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Lucky Strike Entertainment Corp Q2 FY2026 Earnings Call

Lucky Strike Entertainment Corp (LUCK)

Earnings Call FY2026 Q2 Call date: 2026-02-04 Concluded

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Operator

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. My name is Kelvin, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Lucky Strike Entertainment Q2 2026 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star, followed by the number 1 on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star 1 again. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Bobby Lavin, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.

Good afternoon. This is Bobby Lavin, Lucky Strikes Chief Financial Officer. Welcome to our conference call to discuss Lucky Strikes' second quarter of 2026 earnings. Today, we issued a press release announcing our financial results for the period ended December 28, 2025. A copy of the press release is available in the Investor Relations section of our website. Joining me on the call today are Thomas Shannon, our Founder and Chief Executive, and Lev Exeter, our President. I'd like to remind you that during today's conference call, we may make certain forward-looking statements about the company's performance. Such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance, and therefore one should not place undue reliance on them. Forward-looking statements are also subject to the inherent risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed. For additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ from those discussed in our forward-looking statements, you should refer to the cautionary statements contained in our press release, as well as the risk factors contained in the company's filings with the SEC. Lucky Strike Entertainment undertakes no obligation to revise or update any events or circumstances that occur after today's call. Also during today's call, the company may discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures as defined by SEC Regulation G. The GAAP financial measure is most directly comparable to each non-GAAP financial measure discussed, and the reconciliation of the differences between each non-GAAP financial measure and the comparable GAAP financial measure can be found on the company's website.

Thomas Shannon Chairman

I will now turn the call over to Tom. Thanks, everyone, for joining today's call. We finished the December quarter with a positive same-store sales comp of plus 0.3% and total revenue growth of plus 2.3%. The result was driven by continued strength in both our retail and league businesses, while we made steady progress turning around our events business, which ended nearly flat for the quarter, its best showing in years. Retail and leagues performed well throughout the quarter and provided a stable foundation for the comp. Events, which had been the primary drag on same-store sales over the past several quarters, inflected meaningfully in January. The changes we've made to the events organization, pricing, and funnel are beginning to show results. January started off with strong double-digit results. We saw one week of headwinds from the biggest snowstorm this country has seen in a while, and then a return back to momentum of strength of retail, leagues, and events. During the quarter, we made deliberate investments in payroll, marketing, and elevated activity levels to drive traffic and return the business to positive same-store sales growth. A number of these investments delivered attractive returns and helped establish positive momentum, particularly in retail, leagues, and the early stages of the event's turnaround. However, not all of the spending generated the ROI we expected, with incremental labor in particular weighing on profitability. As a result, while we remain focused on driving organic growth, we are shifting toward a more balanced approach that places equal emphasis on same-store sales growth and EBITDA expansion. Going forward, investments will be more targeted, more measured, and held to a higher return threshold. In January, we also closed on the acquisition of Raging Waters, the largest water park in California, which will contribute meaningful EBITDA in the June and September quarters. When combined with Wet n Wild Emerald Point in North Carolina and three new family entertainment centers we've acquired, we expect a significant seasonal lift to earnings as we move through the summer months, reflecting the continued diversification of our portfolio. On the brand front, we opened Lucky Strike Alyssa Viejo in Orange County, California in December, and early results have been encouraging. We now operate approximately 100 Lucky Strike locations and remain on track to sunset the Bolero brand by the end of this calendar year. Conversions to Lucky Strike have delivered strong lifts and simplifying the portfolio to two cohesive brands, Lucky Strike, and AMF will drive efficiencies, particularly in marketing spend. At the same time, we plan to roll out a refreshed AMF look later this year that leans into the brand's more than 100-year history. This evolution strengthens our value-oriented offering while clearly differentiating it from Lucky Strike, positioning the portfolio for profitable growth and improved

Operator

returns. With that, let's turn it over to Q&A. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. As we enter Q&A, we ask that you please limit your input to one question. To ask a question, please press the star button followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star one again. One moment, please, for your first question. Your first question comes from the line of Steve Vyshynski of CFO. Please go ahead. Yeah, you guys, good afternoon. So, Bobby, this is probably

Speaker 9

for you. I guess as we kind of think about the results we've seen here, I'm surprised you guys didn't elect to kind of lower the EBITDA guidance for the full year, or at least maybe bring the high end of that range down. Based on the EBITDA generation through the first six months, you guys would need to see a pretty significant uptick in the second half of the year to you know, to kind of get inside of that range at this point. So, you know, I guess my question is what, what makes you guys still confident in getting into that range? And look, I understand your commentary just made about how strong, you know, the start of the year has been.

Yeah. So I see. If you think about from a numbers perspective, the past two years, we've had this $300 million business being really a drag on our results. You know, It's a drag on our financial results, but also events is sort of tip of the spear as a lead gen for the business. That business has turned, as Tom said in commentary, we said in the press release, that business had organic growth in January, February. When you compound that with retail being up mid-single digits, league being up mid-single digits, we're still within the paradigms of our guidance. You know, we, you know, when we talked last quarter, we were very focused on people not getting super excited about the December quarter because we still had this corporate events business, which was front end loaded in December. As expected, corporate events are down. But then you got into the third and fourth week of December and our consumer events and our retail were on fire. And the first three weeks of January, the business was up double digits. So, you know, our confidence in business is very high. We invested to get there. And now we need to pull back some of those investments. But, you know, we're definitely still within confines of our guidance we gave out in August.

Speaker 9

Okay, that makes sense. And then maybe if I could add one more real quick. I want to ask how we should think then about how the flow-through would look for the rest of the year. Obviously, you guys were investing, it seems like, pretty heavily in the corporate events business and turning that around through December. So maybe a better way to ask that is how much of a drag was that on margins in your second quarter? Hopefully that makes sense.

yeah so you know there are two there are three buckets i would say of direct tracks so center payroll on comp basis was up six million year over year right two you know we we talked about we flagged very heavily the marketing investment the marketing investment on a year-over-year basis was up four million and the marketing team investment on a year-over-year basis was up a million, right? So, ultimately, finding the right balance on those numbers and organic growth is what we think we've gotten to in January. You know, we're very happy with the January results, but we're going to, you know, ultimately optimize those numbers to make sure that, you know, we're getting the appropriate flow through. You know, from our expectations, you should see margin growth in a material way in the fourth quarter as all the water parks and the boomers go from being a few million a quarter of drag to significant evita.

Speaker 9

Okay, that's helpful. Really appreciate it.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Voss of J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Matthew Voss Analyst — J.P. Morgan

Great, thanks. So could you elaborate on progress with your initiatives that you've made to date to to rebuild the the events business or specifically drivers you think underlying this this recent inflection in the in the events business relative to the headwinds that you've faced on that side of the house in in the first half of the year yeah we chased price for two

years so if you called us and you wanted a discount we would give it to um now discounts are an important part of any sort of location-based entertainment company. You know, if you call in the summer or Monday afternoon, you know, a discount is warranted. But if you call for a Thursday at Times Square in December, we shouldn't give you a discount because demand is greater than the supply. And so in September, we built out dynamic pricing reporting systems. And when we looked at where we were tracking in September, we were tracking for our events business to be down double digits, and we brought it all the way back. And now it's really less through volume and more through dynamic pricing. And that is something that has dramatically changed over the past few years. You know, the volume, it's hard on the corporate side. You know, that's business that we need to build functions to kind of build, you know, our marketing function to get our name out there more. But, you know, also our marketing, which has really helped the kids' birthday parties and consumer parties. So pricing has been paramount, and also the partnership with marketing is really a sea change for the business.

Matthew Voss Analyst — J.P. Morgan

and maybe to that point bobby could you elaborate on on which investments you made in the second quarter that you saw translate directly to an improved traffic or same center comps um and then just how best to think about uh the continued investments as we think about the the third or the fourth quarter is i think you mentioned balancing margin in the back half of the year and particularly it sounds like the fourth quarter so i'm gonna hand it over the left because you

Lev Ekster Analyst — Other

Hey, Matt. So you saw we made a significant increase to our marketing budget, and that was an investment in building our brand and increasing the brand awareness. We feel like it was, for the most part, a pretty worthy investment. In fact, we saw our media impressions in the quarter increase 200%. Q2 of prior year, we had 340 million impressions. Q2 of this year, we exceeded over a billion impressions. And that also converted. We saw online revenue increase 28% year-over-year, and booking conversions improved 2x. The rebrands of Lucky Strike, of which we did 30 in Q2, are also bearing fruit, and we anticipate being done with all of those rebrands this calendar year, which would put us right around 218 Lucky Strike locations. But when you consider the efficiency of going from three brands to two, it really helps our national awareness. I also want to mention that the marketing investment increased our share of voice. So our search impressions climbed significantly. In fact, it was a 520% increase. But we also saw efficiency with our CPMs decreasing by 38%. So, from a high level, marketing increased, but largely as an investment in brand building, and we saw the benefits of that in January, and I think that's going to continue as we scale the rebrands of Lucky Strikes.

Matthew Voss Analyst — J.P. Morgan

Great. Best of luck.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Jason Pilchen of Kanaker Genuity. Please go ahead.

Speaker 6

Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if we could talk about the food and beverage sales that you saw during the quarter. It was a little below what we were expecting, and I'm just curious sort of how attach rates trended and what are some of the benefits you're starting to see from sort of the increased emphasis on training and some of the tablet implementation that you guys are rolling out. Thanks.

Lev Ekster Analyst — Other

So our retail comp was just shy of 2% at 1.7, but our retail food was at 10.9%. So it continues to outperform. And while alcohol was a bit of a drag with retail alcohol down right around 4.7%, we saw that our retail non-alcoholic comp grew more than the drag. So that increased 26.2% or $2 million. dollars. So in terms of food and beverage, it's pretty dynamic. We're seeing, obviously, as a society, the decrease in alcohol consumption. But we continue to invest in our zero proof program. So we launched, as you remember, Kraft Lemonades earlier in the year. That has a run rate of over five million dollars. And with the success of Kraft Lemonades, later this quarter, we plan to introduce dirty soda programming to our traditional properties and boba drinks to our experiential properties and we anticipate similar results we're also for the first time ever going to introduce a zero proof program to our amf properties our traditional locations they've never had a mocktail program so we're just changing with the times investing more in zero proof and it's working what also is working is our tablets so we introduce server tablets today we sit at 125 locations with server tablets and we're seeing the average check size increase about seven percent with increased gratuities for the associates using the server tablets by march we're going to have server tablets in 160 of our locations and we're going to continue to evaluate as we scale that. But ultimately, as Tom mentioned, we increased service labor in Q2. And some of it worked and we saw retail comp growth. Some of it was inefficient and we have to evaluate that. So we've actually recently trimmed some of our least profitable operating hours as a result of that. And we're looking at in and out times of our associates to make sure that they're very productive. But that investment in labor, increased service labor for our guests, and our increased hospitality training is working because we've now seen for 14 straight months our NPS score comp from prior year. In fact, it hit our highest point of 78.7% in October. So from a hospitality perspective, from a retail growth perspective, the service is working. We just want to optimize it.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Ian Zafino, Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.

Ian Zaffino Analyst — Oppenheimer

Hi, Grace. Thank you very much. You know, I know you guys mentioned some of the investment that you're making and upping the return that you're expecting. You know, can you give us maybe kind of particulars of, you know, what was unexpected? I think you mentioned labor, but anything else? And then how are you actually accounting for some of the line items as you

get to the return that you want to get too thanks i mean the investments are focused on center payroll marketing infrastructure at the water parks boomers and then what i would call the other bucket or the incremental activity bucket the center payroll as as you know as spoke at, we look center by center, we look at the amount of payroll we added and we identify where that payroll delivered a return or didn't deliver a return, right? You know, returns are in this world, you know, ultimately, you know, average labor is going to cost you $25, $30 an hour. And if you're not getting the revenue to justify that, then the, you know, that you shouldn't be investing in labor, right? We're an incremental margin business, you know, the revenue, the incremental revenue has to be greater than the incremental cost. You know, from a marketing perspective, you know, right now we're injecting capital into a system that has generally been starved of marketing. We're watching impressions very strategically. We are testing market by market. And so, you know, the first market we leaned into was in New York, New York city. We increased marketing spend. we rebranded Times Square, Chelsea Piers, Lucky Strikes, and both of those centers comped double digits in the second quarter. At the same time, we have a state like Colorado where we have a hodgepodge of Bolero's Lucky Strikes and AMS, so it's harder to test that marketing spend, and that's why the rebrand is so important to get done this year. As it relates to the water parks in the FECs. These businesses have been starved of management labor. We think that there's massive opportunities on awareness on investing capital into these locations. We saw that with the robust performance at Boomers. Destin water park that we bought a year and a half ago, that water park was up 20% year over year last summer. We continue to lean into that team, But that team does drive, you know, a multimillion-dollar drag in the off-seasons, but then you get that even dot and more back. You know, and then the one that we found had the least returns was just kind of incremental activity. We had more programs. More programs mean that you're spending money faster. You're ultimately dealing with marketing materials, collateral in the center of the uniforms, that you're not being as efficient. those are the things that we're going to plan better pull back on and really focus on service labor and marketing that drives the top line next question comes from the line of eric handler of

Eric Handler Analyst — ROTH Capital

roth capital will you go ahead good afternoon thanks for the question um so we're now about let's call it three and a half months away from memorial day when a lot of the uh regional water parks will be opening um you know as you sort of when customers show up i'm sort of like on a like-for-like basis where are they going to notice the biggest changes in in operations

Thomas Shannon Chairman

uh hi this is tom shannon um we've been investing in all of these assets really from shortly after we acquired them and one of the reasons that big kahoot investing was up 20 is it got a comprehensive facelift it was done very efficiently it was done largely within park labor but there were a lot of there was a lot of rot literally in in the park where you had things like bridges that were dilapidated fences that were not you know appealing or maybe even structurally sound and the team in the off season went through the entire park they rebuilt seven bridges they probably replaced half of the fencing they painted literally everything gel coated the slides replaced uh you know malfunctioning pumps lighting etc and the park looked effectively new and the customers responded um we've done the same on the boomers so uh the the preliminary numbers i have on the boomers uh the legacy boomers that we've owned for more than year they're up in revenue 25 percent over the last two weeks and that's uh six large locations from boca raton irvine livermore modesto etc um they all benefited from meaningful capital investment and and some very efficient capital investment i think you're going to see that in all the parks with the exception of probably raging waters which we literally just closed on we'll do our best to upgrade aspects of that. But when the guest comes, they're going to see something they haven't seen in a long time. And that is a really refreshed, really appealing and upscale water park or family entertainment center. Where we've made the investments, we've seen the return. I think we've seen a better return than we would have reasonably expected or

Operator

even hoped for. Your next question comes from the line of Eric Wald of Texas Capital Securities.

Eric Wald Analyst — Texas Capital Securities

please. Please go ahead. Thank you. Good afternoon. I just have a question, kind of following up on the very first question out of the gate around the guidance range, Bobby. I guess, you know, January done, so five-ish months left in the fiscal year, you know, maybe talk about the biggest variables between kind of the, you know, the $50 million, you know, high and low end range of revenue and $40 million on EBITDA, the biggest variable that would take it in your mind from the high end, the low end, or vice versa? And then, you know, which of those are most in your control, you know, like marketing, maintenance, things like that, versus something that maybe is a little less

out of your control? Yeah, so if you go for six months, the comp is flat, right? The comp is is unbelievably easy for the next six months or five months, I guess, on the event side, right? Additionally, leaning more into summer season pass. Last year, we did 13 million. We think we can beat that significantly this year. And most important is going to be how profitable the boomers emerald point which is you know the biggest water park in north carolina raging waters which is the biggest water park in california raging waves biggest water park in illinois all of these are we've invested in we've done what we did to the legacy boomers and you remember we bought you know the legacy boomers for 27 million and those properties are doing 16 million of EBITDA at this point. We think we can, you know, get to not exactly there, but close on the water parks. And so how profitable the water parks come on with the capital invested is really kind of the main driver in the fourth quarter. In the third quarter, you know, we started January strong, right? And so, you know, we started January strong, you know, if it wasn't for this There's no apocalypse that happened. We would have been up double digits on a comp basis in January. We're still up. We had a great month. We'll see a ton of operating leverage that month. And the thing that Tom put in his quotes in his press release is we're committing to taking down the inefficient step. And so the difference between the top and the bottom is going to be performance in the water parks, maintaining good organic growth, but also us getting costs under control.

Operator

Next question comes from the line of Michael Kopinski of Noble Capital. Please go ahead.

Michael Kupinski Analyst — Noble Capital

Thank you for taking my questions. Obviously, you're anticipating that the water parks are going to contribute meaningfully into the fourth quarter, so I plan to get a little granular here, and sorry for the questions. In terms of a raging wave, you indicated that it came with a lot of land. And I know that you had anticipated that you had planned to build out some event space there and maybe do some expansion. I was wondering if you had already done that. And then part of the growth that we saw last year, I think you said that you introduced alcohol and that you saw a little revenue lift from that. I was wondering if your Raging Waters in California, if that was part of the acquisition plan, if that already had alcohol, you know, they had that there, or is that a part of introduction that you can see a little lift from that as well? And then, I guess, in terms of other investments into the water parks, are there other expansion plans that you have either

Thomas Shannon Chairman

done or contemplated for for those hey this is tom shannon thanks for the question with regard to raging waves we did add um some covered event spaces uh with open sides uh and those were open for the last season. We also got a beer license in the middle of 2024, and we had that last year. That contributed a couple hundred thousand dollars in alcohol sales. We're increasing food and beverage availability throughout the park for this year. We've sort of reconfigured the flow as you walk in and where we've placed certain food and beverage outlets to optimize that so i think you'll see continued lift we purchased 66 acres adjacent to that park we haven't done anything with it and we don't have any plans at present we were going to embark on a pretty meaningful expansion of the park with the addition of an action river a family pool pool and an adult pool with swim up bar that would have increased the impact capacity by somewhere between 1,500 and 2,000 people. Unfortunately, we weren't able to get through the permitting process in time to start construction this year, so that'll be deferred to next winter for a 2027 summer opening. With regard to Raging Waters, it does not have a liquor license we will be applying for a liquor license that will not happen for this summer hopefully we'll have that for the following summer and given the volume of that part you know that that should be a meaningful number um i don't recall if there was anything else you you asked that i haven't

Michael Kupinski Analyst — Noble Capital

covered please let me know outside of alcohol in terms of the prospects for growth there like is there other land that you're getting other expansion plans done in the future well i mean

Thomas Shannon Chairman

we have expansion opportunities within the confines of all of the parks none of them are built out to their capacity so um over time the answer is yes um but i think that you have a lot of very low investment high return opportunities um for example in big kahuna and You can do a lot of rides and make the park sort of more dynamic and exciting, but the gating factor there is really there's not enough deck space and lounging space, which is relatively inexpensive. expensive. And so we focused on those sorts of things. We have ambitious expansions planned, as I mentioned, in Raging Waves, also in Shipwreck Island in Panama City. We're doing a number of upgrades over the next two years at Wet n Wild Emerald Point, which is a very large, high-volume Park. We're adding a meaningful kitty slash family area. There'll be upgrades to the cabanas there which sell out nearly every weekend. We're adding something like 40 or 50 cabanas that will be in place for this coming season. So there's a lot of that sort of stuff. Relatively inexpensive, very high ROI, has a big impact on the guest experience, but we also have things planned like a large tower complex, slide tower complex at Shipwreck Island in Panama City that we hope to have in place for the 27th season, the expansion I mentioned at Raging Waves for the 27th season, and also some things that we'd like to do at Raging Waters. But for the most part, you know, these parks are in pretty good shape. It really comes down to being able to increase revenue through simply having more availability of food and beverage, more cabanas to sell, and, you know, and then optimizing pricing and packages, which I think we've done a pretty good job on for this upcoming season.

Michael Kupinski Analyst — Noble Capital

Thanks for the color. My pleasure.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Gregory Miller of Truist Securities. Please go ahead.

Gregory Miller Analyst — Truist Securities

Thanks. Good afternoon, all. I'm hoping you could provide some help in terms of getting a better understanding of how we should be thinking about, say, the next 50 or so lucky strike conversions relative to the first 100. How similar or different are these stores from a demographics perspective, locations, the types of stores, in part in terms of how we should be thinking about the ramp of these rebranded locations over the course of the

Thomas Shannon Chairman

rest of the year. Thank you. Sure. This is Tom Shannon. There's no difference. It's not like we started at the top in terms of revenue and went down. A lot of what got converted was a function of how quickly they moved through a permitting process as you know we deal with a lot of permitting issues in a lot of municipalities some are very easy and efficient to deal with some are not and so uh you know the the pace at which these things happen is somewhat dictated by an external uh audience which is municipal governments so there is really no difference between the next 50 and the first 100, what is going to happen, and this is really important to note, is that we are going to build out critical mass in most, if not all, markets with the new Lucky Strike brand. So I think Bobby mentioned that we have markets like Denver, where you still have three brands and you may have four or five Lucky Strikes out of 20 centers. it's not enough to do any meaningful marketing because you just can't amortize the spend over enough centers. But when you get to call it 15 Lucky Strikes in the market, you're able to do that. And you're also able to do that on a national basis. So I think the returns will accelerate. And Lucky Strike will become a very, very powerful brand once we have 200 locations, which we expect by the end of calendar 26 and we're able to put real marketing muscle behind it in a way that's never occurred before, you're going to start to see a lot more relevance and unaided awareness of Lucky Strike and then following that AMF. You know, just to sort of flesh out the point, AMF as a brand has probably had no meaningful marketing spend in three or four decades. It doesn't mean anything at all. And the same is largely true of Lucky Strike. When Lucky Strike first launched back in, I believe, 2003, it had a lot of excitement around the brand. It was on entourage, you know, it was really considered a cool brand. And then it really sort of fell by the wayside and no real money was spent on the brand. And so we're going from an environment of little to no investment over a very long period of time to one now where we have or soon we'll have critical mass in two brands that we're going to be investing serious marketing effort behind. And I think the upside in both of those is tremendous.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Jeremy Hamlin of Craig Hallam. Please go ahead.

Speaker 1

Hey, this is Will on for Jeremy. thanks for taking my questions um just first wondering if you could break down the comp cadence by month through the the second quarter and then if you're able to quantify the weather impact you saw from the snowstorms yeah so it was it was the easiest cadence is plus one plus one

minus one a little bit better in october november um and december but that's that's the easiest way should look at it um the hit from the snow in january was about 5 million in revenue so you know it really took down saturday afternoon to saturday night about you know we lost at least two and a half million on sunday and we lost about 500 grand on monday tuesday so is you know we were we were looking at double-digit comp for January until that. You know, we're still pretty happy with the comp, but, you know, we get through. Yeah, and then snow in December cost us about

Speaker 1

$2 million. Okay, that's helpful. And then just curious on the EBITDA drag from the water park business in the quarter. And then I know focus has been on organic growth this year, but is there anything in the acquisition pipeline that we should consider for the back half?

And we've done $95 million of acquisitions this year. We're always looking at things, but right now we're focused on having a monster summer season in our boomers and water parks.

Speaker 1

Got it. Appreciate the call here.

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. And with that, ladies and gentlemen, concludes today's conference call. We thank you for participating. You may now disconnect your lines.