The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Braves’ first-quarter losses and revenues were higher

- By Tim Tucker ttucker@ajc.com

An earlier start to the season and operations at The Battery Atlanta fueled an increase in the Braves’ first-quarter revenue, according to financial results released Wednesday by team owner Liberty Media.

But as usual for the first quarter of a year, the Braves posted large operating losses.

The Braves generated revenue of $28 million in the January-through-March quarter this year, compared with $5 mil- lion in the same period a year ago. Liberty Media said $20 million in revenue came from baseball and $8 million from The Battery, the mixed-use developmen­t adjacent to SunTrust Park.

“Baseball revenue increased in the first quarter primarily driven by ... three home games in the first quarter of 2018 compared to no home games in the first quarter of 2017,” Liberty Media said. “Developmen­t revenue was nominal in the first

quarter of 2017 as the project was still ramping.”

In the big picture, first-quarter financial results generally aren’t significan­t for an MLB team because the vast majority of revenue — and profit — is generated in the second and third quarters each year. Teams typically show large operating losses in the first quarter, as was the case for the Braves again this year.

The Braves had an operating loss before depreciati­on and amortizati­on of $33 million in the quarter and a loss after depreciati­on and amortizati­on of $49 million in the quarter, Liberty said. In the same period last year, those losses were $28 million and $32 million, respective­ly.

Liberty in part attributed the larger losses to “the accelerati­on of player salary expense as a result of released and injured players” and increased depreciati­on and amortizati­on expense associated with The Battery and SunTrust Park. The Braves released pitcher Scott Kazmir in March, writing off his $16 million salary.

“Selling, general and administra­tive expense also increased primarily due to higher facilities, marketing and advertisin­g costs associated with baseball and ballpark operations and the mixed-use facility,” Liberty said.

The company also disclosed the Braves reduced their still-large debt from

$667 million Dec. 31 to $603 million March 31. The debt is associated with constructi­on of the stadium and mixeduse developmen­t.

For the first time, Liberty Media separately reported the Braves’ quarterly revenue from baseball and developmen­t. The company said

the $20 million in baseball revenue includes ballpark operations (such as ticket and concession sales), local and national broadcast rights and shared MLB revenue streams, including licensing. The $8 million in developmen­t revenue “primarily includes rental income,” the company said.

On the company’s quarterly conference call with Wall Street analysts Wednesday, Liberty Media CEO Greg Maffei made note of the Braves’ winning record this season.

“We have had impressive on-field performanc­e with a 20-14 record as of (Tuesday) night’s game,” Maffei told the analysts, “and we remain in first place in the NL East.”

He also told them the Braves lead the National League in a long list of offensive categories, have the three youngest players in MLB and have posted a 5 percent attendance increase from the same point last year.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Liberty Media said $20 million in first-quarter revenue came from baseball, which was helped by having three regular-season home games in March.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Liberty Media said $20 million in first-quarter revenue came from baseball, which was helped by having three regular-season home games in March.

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