Six Flags Entertainment Corporation
Q1 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Six Flags Q1 2021 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Catherine, and I will be your operator for today’s call. During the presentation all lines will be in a listen-only mode. Thank you. I will now turn the call over to Steve Purtell, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations.
  • Steve Purtell:
    Good morning and welcome to our first quarter 2021 call. With me are Mike Spanos, President and CEO of Six Flags; and Sandeep Reddy, our Chief Financial Officer.
  • Mike Spanos:
    Good morning. Thank you for joining our call. We have divided our call into three parts. First, I will provide an overview of our recent operating performance in the strong demand trends we are seeing. Second, Sandeep will go into more detail about our financial results and give an update on the progress of our transformation plan. Finally, I will return to discuss why we are excited about our future over both the short and long-term. I am pleased to be able to report that the 2021 season is off to a strong start, despite the significant challenges due to the pandemic. Last year, we were the first company able to safely reopen a theme park in North America. This year, we had the first theme parks open in California and in many cases we have opened our parks earlier than in 2019. We have either opened or announced firm opening dates for all of our theme parks with the exception of Montreal. This is due to the creativity and adaptability of our Six Flags team who worked hard to establish the highest standards of cleanliness and safety protocols. I’m also pleased to report that our guests are excited to return to Six Flags, and we are seeing strong demand across all of our markets. I’ve spent the last couple months visiting many of our parks, which has allowed me to connect with our great team members, understand reopening challenges, reinforce our priorities and examine the effectiveness of our operations. My time with our outstanding park leaders only reaffirms that we have a highly capable team, a healthy industry and a resilient business. Our full-time team members appreciate that we stood by them throughout the crisis and did not conduct furloughs, and they are excited to welcome back our guests to our parks. They are leading admirably in a complex operating environment. Designed to strong consumer demand for our parks are very clear. Through this past weekend, our year-to-date attendance trends have accelerated at our open parks increasing to 79% of 2019 levels compared to 51% in the fourth quarter of 2020. We are seeing strong guest spending per capita and our Active Pass Base has surpassed prior year first quarter levels place in a solidly on track towards recovery.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Thank you, Mike, and good morning to everyone. I want to start by stressing that results for the first quarter are not comparable to prior year, because we closed all of our parks in mid-March last year prior to the spring break for most of our parks. For that reason I will provide comparisons to 2019.
  • Mike Spanos:
    Thank you, Sandeep. Innovation is in our DNA. In 2021, we will be introducing several record-breaking and first of their kind rides including the Jersey Devil Coaster at Six Flags Great Adventure, New Jersey, the world’s tallest, fastest and longest single rail coaster inspired by New Jersey folklore. Tsunami Surge at Six Flags Great America, Illinois, which will be the world’s tallest water coaster. And we are reintroducing West Coast Racers at Six Flags Magic Mountain in California, the world’s first racing coaster with side-by-side tracks which is the parks 19th coaster.
  • Operator:
    Yes, sir. And your first question comes from the line of David Katz with Jefferies.
  • David Katz:
    Hi, good morning, everyone. And thanks for taking my question all the commentary. Mike and Sandeep, I just wonder if you can comment yet at this point about, how you envision the mix of visitation between membership and passholders versus single day visitors and any insight on what you would consider to be kind of an optimal mix.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    So, David, I think that’s a great question and I think we actually probably touched on this a little bit in the last earnings call as well, what we see is very encouraging is the penetration of single-day tickets, which is a sign of pent-up demand, as we came out of the fallen of last year and into the first quarter of this year, where you can see that there is a big pick up with the weight of Active Pass dropping from 64 to 54 driven by single-day tickets. That’s great. But we’ve always said, and we’ll continue to actually emphasize that single-day tickets were in opportunity that we called out in the fourth quarter 2019 earnings call, but it’s an and not all. So we also have a very robust Active Pass Base. And if you actually went through our comments is now, we’re very encouraged because our Active Pass Base is now to return to growth were up 1% against 2020 and down 9% only against 2019, despite the lack of spring season pass sales. So where we’re looking for balanced growth, we’re looking to grow single-day tickets. We’re looking to grow the Active Pass Base. And I think this. This healthy growth will be what we expect to see the dynamic all as we move to grow overall attendance and overall per caps with balanced approach in all cohorts.
  • David Katz:
    And if I can just follow that up by, I recall the and rather than, or if we think about the growth rates of each of those two buckets, do you expect one – should we be expecting the single-day to grow more than the Pass Base or is that still TBD?
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    And David. Another great question, because if you’ve looked at the trend in the last few quarters, it’s clear that single-day ticket has actually outpaced versus Active Pass Base which has made sense because we were underpenetrated on single-day tickets. As that starts to normalize I think you’d see more balanced growth between all the cohorts. But I think we still obviously had some runway on single-day tickets, which has manifested in the way to single-day tickets that you’re seeing so far. But I expect that as time goes, this is going really toward normalizing.
  • David Katz:
    Appreciate that. And one last one if I may, if I were a regular Six Flags customer and I’m not quite that cohort at this stage of life. But what would I observe in terms of the F&B change this year versus what I might have seen prior to COVID?
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Yes, I think, and that’s a great question. And the key is prior to COVID, we introduced something really exciting last year just around the time COVID broken and we saw the reopening in the summer, which is the mobile food ordering and I think that mobile food ordering option continues to be enhanced and rolled out as we actually go into the heart of the operating season and that is a pretty big change that is now going to be seen for the first time in some of the parks, effectively, that have not been opened like in California and so that’s exciting. I mean, it’s something that we continue to refine and improve as things go along. But that would be one big call out on the F&B side that we’ve talked about previously. The other is part of our transformation initiative. We’ve talked about expanding the assortment of the food offerings and specifically in Texas, we talked about this previously as well. We’ve rolled out new assortments and exciting offerings and the take-up has been excellent on what we’ve actually rolled out. So you see this manifesting in the per caps and then we’ve seen very strong per caps on IPOs and this reflects the attraction – the attractiveness sorry of our offerings and park and it’s also combined with the desire to spend. There is pent-up demand that is disposable income, with the propensity to spend from our guests coming into the parks. So it’s all, it’s all a win-win from that perspective.
  • David Katz:
    Thanks very much. Good luck.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Thanks, David.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Eric Wold with B. Riley Securities.
  • Eric Wold:
    Thank you. Good morning. Two questions if I may. I guess one just a follow-up on the last question is around, kind of the Active Pass Base and season pass, I guess if you look at trends in start of the year, memberships being flat but season passes increasing from Q1 to Q4. How should we think about those trends? Would you expected both season pass and membership it’s going to increase at a similar rate or more of your migrating membership or just kind of what you’ve been expecting given how you’re marketing those two plants?
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    So Eric I’ll take that. I think and we’re actually extremely encouraged that membership is pretty much flat as we go from Q4 to Q1 and I’ll tell you why. We had close to 20% of our members on pause and our closed parks and that was until we actually got reopen then as we’ve been reopening we’ve been taking members off of pause. So now I think we’re down at 5% in terms of paused members and as we open up on our parks really go to almost nil. So it’s really a testament to the fact that as we’ve taken our pause and effectively payments have been restarting for those paused members we haven’t seen an attrition rate on the membership and I think as we actually move into the peak of the operating season, you’ll actually see that headwind go away and new membership sales to basically take off and grow. Whereas in the case of traditional season passes as parks were reopening and the season was beginning to get more traction we saw the natural demand come through and we sold traditional season passes in the first quarter. So it’s encouraging. I think, is this more of the dynamic of how we’re coming out of COVID and that, that you saw in terms of the balance between membership and season pass but we’re pleased with the direction of both numbers.
  • Eric Wold:
    Got it and then last question with California with Governor Newsom given the green light for businesses to return to a 100% occupancy, or 100% capacity on June 15. How do you expect your parks in the state to play into that, are you planning to move to 100% on that date or still more gradually throughout the year.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    I mean, on this. Eric the reality is our parks, have been operating 100% capacity in Texas, Oklahoma and Georgia already and we’ve demonstrated that we can very safely operate in those states. So as far as we’re concerned we’ve already got the playbook, we are demonstrating that we can do it and I think at the moment states like California lift capacity restrictions and are able to let us operate in full capacity, we are very confident we can get there pretty quickly or immediately.
  • Eric Wold:
    Perfect, thank you guys. Appreciate it.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Steve Wieczynski with Stifel.
  • Steven Wieczynski:
    Yes, hey guys, good morning. So Mike or Sandeep wanted to see if you could provide us with some color or feedback that you’ve gotten from guests during recent visits. And I guess what I’m trying to figure out is, Mike, you talked about the lower ride throughput and potential longer wait times for rides and so, is this something that guest at this point are kind of okay with and they understand it, or are they showing up, they don’t like it, basically meaning they potentially would delay visits and until some of these capacity limitations are eventually removed?
  • Mike Spanos:
    Steve. Good morning, how are you.
  • Steven Wieczynski:
    Good.
  • Mike Spanos:
    So my direct interaction with the guests and what I’m reading is very consistent across all geographies. The first is, they’re just really excited and appreciative were open. The second is, they actually quite understand the COVID safety protocols and they’ve articulated that quite well through surveys, as well as and personal interactions. They’re also clear on two other things, which we’re working collaboratively with all the state and local county governments. The first is, they do want to get on more rides per day and they understand that the safety protocols of cleaning the coasters in some states where we’re not every row is a frustration. And then the other issue that has been a frustration, which we mentioned in our prepared remarks is as we’re ramping up staffing, we have seen longer lines, which I’m not happy with the food and beverage locations, but that will abate as the season goes, but we are focused on working with the states and the counties. They all want to work with us to expand the park capacity and also with the up, with the guidance we’ve seen out of the CDC to allow less constraints on ride capacities in other areas of the parks. So we’re very confident, we’re going to continue to see progress as we see more vaccinations throughout the nation.
  • Steven Wieczynski:
    Okay, got you. Thanks for that. Mike. And then second question would be around the in-park spending it obviously continues to be very strong. And we’ve seen that across a lot of other verticals that we’re looking at. But how do you guys think or maybe talk us through how you guys are thinking about the way the in-park spend will we’ll kind of move through the rest of the year. And I guess again what I’m trying to get at here is are people coming in just loaded with stimulus money and other things like that and that should start to abate through the summer or do you think the consumer right now is just so healthy that you would expect kind of current run rate levels to be maintained through the rest of the year.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    So Steve, I think in-park spend is actually, like I said in my previous answer as well, very robust. I think we’ve introduced a lot of innovations and improvements in terms of product offerings, both in terms of ease of transaction like in the mobile food ordering and in terms of the assortment with the example I gave in Texas. So there is definitely an enhancement to the assortment of the ease of transactions for the guest that is an enabler. To the point that you’re making, guest are loaded with disposable income and that’s great. And I think the preventive spend is high and we expect the tendency to continue to play out. I don’t think it dries up anytime very quickly. It’s been a year of pent-up demand that actually is manifesting and I think we would likely to see that. The key over here though is when does it start basically normalizing, you’re going to see that at some point. We definitely see food and beverage was a big opportunity pre-pandemic and we called that out in transformation as one of the unlocks the value that we see and so we do see growth. The magnitude of it, I think, will just – will abate so far as time goes along, but it’s definitely going to be growth and I would say growth versus 2019 because that was where we were pre-pandemic.
  • Steven Wieczynski:
    Understood. Thanks guys. Appreciate it.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Thanks.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Tyler Batory with Janney Montgomery.
  • Tyler Batory:
    Good morning. Thank you. Just one question from me, I just. I wanted to circle back to your comment on labor, if I could, can you expand on that a little bit and talk more about how you might address some potential shortfalls in the labor pool that might be out there and what are you seeing in terms of wages as well.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    So, great question. Tyler, and I think I might touched on the fact that, definitely as we started opening up we’ve been experiencing labor shortages and there are few factors like Mike mentions the school COVID schedules, immigration restricting the number of international temporary worker visas. And then I think the extended unemployment benefits, combined with the stimulus checks are resenting people to stay home more in the short term. And so I think from that perspective, the shortages that we experienced manifested in the food and beverage line that Mike just mentioned and other areas in the Park as well. But, I think we do have a plan, we have already been executing the plan to get fully staffed as we enter the holiday operating season. And we’ve actually probably seen some media around some hiring that we’re doing currently and an immediate push to actually to bring in more employment on the seasonal labor front, we’re doing job fairs, we’re doing advertising. So I think we are confident we’re going to get there by the heart of the operating season and it’s already been good progress since, since March. But I think there is to some extent, wage pressure, demand-supply dynamics and but looking about the wage pressure, it’s just not new one and we called it out on our Q4, 2019 earnings call. And where we do need to surgically adjust wage rates, we’re doing it as necessary, but only when we see a clear financial return like in per cap growth and value in revenue and I think overall what that means is we’re very comfortable that this was all within the construct of our adjusted EBITDA target of $530 million to $560 million and we continue on the path of getting there and this is one piece of it, but we feel we’ll get pass it both from a supply of labor hours perspective as well as from a profitability standpoint, I think we’re pretty, pretty comfortable that we have it covered.
  • Tyler Batory:
    Okay very good, I’ll leave it there. Thank you very much for the color.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Thank you.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of James Hardiman with Wedbush.
  • James Hardiman:
    Hey, good morning.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Good morning.
  • James Hardiman:
    Good Morning really good quarter here. But the number I wanted to hone in on was this attendance level of 79% versus 2019 year-to-date is that a comparable number, is that an apples-to-apples number I appreciate sort of putting it at a place where the calendars are comparable, but I know you talked about opening some parks, a little bit earlier than you did in 2019 is got a similar number of operating days as I compare those two numbers?
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    So, James. I think the headline is, it is very comfortable on the open parks, in terms of the trend rate and it’s about 79% year-to-date after you include Easter and spring break in both years. So, that’s relatively like-for-like in terms of the events. From an operating days perspective, it’s kind of a mixed bag, just because of what we’ve actually been dealing with in this past year. We talked last year about all the innovations that we’ve actually brought in including Holiday in the Park events that we had drive-thru or walk-thru events, which were unique in nature, they were so successful we continue them into January. So, you’ve got more operating days from that. And when I think from a timing standpoint, especially in 2019, you saw Texas parks basically wasn’t open probably in the year, but we were open in 2021. So there’s puts and takes like that in terms of operating days. They are not all created equal, but I think – when you think about the bulk of the attendance that really starts coming in once you approach Easter and the spring break, and that’s when it heavies up and the majority will weight of attendance comes from that time period, which is why we highlighted the 79% year-to-date, because it really smooth out the majority of when the attendance was occurring. And I think that trend rate is a very good indication of where our trend in attendance is going on open parks right now.
  • James Hardiman:
    Okay. And I guess my follow up there would be, I think through the fourth quarter call, you said that attendance was pretty similar to the fourth quarter, which is about 50%, 51% of 2019 levels. Now, I know through February there’s a lot less weight to that, but I guess if I think about 79% year-to-date here in 2021 have the last couple of months, maybe the last month have been significantly better than that.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    You hit on the head. James, you’re exactly right. To get from roughly the same as Q4 to 79% year-to-date, we have to perform significantly better in the last couple of months and that has, what has happened and that’s precisely what we’re talking about. We’ve been seeing a significant acceleration in trend as we’ve actually gone into host earnings call of Q4. And that is why we said we expect to see sort of pent-up demand. Frankly, the level of pent-up demand has exceeded our expectations and the direction is very, very encouraging.
  • James Hardiman:
    Got it. And then maybe last follow-up to my follow-up, I apologize, to that point about pent-up demand. I mean, obviously you’ve still got some parks that need to open up. You’ve got still some caps on attendance in some of your parks. But if I just think about maybe this is an unanswerable question. But do you think there is more demand for your parks in 2021 than there was in 2019?
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    So, James, I think it’s pretty early to make that call. It’s clear that people haven’t really had the access to parks uniformly across the nation that they do, that they are likely to have now. So the pent-up demand is very strong. But we really only know that as we get into the summer in terms of what the magnitude will be the direction is very clear based on what we’re seeing. What I will say is, while the pent-up demand is very strong, I think, Mike alluded to it in the prepared remarks as well. The key is capacity constraints and the certain states like Texas, Oklahoma and Georgia, the capacity constraints have been lifted and we are operating essentially with no capacity constraints and we’re operating very safely and we were able to deliver the experience that we would like to deliver, I guess on that. However, I think in certain states, California, as an example, I think it came up on an earlier question, there are restrictions, and I think that puts limitation on a good guest experience at some point with the capacity restrictions that we have, including things like write throughput. So, I think that is going to be what we need to get pass. But I think, Eric asked the question June 15 once capacity restrictions are lifted. Does it change? Yes, it does. Then you can actually realize more full demand. But I think as we go through the summer, it’s going to probably happen at varying times across different states, different parks. So it isn’t quite clear when it’s all going to happen. And so I’d see, 2019 was a very normal year, 2021 is not a very normal year. Demand may be there, but the parts to actually realizing that demand is not as linear as it would be in a normal situation.
  • James Hardiman:
    Really great color. Thanks Sandeep.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Thank you.
  • Mike Spanos:
    Hey James maybe for you and just is on track in the questions, a couple of different thoughts here. First, I think it’s important that everyone understands we’ve learned a lot about our guests during COVID and that has focused us on unique visitation and making sure we deliver products and promotions for different cohorts. So for example, Safari and many of the special events, we’ve executed. We’re going to continue those going forward and as we said, where we have a safe product and its cash flow positive and it drives that unique visitation and positiveness we’re going to do it. And we’ve also leveraged our revenue management team. The second thing I would say maybe a bit more specific to your question, we got to remember that our parks typically operate an average of 50% of the theoretical max capacity. So that does provide us ample capacity to meet what we see is very consistent in improving demand across all geographies and we’ve proven and we’ve been selling this all the states in the counties, we’ve entertained over eight million guests since the pandemic. And as we’ve proven we can do it safely they are collaboratively working with us as the CDC moves as vaccinations move, they want to help us expand capacity. So, we’ll continue to do that and we’ll continue to safely operate as we capture that demand.
  • James Hardiman:
    Really helpful. Thanks, Mike.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Ian Zaffino with Oppenheimer.
  • Ian Zaffino:
    Okay, great, thank you very much. Just wanted to ask one more question on the labor side, I know you mentioned that you think it’s going to abate over at least the shortage is going to abate over time. Why is that specifically, I guess, because a lot of the headwinds you had mentioned seem like they’re going to persist for some time. So is it to manage them more time to kind of find people in turn over every stone or kind of what’s driving your confidence in your thoughts that it’s going to abate. Thanks.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Ian that was, that’s really good question, and I think the key is part of the driver that we mentioned on why is there a labor shortage. It’s school schedules and frankly high schools close for the summer. A lot of our employees that on from a seasonal labor standpoint tend to be school kids who are looking for work over the summer, and that will be a big unlock in terms of labor supply, and I think that’s why we would expect that come Memorial Day weekend, we should be in pretty good shape. Good. That’s supply basically being unlocked.
  • Ian Zaffino:
    Okay. And then just on the M&A side, I mean where is bid-ask spread now? Or how has COVID sort of changed? Or at least some potential targets went through COVID obviously it that was pretty rough for them has that changed the dynamics of M&A and sort of how are you thinking about it now?
  • Mike Spanos:
    Yes, Ian, it’s Mike. I’ll just give you a consistent answer that I provided on the last earnings call. Our first priority is to invest in our base business. Our park infrastructure from a capital allocation and our transformation strategy is all about profit from the core, that’s our focus.
  • Ian Zaffino:
    Okay, thank you very much guys.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Thanks, Ian.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Brett Andrews with KeyBanc Capital.
  • Brett Andrews:
    Hey, good morning. So a few more questions. A few more questions on the 79% versus 2019. I guess, first, is there any way to break that down, excuse me, by region. I guess I’d be more interested in what some of the southern maybe less restricted parks did. And then second to your earlier answer that March and April trended above that 79%, which was implied, is there any way to quantify what March and April maybe were versus 2019.
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    So, Brett, I think first part of your question really was a variation across geographies, and the answer it is broad based and good and consistently good across all geographies, not specifically region by region. And the second is, what I would say is, it’s going to be a little bit difficult for me to quantify, March and April, we’re not going to get into that level of detail, but you do the math and if we were at close to 50% in the first couple of months and now with another couple of months gone it’s about 79%. It had to be in pretty good in March and April for it to go into the 79% number. So very strong, very strong and a significant acceleration. And I think, as Mike said in the prepared remarks, a great demand came its challenges because some of the labor issues that we had, and I think where we we’re fully cognizant of where things are at right now, and we expect a very robust demand going forward. And that’s why we’re looking at year-to-date trend in saying this is a very good indication of where we’re trending from a demand standpoint at this point.
  • Brett Andrews:
    Got it. Okay. And then second question more of a modeling question. I mean we’ve never had to model a 4th of July shifts for Six Flags before I think. So, is there any way to frame up what kind of impact that could have or will have for you this year maybe just putting some bookends around it?
  • Sandeep Reddy:
    Yes, I think from a trend standpoint just like we’ve given you the color that we’re giving right now you’re going to have that color, when we report Q2 including the 4th of July. So from a modeling standpoint, what I would say is, just like you saw the attendance value shift from Q2 to Q1 for about 293,000 with the calendar shift, you’re going to see those days go out of Q2, and you’re going to see the four days in July come into Q3. So order of magnitude is typically the much bigger event in July 4th because it’s in the summer versus around the Easter. So, you’re going to see a net benefit in terms of value of attendance in Q2 as a result of big shift. And I think the headline, I would say from a trend standpoint is, we will basically normalize and give you the normalized attendance trend as we report Q2.
  • Brett Andrews:
    All right. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    And your last question comes from the line of Alex Morocco with Berenberg.
  • Alex Morocco:
    Hi, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my question. You touched on this a bit. But I’m trying to learn more about the labor constraint impact on customer experience, in which parts of the park outside of food and beverage will be most heavily impacted by continued labor shortages and then how are you working with customers to make sure they understand the impact?
  • Mike Spanos:
    Alex. Good morning. So, I think it’s very consistent with what we said. We’re being, first of all, we’re on the labor specific to availability. We’re being very focused by type of functional work and what the competitive market is and assessing that and so we’ve got a very good plan in place. As Sandeep said, we’ve got a lot going on right now, last week and this week with national hiring week. So that’s the first thing. The second is we’ve leveraged technology to deal with the problem and this was even it’s big – the early part of COVID when you think about it, the way we’ve been able to address this is, we’ve just allowed a lot of technology to provide contactless entry our front gate process is significantly faster than it was before. We have used mobile dining and mobile dining only pickup areas and we’ve communicated that to the guests in the park. We’ve been very proactive in signage and in other ways to let them know that and we’ll continue to do that. So, it’s predominantly technology. There’s other parts if you look at things like the reverse ATMs and games, that’s also been a big enabler a faster experience in parts of the park. We’ve also done work with FLASH Pass accelerate that process to reduce waiting. So there is a lot. We’ve been doing with technology and we’ll continue to do that.
  • Alex Morocco:
    Okay, that’s helpful, Mike. And secondly, you mentioned in the prepared remarks that you’ve spoken with surveyed some guests to get feedback on just their general thoughts right now. Have you have asked them the study about guest entertainment preferences, once we see a lot of other options open to full capacity such as sports stadiums, movie theaters and some other places?
  • Mike Spanos:
    Yes. So, we surveyed guests every week, Alex, and the consistent feedback we are seeing is, our guests are broadly and out of home they want safe, they want fun, they want to thrilling with coasters and it’s real important to them to be outdoor and drive away from that experience, which is why we feel very good the way we’re positioned, the demand where it’s coming from. But those seem to be the very consistent themes that we’re seeing from guests and that’s been very consistent. It’s very broad-based across all the geographies, as well.
  • Alex Morocco:
    Got it, thank you.
  • Operator:
    And there are no further questions at this time.
  • Mike Spanos:
    Thank you for your continued support. The essence of our transformation plan is using technology to create an improved and personalized guest experience. We are solidifying our connection with our guests from the time they purchased their ticket, all the way through to their online visits. Six Flags is truly the preferred regional destination for entertainment, creating fun and thrilling memories for all. Take care. And we hope to see you at our parks this summer.
  • Operator:
    Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. We thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.