 1 89 1 26 25 7 1 35 23% Market Share Improved Experience Driving Demand Rationalized Theatre Portfolio 61% Screens Built Since 1997 60% Feature Stadium Seating 10.5 Screens / Theatre 75% Theatres with 10+ Screens 9 of Top 10, 23 of Top 25 DMAs Outperforms Industry #73397 v3 Modern Theatre Circuit Minimal Future Cap-X 11 20%+ EBITDA Margins Superior Operations Management – Lower rent and occupancy costs – Effective controls on theatre-level costs – National contracts and scale drive margins Leading EBITDA Margins 24% 22% 23.0% 21.7% 22.9% 20.0% 18% 16% 18.2% 20.0% 19.1% 20% 18.5% 16.0% 18.4% 16.3% 14% 15.4% Industry Average* Standalone Regal Cinemas 12% 15.4% 13.0% 10% #73397 v3 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 * Industry Includes AMC, Carmike, Loews and Cinemark. 12 2001 Proven Ability to Integrate Acquisitions 11 Successful Acquisitions Since 1995 Theatre-Level Cash Flow Margin 35% 29.8% 30% 24.1% 25% 20% 23.3% 21.1% 23.1% 16.0% 15% 10% 5% 0% National Litchfield #73397 v3 Pre-Acquisition 13 Cobb Post-Acquisition Steady Industry Growth On-track to realize $30 - $40 million of synergies – G&A reductions – Concession synergies – Reductions in advertising expense and other theatre operating costs #73397 v3 Expect continued benefits during the first half of 2003 14 Simple Growth Strategy Continue Core Theatre Business Momentum Increase Theatre Margins Capitalize on Consolidation Opportunities Pursue High Margin Ancillary Business Opportunities #73397 v3 Generating significant Free Cash Flow 15 #73397 v3 Regal CineMedia Unique National Digital Theatre Network First of Its Kind Internally Funded Initially Focused on Digital Advertising End of Year DMAs Built Screens Digital Ready Patrons To Serve 2002 11 1,335 70 million 2003 51 4,460 200 million Valuable Long-Term Platform Complementary programming Digital projectors #73397 v3 Transforming the Theatre into a Unique Advertising, Promotional and Communications Platform 17 RCM’s Competitive Advantages Dedicated Focus on Complementary New Business Opportunities – High level management, sales and advertising expertise Direct Control of Theatre Venues and Patron Data – Ability to create of wider variety of products and services – Better control of delivery of advertising and promotional services – Attendance data enables capture of valuable in-depth research Existing Technology Platform Ready – Network operating center in use – Satellite delivery of digital content implemented in initial theatres – Sales, distribution and billing software installed #73397 v3 – On-going linking of theatres to network represents simple connection process 18 Advertising Revenue Opportunity 2001E Advertising Market Sizes Theatres Provide Better Recall – – ($ in billions) $60 $50 $47.8 Increasing Fragmentation Among Traditional Mediums $40 Existing Market Only $100+ million $30 Advertisers Seeking New Platforms to Create Consumer Touchpoints $17.8 $20 High impact Captive audience $10 $2.4 $0.1 $0 #73397 v3 CPMs Television Print Outdoor Cinema $19 $11 $4 $25+ Small Shift in Ad Spending 19 + 50% - 70% EBITDA Margins Large = Impact on EBITDA #1 Market Share in Top DMA’s #73397 v3 DMAs % National Box Regal Market Share New York / LA 17.7% #1 Top 10 40.3% #1 Top 25 62.1% #1 Top 50 77.7% #1 Source: EDI 20 #73397 v3 Financial Overview Revenue and EBITDA Performance EBITDA* Revenue* ($ in billions) ($ in millions) $2.2 $2.3 $2.0 6,100 $2.0 $1.8 $1.8 $500 6,200 $461 $400 6,000 $300 $1.7 $351 $294 $289 5,900 $200 5, 88 6 5, 91 1 $1.5 5,800 5, 71 1 5, 70 9 $1.3 $1.0 5,600 1999 #73397 v3 5,700 .3% 17 20% .5% 17 18% .1% 16 16% $0 14% 2000 EBITDA *Pro Forma for the combination of Regal, Edwards and UA Excludes results of theatres closed in connection with reorganizations 2001 excludes the 53rd week in UA’s fiscal year - $17.9m of revenues and $7.3m of EBITDA. 22 22% $100 1999 2000 2001 LTM Revenue Ending Screen Count 2 % 0.8 24% 2001 LTM Margin 2002 EBITDA Margin Growth #73397 v3 Regal Improving EBITDA Margins in 2002 vs. 2001 23 • Strong box office growth coupled with maximizing operating leverage • Realized integration synergies Conservative Leverage and Excellent Liquidity As of 9/26/2002 ($ in millio ns) Cash $216.2 Revolver Term Loans Senior Subordinated Notes Lease Financing Arrangements Other Debt Total Debt $0.0 225.0 350.0 98.3 11.4 $684.7 Shareholders Equity (Mkt. Value)(1) Total Capitalization 2,517.0 $3,201.7 Net Debt / 9/02 LTM EBITDA (2) #73397 v3 Conservative Capital Structure (1) (2) As of 11/1/02 Net Debt + Leases / EBITDAR = 3.5x 24 1.0x Strong Free Cash Flow ($ in millions) LTM EBITDA $460.9 Less: Pro Forma Interest Expense, net (56.0) Less: Pro Forma Cash Taxes (83.0) Less: LTM Theatres’ Capital Expenditures (55.9) Less: LTM CineMedia Capital Expenditures (13.0) Less: Working Capital (5.0) Less: Pro Forma Mandatory Debt Amortization Cash Flow Before Dividend and Other (1) (15.0) $233.0 (1) #73397 v3 Significant Free Cash Flow Funds Growth Opportunities (1) Excludes 2002 reorganization payments of approximately $81 million 25 Financial Flexibility for Growth Strategy Conservative Capitalization + $200M+ Annual Free Cash Flow Before Dividend Flexibility to Execute Growth Strategy Capitalize on prudent acquisition opportunities Pursue high margin ancillary business Make selective investments in asset base #73397 v3 Provide incremental returns through dividends 26