Fubo, Inc. Q2 2026 Earnings Call - Combination, Disney Ad Migration Drive Adjusted EBITDA Momentum
Summary
Fubo reported its first full quarter as a combined company with Hulu + Live TV, delivering record revenue and a meaningful step-up in profitability. North America revenue was $1.566 billion, pro forma trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA surpassed $100 million, and Q2 adjusted EBITDA was $37.7 million, a big improvement versus pro forma prior-year levels. Management emphasized the contractual wholesale fee step-up with Hulu, early ad monetization gains from migration to Disney’s ad server, and product packaging and AI features as the levers to hit at least $300 million in adjusted EBITDA by 2028.
The call centered on execution risk and timing. Subscriber counts were essentially stable year-over-year at 5.7 million versus 5.9 million, and management no longer discloses segment splits. They signaled limited near-term content-cost relief given staggered renewals, but highlighted near-term synergies: ad tech migration (completed by year-end), new ESPN distribution and reseller paths (esp. Fubo Sports in H1 2027), and an AI conversational layer launching this fall to boost discovery and engagement. Cash remains healthy at $244 million, and the company expects positive free cash flow in fiscal 2027 under current plans.
Key Takeaways
- Q2 fiscal 2026 North America revenue was $1.566 billion, compared with $1.125 billion reported in the prior-year period; pro forma prior-year revenue was $1.556 billion (about 1% pro forma growth).
- Q2 adjusted EBITDA was $37.7 million, a sharp improvement versus pro forma adjusted EBITDA of $1.4 million in the prior-year period; trailing 12-month pro forma adjusted EBITDA exceeded $100 million. Management reiterated a long-term target of at least $300 million in adjusted EBITDA by 2028.
- Pro forma guidance for fiscal 2026 remains $80 million to $100 million in adjusted EBITDA; company expects positive free cash flow in fiscal 2027 and fiscal 2028 under the current plan.
- Fubo ended the quarter with $244 million in cash and restricted cash and expects to finish the fiscal year with more than $200 million on the balance sheet. Net debt described as manageable, with no formal leverage target.
- The business combination with Hulu + Live TV is central: a contractual wholesale fee (95% in calendar 2026, scaling to 99% by 2028) provides high visibility into earnings expansion and is cited as the largest component of expected adjusted EBITDA improvement.
- Fubo migrated its ad inventory to Disney’s ad server beginning in February; management reported early improvements in both CPMs and fill rates. Migration expected to be fully completed by year-end, and Fubo ad ARPU should converge with Hulu + Live TV once migration is complete.
- Subscription base ended the quarter at 5.7 million total North America subscribers versus 5.9 million in the prior-year period. Management will no longer split Fubo vs Hulu + Live TV subscribers publicly, positioning the combined base as one company.
- Management said they navigated loss of NBCUniversal with minimal incremental churn during a period that included heavy NBC sports programming, citing access via Hulu + Live TV and expanded local RSN additions as offsets.
- Content cost leverage is real but backloaded, since renewals are staggered (roughly one material renewal per year). Two small renewals since the transaction closed were satisfactory, but broader content savings will show up over a longer tail.
- ESPN integration plans: link-outs on ESPN 'Where to Watch' pages to drive acquisition, and a reseller/marketing integration to add Fubo Sports into ESPN’s e-commerce flow, expected to launch in H1 2027. ESPN ecosystem cited as a major new distribution channel (100M+ monthly users).
- Seasonality remains a factor: Fubo captures 40%–50% of gross ad revenue in the final fiscal quarter, and management expects to spend more marketing dollars in the back half, which helps explain the guidance cadence (first-half strength, planned back-half step-down).
- One-time and near-term items: the quarter included a $6.5 million above-the-line tax-related benefit; prior-year pro forma results were benefited by a roughly $220 million net gain from a litigation settlement.
- World Cup is viewed as a potential source of trials and incremental subscribers—especially for lower-priced Fubo Sports—but historically World Cup had limited ad revenue uplift; this year management expects more sponsorships and better ad opportunities due to favorable time zones.
- AI is an explicit product and productivity lever: management plans to launch a conversational AI assistant in the fall for sports discovery (Roku, Apple TV, mobile) and later extend to news and entertainment; internally they say ~35% of code is now completed with AI tools and ~200 employees use AI coding assistants to boost efficiency.
Full Transcript
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: I would now like to turn the call over to Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations. Thank you. Please go ahead.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.: Thank you for joining us to discuss Fubo’s second quarter fiscal 2026 results. With me today is David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO of Fubo, and John Janedis, CFO of Fubo. Full details of our results and additional management commentary are available in our earnings release and letter to shareholders, which can be found on the investor relations section of our website at ir.fubo.tv. Before we begin, let me quickly review the format of today’s call. David will start with some brief remarks on the quarter and our business, and John will cover the financials and guidance. We will turn the call over to the analysts for Q&A.
I would like to remind everyone that the following discussion may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including but not limited to statements regarding our financial condition, our expected future financial performance, including our financial outlook, guidance, and long-term targets, business strategy and plans, including our products, subscription packages, and tech features, our partnerships and other arrangements, the benefits of the business combination, including expected synergies and integrations and expectations regarding growth and profitability. These forward-looking statements are subject to certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from forward-looking statements are discussed in our SEC filings. Except as otherwise noted, the results and guidance we are presenting today are on a continuing operations basis, excluding the historical results of our former gaming segment, which are accounted for as discontinued operations.
During the call, we may also refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are also available in our Q2 2026 earnings shareholder letter and press release, which are available on our website at ir.fubo.tv. With that, I’ll turn the call over to David.
David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO, Fubo, Inc.: Thank you, Amit. We appreciate everyone joining us for today’s call to discuss our Q2 2026 financial results. We delivered the strongest second quarter in our history on an adjusted EBITDA basis. More importantly, on a trailing 12-month basis, we have now exceeded $100 million in pro forma adjusted EBITDA, an important milestone that reinforces our confidence in delivering against our long-term target of at least $300 million in adjusted EBITDA by 2028. We also achieved record revenue for the quarter, driven by continued expansion of our Fubo and Hulu + Live TV offerings, differentiated content, and product innovation. The migration of our advertising business to the Disney ad server began in February, and we are pleased with the early benefits to date, with both fill rates and CPMs experiencing healthy increases. The business combination fundamentally expands our strategic position.
Fubo is now built to scale as a preeminent video player driven by flexible content packaging. We can aggregate and deliver a range of content packages at different price points, allowing us to serve distinct consumer segments rather than forcing a single package across the entire bundle. That flexibility is a durable advantage and a key driver of both growth and margin over time. We are already executing on this strategy. We now offer our Spanish-speaking customers two clear options: Fubo Latino, a lighter bundle without Univision, and Hulu + Live TV Español, a more comprehensive package launched this quarter, which includes Univision. Fubo is applying the same approach across our broader service portfolio. We offer the Fubo Sports service alongside our core Fubo bundle, as well as a more comprehensive entertainment offering through Hulu Live, which includes NBC and Versant.
This diversified product set is designed to expand choice while reducing churn. Importantly, we believe we have successfully navigated the loss of NBCU on Fubo, even during a period when NBC held a dominant portion of February sports programming. Customers continue to access that content through Hulu + Live TV, and incremental churn at the combined business during the quarter was minimal. This provides a clear example that we are not reliant on any one programming provider as we segment our content strategy across our portfolio. At the same time, we are beginning to unlock synergies following our business combination. Over the last 12 weeks, we have been hard at work to explore, define, and execute against the series of initiatives we’ve identified to power future growth. Let me expand upon a few of these. First, Fubo’s aggregated storefront now offers the full Fubo and Hulu + Live TV content portfolios.
Consumers can select the content plan that’s right for them, whether that’s an English or Spanish package, our Fubo Sports service, the Fubo virtual MVPD, or Hulu + Live TV’s complete cable replacement package. Second, through our integration with ESPN, fans looking to watch a live game will soon be able to seamlessly access Fubo via link outs on ESPN’s Where to Watch pages, creating a new acquisition channel. Third, we previously announced that our Fubo Sports service will be integrated into ESPN’s e-commerce flow through a reseller and marketing arrangement. I’m pleased to update you that launch is expected in the first half of calendar year 2027. As a reminder, the ESPN ecosystem reaches over 100 million users every month. Through our progress on various cross-selling initiatives, we are building a powerful growth flywheel to scale our business. This is just the start.
We believe the next phase of aggregation will be the conversational layer, where discovery becomes the product. As content libraries expand, simplifying how consumers find and engage with programming becomes critical. This fall, we intend to launch our first AI conversational feature within the Fubo app, starting with sports. With Fubo’s AI assistant, customers will be able to use natural conversational voice to search their DVR’d content for game highlights and ask for recommendations. They can ask precise questions such as, "Give me all of the scoring plays by the New England Patriots quarterback in the past 2 games, but I only wanna see passing touchdowns, no rushing." "I’m trying to figure out who to move on to my fantasy team.
Show me all of the Kansas City Chiefs defensive highlights from last month." We believe our AI assistant is a fundamentally more intuitive way to interact with live sports and video than scrolling up and down or being fed algorithmic carousels. We expect this to drive deeper engagement and stronger attention over time. We look forward to adding the AI assistant to Fubo’s Roku, Apple TV, and mobile apps to start. We also plan to extend the AI assistant to news and entertainment talk shows, enabling the Fubo app to instantly retrieve any clip our customers are looking for. In closing, we are more confident than ever in the pay-TV category and in Fubo’s growing position within it.
Based on these and other initiatives, we believe there will be opportunities to drive growth and scale as we focus on our long-term target of at least $300 million in adjusted EBITDA. I will now turn the call over to John Janedis, CFO, to discuss our financial results in greater detail. John?
John Janedis, CFO, Fubo, Inc.: Thank you, David, and good morning, everyone. The second quarter of fiscal 2026 marked our first full quarter as a combined company following the close of our business combination with Hulu + Live TV. As a reminder, to facilitate comparability between periods, we will discuss our results on both an as reported and a pro forma basis, which gives effect to the transaction as if it had been completed at the beginning of the first period presented. Turning to results for the quarter. In North America, our revenue for the second quarter was $1.566 billion compared to $1.125 billion in the prior year period. Pro forma revenue in the prior year period was $1.556 billion, representing 1% growth year-over-year.
In terms of our user base, we ended the quarter with 5.7 million total subscribers in North America compared to 5.9 million in the prior year period. Turning to our profitability metrics, our net loss for the second quarter was $6.2 million compared to a reported net loss of $40.9 million in the prior year period. Pro forma net income in the prior year period was $100 to 20.6 million, positively impacted by a $220 million net gain related to the settlement of litigation. Earnings per share for the quarter reflected a loss of $0.07. We delivered adjusted EBITDA of $37.7 million in the second quarter compared to pro forma adjusted EBITDA of $1.4 million in the prior year period.
From a cash and liquidity perspective, Fubo ended the quarter with $244 million in cash equivalents, and restricted cash on hand, and we continue to expect to finish the year with more than $200 million of cash on our balance sheet. I would also like to provide some additional commentary around the near and long-term financial targets we recently released. For fiscal 2026, we continue to expect pro forma adjusted EBITDA of $80 million-$100 million and at least $300 million in fiscal 2028. We also expect to deliver positive free cash flow in fiscal 2027 and fiscal 2028 under our current operating plan. Our outlook is supported by elements of our business combination in which we have a high degree of conviction.
As a reminder, per our commercial agreement, Fubo received a wholesale fee relative to Hulu + Live TV’s carriage cost, currently at 95% in calendar 2026 and scaling to 99% by 2028. This contractual step-up provides strong visibility into our expected earnings profile and adjusted EBITDA expansion. Furthermore, the company captures advertising revenue from both the Fubo and Hulu + Live TV businesses. Together, these elements reinforce our expectations regarding the long-term earnings power of our combined entity. In summary, Q2 was a healthy quarter for our business, and we believe we are just beginning to realize the full potential of the Fubo and Hulu + Live TV business combination. As David noted earlier, we are excited about our new initiatives and the opportunities ahead. As we move forward, we remain focused on establishing a sustainable foundation for growth.
With that, I’ll turn the call back to the operator for questions. Operator?
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Thank you. As a reminder to ask a question, please press star followed by the number 1 on your telephone keypad. In the interest of time, we ask that you please limit yourself to 1 question. Thank you. Our first question comes from Shagun Mehra from Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Shagun Mehra, Analyst, Evercore ISI: Great. Thanks for taking the question. There’s a lot to talk about, but I wanna actually focus on advertising. With Fubo’s inventory having now moved over to Disney’s ad platform, it seems like there’s a lot of opportunity, but the broader streaming ad market has been choppy for some folks. I’d be curious if you could talk about any of the early indicators you’re seeing on whether the Disney relationship is creating real upside net of the 15% agency fee, perhaps in terms of CPMs, filler rates, or something else. And how much of the medium-term EBITDA plan that you laid out assumes a meaningful ad monetization improvement versus just stabilization? Thank you.
John Janedis, CFO, Fubo, Inc.: Kutgun. This is John. Let me answer this one. I would just say the short answer is yes, and we’re already seeing that. It’s been less than 90 days since we started the migration of the inventory to Disney’s ad server, and we have seen improvement in both CPMs and fill rate. As you know, those are the key components of ad ARPU, and we think that can continue. The CPM improvement has come in faster than expected. I’d say in terms of timing, we expect the migration to be fully completed by the end of the year. Then at that point, the Fubo ad ARPU is expected to converge with Hulu + Live TV’s.
On the second part of the question, look, the largest component of the adjusted EBITDA improvement will come from the contractual increase in the wholesale fee from 95% to 99%. I would say the ad monetization improvement is tracking in line to better as of now, and I’d say also the quarter came in ahead of expectations.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Our next question comes from Matt Kondan from Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Matt Kondan, Analyst, Citizens JMP: Thank you so much for taking my question. I just wanted to ask, you know, just given the combination with Hulu + Live TV meaningfully expanding your subscriber base and with it, you know, their content cost leverage, can you just help frame the timing of when that scale benefit really begins to show up in your, in your content cost structure?
John Janedis, CFO, Fubo, Inc.: Matt, hey, this is John. I’ll start with this, then David may wanna chime in also. I’d say, you know, cost broadly in terms of scale benefit to your question, first, on the content cost, we historically haven’t spoken to the timing of specific deals. What I can tell you is that we’ve had 2 small renewals come up since the close of the business combination. We’re happy with that outcome, or those outcomes. I think what I’ve also said historically is that on the timing, when we’ve talked to medium, short, and longer term, in terms of seeing that benefit on the content cost side, given that we typically have about 1 renewal per year, that will have a bit of a longer tail to show up in the numbers.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Our next question comes from Drew Crum from B. Riley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Drew Crum, Analyst, B. Riley: Okay, thanks. Hey, guys. Good morning. On your fiscal 26 adjusted EBITDA guidance, you’ve generated $79 million during the first half, which suggests a pretty meaningful step down in the second half. Can you reconcile the two and address what’s driving the deceleration? Thanks.
David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO, Fubo, Inc.: Yeah, this is David. Why don’t I start, and then I’ll let John chime in. Just in terms of where we are, as you know, we are a sports first cable replacement service, and the seasonality of our business typically allows us to generate 40% to 50% of our gross ads in the last fiscal quarter. Therefore, you know, we keep our powder dry until then. We do expect to spend more in marketing. Also, given the initiatives that we just laid out for you in my opening comments, we wanna make sure that we have the flexibility to not only focus on profitability, but also growth. This really allows us to take a balanced approach.
John Janedis, CFO, Fubo, Inc.: I would just want to add one quick point in terms of a one-timer. We did have a six and a half million dollar above the line tax-related benefit during the quarter.
David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO, Fubo, Inc.: Yeah. Just one last thing I’ll say is, like, look, we provided guidance a few weeks ago. Our plan is really to focus on, you know, the at least $300 million of EBITDA in 2028. We are planning accordingly and working with, you know, Disney on a number of these initiatives that we, of course, as we get traction, you know, we’ll look to double down on some of these efforts.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Our next question comes from Tyler DiMatteo from BTIG. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.2: Hi, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question here. I was hoping we could unpack some of the organic growth trends in the business, in particular the subscriber trends. I was hoping we can get a little more color about maybe the split between Hulu + Live TV and Fubo. Then also more importantly, how you see that trending through the year and maybe any comments on ARPU as well. Thank you.
David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO, Fubo, Inc.: Yeah, thank you. I’ll start. One, you know, we don’t separate our sub count going forward. This is one company, and we’re focused on creating leverage for the business as a combined entity. In terms of where we are from an organic perspective, I laid out three initiatives that we’re working on at the moment just to kind of reinforce those. The first is utilizing our storefront to drive sales for Hulu + Live TV. I think you know the Fubo team has been very strong in driving growth organically and inorganically over the last few years. We’ll look to really attempt to drive growth on the Hulu side.
Due to the array of products that we offer, it makes sense for us to be able to push people towards a bundle that includes a comprehensive portfolio of networks. I think part of the opportunity here is we’re the only company today that offers such an array of offers. Everything from as low as $9.99 on the Fubo Latino package. Then there’s the Hulu Español package, which starts at the $30 range, which is well below some of our competitors and really gives us an opportunity to drive growth across these packages. As you know, lower pricing typically yields, you know, greater subscriber growth and top of the funnel conversion. We’re focused on that.
From a product and technology perspective, you know, we’ve built a pretty strong mousetrap, I would say. Today, we’re really focused on continuing to enhance our product capabilities to drive engagement and to take advantage of what John was talking about earlier around the advertising. The more engagement that we can drive on the platform, the more Disney will be able to drive ad sales on behalf of Fubo Inc.
John Janedis, CFO, Fubo, Inc.: I would just add on seasonality, given your question in terms of organic. Look, the Fubo service tends to have a bit more seasonality than Hulu Live. When we look at the sequential change in subscribers from fiscal 1Q to 2Q over the past 2 years, the trends were nearly identical for both periods and for both services.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Our next question comes from Brent Thill from Raymond James. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Brent Thill, Analyst, Raymond James: Hey, good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. you know, it’s good to see some of the RSN deals ahead of MLB season. I just wanna zoom out and get your broader view as that space evolves and some of those businesses face some headwinds. How do you maintain your advantage in local sports as that ecosystem changes? With Hulu Live now, any plans to push Hulu Live more into the RSN space? Thanks.
David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO, Fubo, Inc.: Yeah. You know, obviously, we are working in a ever-evolving landscape. I think we’ve done a very good job navigating the different changes that the industry is dealing with. As you said, you know, we’ve done a great job adding, I think it was 14 local baseball teams in a very short period of time, as well as the Dodgers, the Braves, and the Mets before opening day, if I’m not mistaken. That allowed us to really offset losses from, you know, the subs that rolled off due to the NBCU drop. We feel pretty good about where we are. Of course, we, you know, enjoy our position as a leader in local sports.
You know, we’ll be focused on football season, you know, the World Cup and then football season after that at this juncture. That’s where our focus is, and we’ll look to evaluate the situation as things change. You know, as you know, we’ve constantly been proactive about some of these decisions that we’ve made, and, you know, they’ve obviously worked out very well for us.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Our next question comes from David Joyce from Seaport Research Partners. Please go ahead.
David Joyce, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Thanks, David.
Thank you. could you just provide a little bit more color on what you said about the Olympics earlier and Super Bowl and NBCUniversal? What’s your retention experience been like versus, you know, in prior years? Secondly, it seems like you’re mostly integrated with Disney Ad Sales. Is there any new technological work remaining on that front? Thanks.
David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO, Fubo, Inc.: Why don’t I start with the first part of the question and let John Janedis touch on the technological side of the ads. Look, from a retention perspective, I think we’ve done very well. As I said, we’ve navigated the issues with the NBC loss in a particularly dominant month for NBCUniversal, which included the Super Bowl, the Olympics, and let’s not forget the All-Star Game. You know, I think from January through March, we’ve experienced better retention across all plans, which is obviously very important. And we’ve seen growth on that front, which really translates into the, I would say, relatively flat sub base on a year-over-year basis, which I think is very impressive.
In April, what we’ve already experienced is retention levels that are on par with 2024. Again, that’s offset by, you know, local baseball. The only year I think where we may have experienced better retention was during the pandemic in 2021. Reactivations were also very strong, which really highlights the fact that people really enjoy the Fubo product, you know, during the baseball season. Again, we’re very focused on continuing to drive growth across all of our plans and to ensure that we don’t rely on any one provider of programming, you know, for our service.
John Janedis, CFO, Fubo, Inc.: Hey, David, just on the tech front, like I would just say that there was, as you’d expect, a fair amount of tech work that was done, and that’s also largely complete.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Our next question comes from Alicia Reese from Wedbush. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Alicia Reese, Analyst, Wedbush: All right, thank you. Moving back to one-time events or occasional events, I’d like to ask on the World Cup. I have a couple questions, so or a two-parter on that. If you could talk first about what level of subscription uplift is embedded in the guidance from the World Cup. Also, if you could talk about any, you know, like how you’re participating outside of subscriptions in terms of perhaps shoulder programming around the World Cup that you can advertise against, whether it’s on Fubo or Hulu.
John Janedis, CFO, Fubo, Inc.: Hey, Alicia, this is John. Look, for World Cup, we do think there may be a good incremental opportunity for us, particularly on Fubo Sports, given the lower price point. I would say on previous World Cups, really haven’t had a major impact on ad revenue. I’d say this time around, we do have several sponsorships that we haven’t had in the past because we’re now selling hubs. Combined with that, given with the friendlier time zone, there could be more of an advertising opportunity this year. On subscribers, look, I’d say that we haven’t shared a subscriber outlook specific in terms of our guidance, but I would say that our marketing team expects an uplift in trials, there could also be upside based on conversion.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Our next question comes from Patrick Sholl from Barrington Research. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.1: Hi, thanks for taking the question. You know, with your free cash flow expectations for 2027 or sooner, could you know, maybe outline some of your capital allocation priorities, whether in terms of growth investment, leverage targets or other areas of investment? Thank you.
John Janedis, CFO, Fubo, Inc.: Yep. Hey, Pat, it’s John. Look, we’re investing in several areas. David alluded to them in the letter. I would just add again, we’re investing in product and tech. I think we’re seeing some of the fruits of that in terms of what we’re seeing in retention and churn, content in terms of the RSNs, marketing, all in an effort to drive customer delight and customer growth. On the free cash flow front, look, I would say we are tracking in line to slightly better relative to our expectations. Look, on leverage, we don’t have a leverage target. Look, more or less what we’ve said is that, in terms of cash, we expect to have north of $200 million of cash on the balance sheet at the end of the fiscal year.
You know, based on our debt outstanding, we have a very manageable net debt level, if you will.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: Our last question today comes from Laura Martin from Needham. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Laura Martin, Analyst, Needham: Okay. On AI, can you guys talk about how AI is affecting costs and also, whether it’s accelerating revenue? On international, can you tell us sort of, what’s going on in the international subs and how those subs fit into your strategy now that you’re part of Hulu with us?
David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO, Fubo, Inc.: Thank you. Hey, Laura, this is David. I’ll take both of those, I think. Let me start with the international question. I think, you know, post our business combination with Hulu + Live TV, we’re very focused on driving domestic growth, given the size of our, you know, our subscriber base here. We’ll probably put that on the back burner given all the priorities we have, particularly with some of the initiatives that we are implementing in the relatively short term. As it relates to AI, I think you and I are sitting together on May 12th at your conference. I’m looking forward to it. You know, this is a major topic. I think this is one of the most underrated, you know, topics within streaming video.
On the back end, I would say from a business perspective, about 35% of all of our code is now completed with AI. About 200 of our employees now use either ChatGPT or Claude Code to really drive more effectiveness and efficiency. Some of our top engineers actually don’t code anymore. There’s still a learning curve here. We’re still going through that. I do think that there’s opportunities for us to enhance across all of the various functions in the company. From an external-facing perspective, as I mentioned, on the technology front, we’re gonna start with our AI assistant. I actually think times are changing. Everyone has been so focused on the billing relationship.
I think, going forward, it’s really the conversational layer, that’s gonna really drive, you know, value for consumers and for companies. Our job really is to try and to compress the entire journey from discovery, you know, to purchase. That means that there will be some level of, you know, graphic UI, deconstruction, where I think we’re gonna really start to experiment, as we’ve done historically with 4K and Multiview and other capabilities that we’ve brought to the forefront, which I think the industry has benefited from. We’re looking forward to implementing some of these features, you know, in the short term before the fall to start testing, and, looking forward to talking about these in the future.
Ameet Padte, SVP, FP&A, Corporate Development & Investor Relations, Fubo, Inc.0: We have no further questions. This will conclude today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.