Getty Images Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:GETY) Q2 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Getty Images Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:GETY) Q2 2025 Earnings Call Transcript August 11, 2025

Getty Images Holdings, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $-0.08 EPS, expectations were $0.03.

Operator: Good afternoon, and welcome to the Getty Images Holdings, Inc. Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. Today’s call is being recorded. We have allocated 1 hour for prepared remarks and Q&A. At this time, I’d like to turn the conference over to Steven Kanner, VP of Investor Relations and Treasury at Getty Images. Thank you. You may begin.

Steven Kanner: Good afternoon. And welcome to the Getty Images Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. Joining me on today’s call are Craig Peters, Chief Executive Officer; and Jenn Leyden, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, we would like to note that due to the ongoing regulatory review process, we will not be able to comment on the status of the merger with Shutterstock or the Q2 2025 Shutterstock operating results. We appreciate your understanding, and we’ll share updates as soon as we are able. This call will include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are subject to various risks, uncertainties and assumptions, which could cause our actual results to differ materially from these statements.

These risks, uncertainties and assumptions are highlighted in the forward-looking statements section of today’s press release and in our filings with the SEC. Links to these filings and today’s press release can be found on our Investor Relations website at investors.gettyimages.com. During our call today, we will also reference certain non-GAAP financial information, including adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted EBITDA less CapEx and free cash flow. We use non-GAAP measures in some of our financial discussions as we believe they represent our operational performance and underlying results of our business. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP measures as well as the description, limitations and rationale for using each measure can be found in our filings with the SEC.

After our prepared remarks, we’ll open the call for your questions. With that, I will hand the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Craig Peters.

Craig Peters: Thanks, Steven, and thanks to everyone for taking the time to join us today. I’ll begin with a high-level view of the quarter, after which Jenn will dive into the details of our performance. Second quarter revenue for 2025 was $234.9 million, representing reported growth of 2.5% and 1.8% on a currency-neutral basis. Adjusted EBITDA was $68 million for the quarter, down 1.2% reported and 2.2% on a currency-neutral basis. We continue to see growth in our annual subscription business with gains across premium access and Unsplash+ and strong demand for video, news and sport content. We saw an acceleration in corporate growth as well as a return to growth in media despite some continuing build back in production and entertainment.

As expected, the agency business continues to be soft in light of ad industry’s challenges and macro pressures. It was another strong quarter for our sport coverage. Our specialist motorsport team delivered exclusive imagery of the Formula 1 75th anniversary season, including iconic races in Miami, Silverstone and Monaco as well as coverage of the F1 Academy and Formula E seasons. Our golf photographers were on the green at the PGA Championship, while our football photography teams were crisscrossing Europe for the UEFA Champions League and here in the U.S. for the FIFA Club World Cup. In entertainment, our team once again demonstrated why we are the trusted partner for the world’s most prestigious events. As the exclusive photography partner, we delivered stunning imagery and seamless operation at Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival, the Met Gala, BAFTA Television Awards and the Tribeca Film Festival.

This commitment to high quality and service is why the British Film Institute just named Getty Images as its official photography partner. It’s also why our designated Royal photographer, Chris Jackson, was selected to take portraits of the U.K.’s King and Queen to commemorate their 20th wedding anniversary in the Queen’s birthday portrait. On the news front, we expanded our Bloomberg partnership to include Bloomberg video content in our offering. While still behind peak activity in 2023, our production business continues to support producers with our premium archival footage and stills featured in a range of recent scripted and unscripted film and television production, including the Fantastic 4: The First Steps, Captain America, F1: The Movie, the Billy Joel documentary and the Drive to Survive series 7.

These productions highlight the enduring value of our archive and the strength of our relationships across the production industry. Our insights platform, VisualGPS, continues to be a strategic differentiator by providing data-backed guidance to customers across industries, helping them drive engagement by aligning their visual storytelling with evolving consumer expectations. Our latest insights, launched this quarter, help customers navigate evolving consumer sentiment around sustainability messaging in their visual narratives. In Q2, we upgraded our AI suite of services to generate even higher quality outputs with better prompt adherence, still based on the foundational model only trained from licensed creative content that respects the rights of IP holders and artists.

And based on the utilization of the model for pre-shot modifications, representing over 70% of the usage, we launched bundles of these AI capabilities directly into our image subscriptions on iStock so customers can access our pre-shot creative library and our clean suite of AI services to use in concert with those images in one simple plan. In terms of the proposed merger with Shutterstock, within the quarter, Shutterstock shareholders approved the adoption of the merger agreement between Shutterstock and Getty Images. We continue to work with regulators in the U.S. and the U.K. to obtain the necessary approvals and expect the transition to close by the end of 2025. We have no other active regulatory review of the transaction. I’m excited for the close of the transaction and for the second half of the year.

And with that, I’ll turn it over to Jenn to take you through the more detailed financials.

Jennifer Leyden: Q2 marked our fifth consecutive quarter of top line growth with continued expansion of our subscription business and healthy key performance metrics. We executed a solid quarter, navigating through ongoing macroeconomic uncertainty and continued headwinds in our agency business. While agency continues to be a challenge, we saw good performance from both our corporate and our media business, which represent roughly 58% and 29% of total revenue, respectively. Corporate was strong with high single-digit growth, fueled by good performance in technology, business services, sport and fashion as well as benefits from creative content deals that include some level of AI rights. Media was a low single-digit growth with broadcast and production performance still not fully returned to 2023 levels.

A professional photographer capturing a visually intriguing lifestyle shot.

Q2 revenue was $234.9 million, with year-on-year growth of 2.5% or 1.8% on a currency-neutral basis. Included in these results are certain impacts of the timing of revenue recognition, which contributed approximately 70 basis points to Q2 growth. Annual subscription revenue was 53.5% of total revenue, up from 52.9% in Q2 of last year. In total, subscription revenue grew by 3.7% or 3% on a currency-neutral basis, driven primarily by growth in our premium access offering. We added 39,000 active annual subscribers to reach 321,000 in the Q2 LTM period, representing growth of approximately 14% over the comparable 2024 LTM period. Annual subscriber growth continued to be driven by our e-commerce businesses, iStock and Unsplash+. Out of the 321,000 annual subscribers in the period, 52% were brand-new customers and 26% were customers in our growth markets across EMEA, APAC and LatAm. The annual subscription revenue retention rate was 93.4% in the Q2 LTM period, up 400 basis points from 89.4% in the corresponding 2024 period and also up from 92.7% in the Q1 LTM period.

This metric is continuing to normalize as we lap the adverse impacts from the dual Hollywood strikes, see the benefits from the acceleration in our corporate business, as well as the anticipated impacts from the leveling off of the growth rate of smaller e-commerce subscribers, which have lower revenue retention rates. We should continue to see stabilization in this metric relative to 2024 as we navigate through the balance of 2025. Paid downloads were down slightly at 93 million, while our video attachment rate continues to steadily grow, rising to 16.7% from 15.6% in the prior-year period. Creative revenue was $130.8 million, down 5.1% year-on-year and 5.7% on a currency-neutral basis. This decline is primarily driven by continued macro challenges impacting our agency business, which sits entirely within creative and was down 10% in Q2.

Outside of agency, we see steady momentum in creative across premium access, video and our Unsplash+ subscription. Editorial revenue was $88.3 million, growing 5.6% year-on-year and 4.6% on a currency-neutral basis. Strong demand for news and sport was primarily driven by our outstanding coverage, as Craig noted, of major events such as FIFA’s Club World Cup and Formula 1 racing as well as global news events, such as the election of Pope Leo the Fourteenth. Other revenue was $15.7 million, an increase of $8.1 million from Q2 ’24, driven primarily by three new multiyear creative content deals that included some level of AI rights. As with other similar agreements signed over this past year, these deals carry heavier upfront revenue recognition.

Across our major geographies, we posted currency-neutral revenue growth of 7.2% in the Americas with growth across corporate and media, including some of the creative content with AI rights deals in the quarter. While EMEA was down 6% as the prior year benefited from revenue from a large nonrecurring assignment, and APAC was down 1.1%. Revenue less our cost of revenue as a percentage of revenue remained strong at 72.1%, compared with 72.5% in Q2 of 2024. SG&A expense was $105.1 million, up $3.8 million year-on-year, with our expense rate increasing to 44.7% of revenue from 44.2% last year. Excluding stock-based compensation, SG&A increased to $101.3 million in the quarter or 43.1% of revenue, up from $97.2 million or 42.4% of revenue in Q2 of 2024.

This increase in SG&A relates primarily to professional fees tied to the acceleration of our SOX compliance efforts and for the ongoing litigation with Stability AI with the trial portion of the U.K. lawsuit in Q2. Adjusted EBITDA was $68 million for the quarter, down 1.2% or 2.2% on a currency-neutral basis. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 28.9% compared to 30% in Q2 2024. CapEx was $16.1 million, up $0.7 million year-over-year. CapEx as a percentage of revenue was 6.9%, compared to 6.7% and in the prior-year period, still well within our expected range of 5% to 7% of revenue. This year-on-year increase reflects the timing of payments for routine CapEx spend. Adjusted EBITDA less CapEx was $51.9 million, down $1.5 million year-over-year, representing a decrease of 3% or 2% on a currency-neutral basis.

Adjusted EBITDA less CapEx margin was 22.1%, compared to 23.3% in Q2 of 2024. Free cash flow was negative $9.6 million, compared to positive $31.1 million in Q2 2024, primarily due to the impact of cash outflows tied to merger and legal-related expenses and an increase in cash taxes paid. Free cash flow is stated net of cash interest expense of $17.5 million and cash taxes paid of $18.9 million. We finished the quarter with $110.3 million of balance sheet cash, down $11.4 million from the Q2 2024 ending balance, and down $4.3 million from Q1 ’25. The lower cash balance relative to Q2 of 2024 primarily reflects the impacts of voluntary debt paydowns, quarterly amortization payment on our euro term loan and fees related to the refinancing transactions, all of this partially offset by the positive impact from FX.

In May, we completed a voluntary loan-to-bond exchange, replacing $540 million of the 11.25% USD term loan with equivalent 11.25% senior notes maturing in February 2030. As of June 30, we had total debt outstanding of $1.39 billion, which includes $540 million of 11.25% senior notes; $510 million of euro term loan, converted using exchange rates as of June 30, 2025, with an applicable rate of 7.94%; $40 million of USD term loan at 11.25% fixed rate; and $300 million of 9.75% senior notes. We have a $150 million revolver that remains undrawn. Our net leverage was 4.3x at the end of Q2, compared to 4.2x in Q2 2024. That slight uptick in net leverage primarily reflects the impact of the weaker dollar on the value of our euro term loan. We continue to assess market conditions with respect to any potential refinancing or redemption of the $300 million of bonds, which are set to mature in March of 2027.

Considering the foreign exchange rates and applicable interest rates on our debt balance as of June 30 and factoring in the quarterly amortization payment on the euro term loan, our estimated cash interest expense for 2025 is $123.1 million. This reflects approximately a $10 million reduction from the Q1 earnings call estimate due to the timing impact of the loan-to-bond exchange, which shifted a portion of interest payments from monthly or quarterly payments to semiannual payments, effectively moving some payments from 2025 into 2026. In summary, we feel good about financial performance this quarter, and we will continue to emphasize execution, fiscal discipline and momentum building into the back half of this year. Turning to our outlook for the full year 2025, which with respect to year-on-year currency-neutral performance, remains unchanged from the guidance provided in Q1 2025.

Taking into consideration the impact of the weaker dollar and assuming full year 2025 FX rates with the euro at $1.10, and the GBP at $1.30, we anticipate revenue of $931 million to $968 million, down 0.9% to up 3.1% year-on-year. On a currency-neutral basis, this represents a decrease of 1% to an increase of 3%. As we think about cadence, we expect tougher year-on-year comparisons to flatten growth in the second half of 2025. In addition, our guidance reflects a $1 million impact from FX, inclusive of the $2.5 million headwind in the first half, which will be offset by a benefit for the rest of 2025, including an estimated $2 million in the third quarter. We expect adjusted EBITDA of $277 million to $297 million, down 7.6% to 1.2% year-on-year, and down 7.9% to 1.4% currency neutral.

Included in the adjusted EBITDA expectations is a similar cadence for the estimated FX impact, with an approximate $0.5 million tailwind in 2025, inclusive of a $0.9 million headwind from the first half of 2025, offset by a tailwind across the remainder of the year, including an estimated $0.7 million in the third quarter. Please note this guidance reflects the anticipated impacts of the odd year versus even year editorial events calendar comparisons, largely impacting the second half of 2025 as well as the impact from disruptions in production activity due to the Los Angeles fires and some continued lag in a return to pre-Hollywood strike production levels. The Hollywood strikes will also present tougher year- on-year comparisons in the second half of 2025 as year-on-year growth in the second half of 2024 benefited from the comps to a strike-impacted 2023.

On the cost side, our guidance continues to include approximately $8 million in one-off increases in SG&A for SOX acceleration efforts, which were previously disclosed in our Q4 earnings call. These are largely concentrated in the Q2 through Q4 period with approximately $5.5 million expected in the second half of 2025. Please note, all other merger-related costs are excluded from this guidance as they are considered onetime in nature and therefore, excluded from adjusted EBITDA. Finally, any potential broader impacts, which may result from tariffs and other global macroeconomic conditions remain unknown and may not be fully reflected in this guidance. With that, operator, please open the call for questions.

Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions] We’ll take our first question from Mark Zgutowicz with Benchmark.

Mark John Zgutowicz: Jenn, just a couple of top line questions. One, it looks like we’ve been witnessing sort of an economy in past couple of quarters between weakening creative and strengthening data licensing. And I was hoping you could maybe rectify comments that you made in terms of strength in corporate and media relative to the subscription results that you saw in the quarter? And then what’s implied in the second half for creative and data licensing in your ’25 guide? And then I just had one quick follow-up.

Jennifer Leyden: Yes. So I think creative decline of about 5%, fairly consistent with what we saw in Q1. Drivers there are really going to be the same as what we talked about in Q1. So it’s predominantly going to be agency impacting that creative performance for us in these 2 quarters so far year-to-date, our agency sits entirely within that creative number. Editorial, last year, as you know, we had a pretty hefty event calendar year. We have some events that are falling into the first half of this year, but certainly to a lesser degree. So as we mentioned in the prepared remarks, as we get into that second half, you’re going to start to see a more challenging year-on-year comp on the editorial side of the business. That other revenue, you’re right, that continues to be a good performance for us, about $16 million this quarter, I think that’s the highest we have seen for that other revenue bucket, although we’ve come close in prior quarters.

Those are deals with existing customers, for the most part, who sit in that corporate space and those are going to be content licensing deals with some expansion into AI rights. So there’s a little bit of a convergence there between creative, other, corporate all sitting within our ability to get those bigger other deals done. Not expecting anything different than what we’ve said in the past in terms of that other revenue bucket in 2025 being very low single digits in terms of percentage of total revenue. So no change there from prior comments. Creative, agency, we’ll see what happens there. I think if you listen to, and I know you do, Mark, and follow some of those bigger agency performances, it’s a challenge, and we are certainly seeing that there.

But I think we continue to see good momentum outside of agency and creative, and that is, again, on the corporate side of the business and subscriptions, right? We’re seeing those subscriptions continue to grow. A good majority of those do sit in that corporate space.

Mark John Zgutowicz: Okay. And Jenn, maybe just on the flip side of that, you talked about agency weakness, but you also saw some really strong growth on the non-subscription side or a la carte side. So can you perhaps rectify the comment on just overall seeing agency weakness, but yet seeing relatively good a la carte strength?

Jennifer Leyden: I don’t think I said we saw good a la carte performance. As the agency business is practically all a la carte, so as agency goes largely, so does a la carte on the creative side of things. Editorial a la carte, that continues to perform well, but that agency impact is felt pretty materially in that it creative a la carte number. So I don’t think I said a la carte performed well.

Mark John Zgutowicz: Okay. I was just looking at your — backing out your non-subscription revenue, which I assume most of it is a la carte. And overall, that was at a healthy uptick in the June quarter by a good, I don’t know, $15 million or so.

Jennifer Leyden: Yes. Yes. We can work through that, Mark, perhaps in the post-call follow-up, but I think that creative a la carte, that definitely wasn’t in growth.

Operator: We’ll take our next question from Ron Josey with Citi.

Unidentified Analyst: This is Jake on for Ron. First, I wanted to ask about the subscription mix shift. You saw a nice uptick in the subscription mix shift and the retention rate ticking back up to, I think, 93.4%. So first, just really wanted to dig into the key drivers of that uptick. And then second question on the litigation with Stability AI, understood, can’t really get into specifics, but with Getty dropping the copyright infringement claims in the U.K., really just wanted to better understand the strategic differences between the jurisdictions and whether there’s anything you could share about your confidence level in the U.S. case.

Craig Peters: Sure, Jake. And we hope Ron is somewhere nice, on a beach somewhere. Jenn, do you want to take the first and I’ll take the second.

Jennifer Leyden: Yes. So on the subscription side of things, that continues to be us tracking to continue to inch that higher and higher over the 50% mark. So we saw that again this quarter, really seeing that growth come largely from our e-commerce subscriptions. So on the iStock side of things, continuing to see good momentum on the Unsplash+ subscription, which is the newest of our subscription offering, so to speak. And premium access, our largest subscription, just about 1/3 of our revenue. That continues to grow nicely as well. So it’s a bit of a continuation of the story there on the creative side of things, that corporate growth that we’re seeing this quarter that certainly underpins that subscription momentum. And on revenue retention.

So yes, this was a good uptick for us to see, and I think we’ve been hinting out seeing this metric start to come back. So it’s good to see those numbers sit where they are. So at about 93%; prior-year period, same time, about 89%. And we cited some of the drivers there. Certainly, seeing us lapping the impact from those Hollywood strikes, that corporate growth. And as we see that growth in subscriber count on those smaller e-commerce subs start to stabilize, they come with a lower revenue retention rate. So that will help that mix. But I think an interesting thing here you might know, Jake, you’ve been following us for a while, we have seen this metric be 100% plus in our history. So seeing that dip below 90% was quite unusual. But when we look in this number in this quarter, premium access, again, our largest subscription, we actually got that revenue retention for premium access back up over 100%.

Premium access revenue retention hasn’t been over 100% since 2023. So that’s where you can really see some of those production impacts, strike impacts, right, those big enterprise customers seeing that revenue retention rate really start to come back. That’s a very good sign for us.

Craig Peters: Great. Thanks, Jenn. And on the litigation front, Jake, we — it’s one of the — the world is not transparent with respect to the models and what they’re training on. And so when we launched litigation against Stability, we launched it in two markets, the U.S. and the U.K. What we found through discovery in the U.K. as that case progressed — we found that there were clear indications that Stability did train on our material. However, that training, we did not have clear facts that, that training happened in the U.K. So that was a primary item that we dropped in the U.K. suit because obviously, given the law there, we didn’t have the facts in order to support that. But we did ultimately get visibility to where that training did take place.

So we dropped it in the U.K. We continue in the U.S. That claim will come into play within the U.S. And we’re hopeful to get a positive outcome in the U.K. on other aspects of that, but really pursuing the training itself within the U.S. I know that’s a bit — it can be a bit complex. And believe me, as the CEO, and Jenn as the CFO of a company who has to spend in order to pursue these cases in two markets, it’s less than ideal. But that’s the state of our world where there aren’t transparency requirements against these model providers. So we have to kind of go on a hunting expedition in order to get it and spend money in order to do that.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] I’m showing no additional questions at this time. This will now conclude our Second quarter Getty Images Holdings, Inc. 2025 Earnings Call. You may now disconnect.

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