HAS February 10, 2026

Hasbro Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Wizards-Fueled Surge Drives Record $1.1B Adjusted Operating Profit and 1B+ Annual Reach

Summary

Hasbro closed 2025 with a clear breakout year, powered by Wizards of the Coast and a slate of new partnerships. Revenue grew 14% for the full year and 31% in Q4, adjusted operating profit topped a record $1.1 billion with a 24.2% margin, and management says Hasbro now reaches more than 1 billion people annually. Magic and Wizards were the engine: Q4 Wizards revenue jumped 86% to $630 million, full-year Wizards revenue hit $2.2 billion with a 46% operating margin, and organized play and distribution continue to expand.

The company is steering that momentum into 2026 while flagging near-term drags. Guidance calls for consolidated revenue growth of 3% to 5% (constant currency) and operating margins of 24% to 25%, but rising royalty expense, tariff costs, and pre-launch investments for 2027 video games will pressure margins early in the year. Hasbro is also deploying AI enterprise-wide, restarting buybacks with a $1 billion authorization, and keeping a heavy emphasis on partnerships, new entertainment tie-ins, and two self-published AAA games due in 2027.

Key Takeaways

  • Hasbro reports record adjusted operating profit for FY2025 of over $1.1 billion, with adjusted operating margin at 24.2% versus prior year.
  • Q4 net revenue was $1.5 billion, up 31% year-over-year; Q4 adjusted operating profit was $315 million, up 180%, delivering a 21.8% operating margin and $1.51 adjusted EPS for the quarter.
  • Wizards of the Coast was the primary growth engine: Q4 Wizards revenue rose 86% to $630 million, driven by Magic which was up 141% in the quarter.
  • Full-year Wizards revenue reached $2.2 billion with operating profit just over $1 billion and an operating margin of 46% for the segment.
  • Magic health metrics show momentum: more than 1 million unique players in organized play (up 22% YoY), over 10,000 active Wizards Play Network stores (up 20% YoY), record Secret Lair quarter and record backlist sales, and Lorwyn became the fastest-selling set ever.
  • Hasbro estimates annual brand reach now exceeds 1 billion people after a multi-market survey and third-party data analysis.
  • Monopoly Go! remains a steady digital revenue stream, planned at roughly $12M to $14M per month run-rate heading into 2026.
  • Full-year consolidated revenue grew 14% to $4.7 billion and adjusted EPS for FY2025 was $5.54.
  • Consumer Products: Q4 revenue $800 million, up 7%; full-year CP revenue declined 4% to $2.4 billion, delivering adjusted operating profit of $113 million; CP guidance for 2026 is low single-digit revenue growth with operating margins of 6% to 8%.
  • Company delivered nearly $800 million in gross cost savings through 2025, including over $175 million in transformation savings during the year, and remains on track toward a $1 billion gross savings commitment.
  • 2026 outlook: consolidated revenue growth of 3% to 5% (constant currency), operating margins 24% to 25%, adjusted EBITDA $1.4 billion to $1.45 billion; Wizards expected mid-single-digit revenue growth and low-40% operating margins in 2026.
  • Tariff and royalty headwinds: Hasbro absorbed nearly $70 million of tariff impact during the year, management models roughly $60 million of tariff costs for 2026, and royalty expense is expected to increase, pressuring margins particularly in H1 2026.
  • Phasing note: management expects stronger revenue growth in H1 2026 driven by entertainment-tied releases, but H1 margin pressure from higher royalties and tariff timing; margin expansion anticipated in H2 2026 as productivity and mix improve.
  • Balance sheet and capital allocation: operating cash flow $893 million for 2025, year-end cash $777 million, gross leverage at 2.3x, $393 million returned to shareholders via dividends, and a new $1 billion share repurchase authorization announced.
  • Video games and digital strategy: two self-published titles, Exodus and Warlock, remain on track for 2027 launches; trailers have amassed over 100 million views across channels; incremental game-related costs will hit P&L ahead of launches and modestly pressure Wizards margins in 2026.
  • AI deployment: Hasbro is integrating AI across planning, supply chain, forecasting and creative workflows with partners including Google Gemini, OpenAI, and 11 Labs, estimating over 1 million hours of lower-value work freed up in the next year.
  • Inventory and supply: owned inventory at a record low of 75 days at year-end; retail inventory reduced versus prior comments and expected to be a neutral factor for 2026.
  • Risk and below-the-line items: interest expense expected to rise from refinancing activity and lower non-operating income (including FX and absence of prior Swiss tax asset benefit) together represent about a $40 million headwind to EPS in 2026.

Full Transcript

Conference Operator: At this time, I’d like to turn the call over to Fred Wightman, Vice President, Hasbro Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Fred Wightman, Vice President, Investor Relations, Hasbro: Thank you and good morning, everyone. Joining me today are Chris Cocks, Hasbro’s Chief Executive Officer, and Gina Goetter, Hasbro’s Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer. We will begin today’s call with Chris and Gina providing commentary on the company’s performance before taking your questions. Our earnings release and the presentation slides for today’s call are posted on our investor website. The press release and presentation include information regarding non-GAAP adjustments and non-GAAP financial measures. Our call today will discuss certain adjusted measures which exclude these non-GAAP adjustments. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures is included in the press release and presentation. Please note that whenever we discuss earnings per share or EPS, we’re referring to earnings per diluted share.

Before we begin, I would like to remind you that during this call and the question-and-answer session that follows, members of Hasbro management may make forward-looking statements concerning management’s expectations, goals, objectives, and similar matters. There are many factors that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from the anticipated results or other expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements. These factors include those set forth in our annual report on Form 10-K, our most recent 10-Q, in today’s press release, and in our other public disclosures. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements made today to reflect events or circumstances occurring after the date of this call. I’d like to turn the call over to Chris Cocks. Chris?

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Thanks, Fred, and good morning. Last year we introduced Playing to Win, our strategic roadmap to guide Hasbro from turnaround into a new era of growth and profitability. At its core are two pillars: play and partnership. Those pillars define Hasbro. Our brands have been delighting fans since 1860, when Milton Bradley introduced his first board game. Partnership has been equally foundational. We have worked with premier partners for more than 70 years, beginning with The Walt Disney Company in 1954. Today we work with over 1,000 partners across more than 5,000 collaborations. Play and partnership anchor everything we do. They power our mission to bring joy and community to fans of all ages through the magic of play. And our KPI for that mission is simple: delight. So how many kids, families, and fans did we delight over the past year?

When we announced Playing to Win, we used objective measures like YouTube views, Circana point of sale, box office receipts, and Sensor Tower data to estimate our annual reach. Our initial estimate was 585 million people. It turns out that was conservative. Since then, we have continued to refine our understanding of brand reach. In late 2025, we conducted a large-scale survey across eight major markets reaching tens of thousands of consumers and combined those results with third-party data to better understand the reach of our brands. The result was clear: Hasbro now reaches more than 1 billion people every year. From Transformers movies to families visiting Peppa Pig theme parks to Magic, Play-Doh hobby shops around the world, Hasbro positively impacted nearly one in eight consumers globally. I’m incredibly proud of that.

It puts into perspective why we do what we do and why we are pushing so hard to position this company for its next century. Our brands and partnerships create joy for an enormous audience through the simple, powerful magic of play. That delight is not abstract. It is showing up directly in our results. Inspiring a lifetime of play is what animates our teams, and in 2025 they translated that passion into outstanding performance. In the fourth quarter, Hasbro grew revenues by more than 30%. Adjusted operating profit grew nearly 180%. Our consumer products business returned to growth, up over 7%, with Monopoly, Peppa Pig, and Marvel all growing. Wizards of the Coast capped off a remarkable year with 86% sales growth in the quarter, driven by the combined strength of magic and digital. For the full year, Hasbro grew revenue 14%.

Adjusted operating profit margin reached a record level above 24%. Adjusted operating profit exceeded $1.1 billion, also a record. That momentum is being reinforced by partnerships across the company. In toys, we added K-Pop: Demon Hunters, the global phenomenon and Netflix’s most popular film, as a co-master toy licensee. That partnership is already underway with a Monopoly deal crossover and many more exciting new role-play, interactive plush, and games coming over the next few months. This morning we also announced the primary toy license for The World of Harry Potter and the upcoming HBO original Harry Potter series with Warner Bros. Discovery, joining new, recently announced partnerships for Voltron with Amazon MGM Studios and Street Fighter with Legendary Pictures. These collaborations will begin in the back half of 2026 and build into 2027.

These are iconic franchises with global reach, and we are honored to partner with such world-class IP owners. Shifting to Wizards of the Coast, Magic delivered a record fourth quarter and grew sales nearly 60% for the full year. We have a powerful lineup in 2026. It includes original IP like Lorwyn and Strixhaven, alongside a blockbuster slate of Universes Beyond collaborations including Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Marvel Super Heroes, The Hobbit, and Star Trek. Avatar: The Last Airbender, which launched in late November, is now the third-highest-selling set in Magic’s history, trailing only The Lord of the Rings and Final Fantasy. At the same time, Secret Lair delivered its largest quarter ever, and backlist sales once again set a record. This balance of tentpole releases, premium offerings, and evergreen play reflects how the Magic system is designed to perform. That momentum has carried into the new year.

Lorwyn has already become the fastest-selling Magic IP premiere set ever, surpassing Tarkir. Player growth continues to underpin these results. Through the end of 2025, more than 1 million unique players participated in organized play, representing a 22% increase year-over-year. That growth is supported by a global play network. We now have more than 10,000 active Wizards Play Network stores worldwide, up over 20% year-over-year, with expanded reach across traditional retail partners. Taken together, this reinforces our confidence in Magic’s long-term growth. We are building a system of play with multiple entry points, product types, and engagement paths, and that system is positioned to continue driving growth into 2026 and beyond.

In the fourth quarter, we also shared more about our self-published video game strategy, including a new gameplay trailer for our science fiction RPG Exodus and the first reveal of our D&D action-adventure game Warlock. Both titles have been in development since 2019 and are led by some of the most experienced creative and development talent in the industry. The response has validated our confidence. Since debuting at the Game Awards, trailers for these titles have been viewed more than 100 million times across social, gaming, and owned channels. We expect both games to launch in 2027, beginning with Exodus in the first part of the year. We will share much more later this year, including extended gameplay walkthroughs that allow fans to fully step into the worlds Archetype Entertainment and Invoke have built.

All of this reflects meaningful change: new partnerships, new distribution, new digital capabilities, and it represents only part of what we have in motion. In 2026, we expect our largest year ever with our longest-standing partner, The Walt Disney Company. We are launching products tied to four major films: Disney and Pixar’s Toy Story 5, Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu, Spider-Man: Brand New Day, and Marvel Studios’ Avengers: Doomsday, alongside an all-new magic collaboration with Marvel Super Heroes. We also have a strong lineup of collectibles and exclusives, including standout pulse drops later this year. We’re introducing creative new ways to experience Play-Doh that age up the brand later this year.

Peppa Pig’s baby sister, Evie, will celebrate a year of firsts as she approaches her first birthday, and we recently announced that Peppa’s younger brother, George, is moderately deaf as we continue to champion stories that reflect real children and families around the world. Transformers will begin celebrating the 40th anniversary of the 1986 animated film with a new product line and surprises throughout the year. D&D has major category expansions coming later this year, alongside continued growth on D&D Beyond. We also announced a partnership with HBO and Craig Mazin on a Baldur’s Gate series. Coming off the success of The Last of Us, Craig demonstrated what is possible when games serve as premium source material. That success reinforces our strategy to unlock long-term value by bringing our worlds to life with top-tier creative partners across more than 60 active entertainment projects.

Before I close, I want to address AI and how we’re using it at Hasbro. We’re taking a human-centric, creator-led approach. AI is a tool that helps our teams move faster and focus on higher-value work, but people make the decisions, and people own the creative outcomes. Teams also have choice in how they use it, including not to use it at all when it doesn’t fit the work or the brand. We’re beyond experimentation. We’re deploying AI across financial planning, forecasting, order management, supply chain operations training, and everyday productivity under enterprise controls and clear guidelines around responsible use and IP protection. Anyone who knows me knows I’m an enthusiastic AI user and that mindset extends across the enterprise. We’re partnering with best-in-class platforms, including Google Gemini, OpenAI, and 11 Labs, to embed AI into workflows where it adds real value. The impact is tangible.

Over the next year, we anticipate these workflows will free up more than 1 million hours of lower-value work, and we’re reinvesting that capacity into innovation, creativity, and serving fans. Our portfolio of IP and the creators and talent behind it are the foundation of this strategy. Great IP plus great storytelling is durable as technology evolves, and it positions us to benefit from disruption rather than being displaced by it. In toys, AI-assisted design paired with 3D printing has fundamentally improved our process. We’ve reduced time from concept to physical prototype by roughly 80%, enabling faster iteration and more experimentation, with human judgment and human craft determining what ultimately gets selected and turned into a final product. We believe the winners in AI will be companies that combine deep IP, creative talent, and disciplined deployment. That’s exactly where Hasbro sits.

As we enter 2026, we view Playing to Win and, more importantly, the execution behind it by our Hasbro, Wizards of the Coast, and digital studio teams as a clear success. Despite market volatility and a shifting consumer environment, we returned this company to growth in a meaningful way. We delighted more than one billion kids, families, and fans, secured partnerships that further underwrite future growth, advanced our evolution into a digital-first play and IP company, and delivered record profits for our shareholders. In 2026, we expect that momentum to continue. Hasbro is firmly back on a growth trajectory powered by play, partnership, new digital capabilities, and, most importantly, our extraordinary brands. With that, I will turn it over to Gina to walk through the financial details and our outlook for 2026. Gina.

Fred Wightman, Vice President, Investor Relations, Hasbro: Thanks, Chris, and good morning, everyone. We closed 2025 with good momentum in the fourth quarter and clear evidence that our Playing to Win strategy is working. While the year included meaningful transformation actions and macro volatility, performance reflects the advantage of our diverse portfolio, the durability of our gaming-led growth model, and disciplined execution. We delivered double-digit revenue growth, expanded adjusted operating margins, generated substantial cash flow, and exited the year with increased financial flexibility. Looking at the fourth quarter, net revenue was $1.5 billion, up 31% year over year, with growth coming from both of our main segments. Adjusted operating profit was $315 million, up 180% versus prior year, resulting in a 21.8% operating margin. Adjusted earnings per diluted share were $1.51, capping a year of accelerating momentum.

For the full year, net revenue grew 14% to $4.7 billion, driven by exceptional performance in Wizards and continued progress across the rest of the portfolio. Adjusted operating profit increased 36% to $1.1 billion, with an adjusted operating margin of 24.2%, up nearly 400 basis points versus last year, driven by favorable mix and cost productivity. Adjusted earnings per diluted share were $5.54. In terms of segment performance, in Q4, Wizards revenue grew 86% to $630 million, driven by magic, which was up 141% versus last year, behind the strength of Avatar: The Last Airbender and Final Fantasy’s holiday release. Operating profit in the quarter was $284 million, resulting in a 45% operating margin. For the full year, Wizards revenue increased 45% to $2.2 billion, with operating profit of just over $1 billion and an operating margin of 46%.

Magic revenue grew nearly 60%, reinforcing its position as one of the strongest gaming franchises in the industry. Core magic KPIs remained healthy, with growth in distribution and a record year for Secret Lair and backlist. Monopoly Go! continued to be a steady revenue and profit stream, contributing $168 million, with the monthly revenue pool remaining largely consistent as we move through the year. The overall mix of business resulted in 420 basis point improvement in margin and a solid foundation heading into 2026. Consumer products executed well in the fourth quarter, delivering $800 million of revenue, up 7% behind the strength of Hasbro Gaming and Marvel. Adjusted operating profit was $54 million, reflecting improved product mix and promotional discipline, while supply chain productivity nearly offset the cost of tariffs.

For the full year, consumer products revenue declined 4% to $2.4 billion and delivered an adjusted operating profit of $113 million, demonstrating resilience and an improved cost structure even after absorbing nearly $70 million of tariff impact. Owned and retail inventory positions remained healthy, and we exited the year with owned inventory at a record low of 75 days. Entertainment performed in line with expectations for the quarter and the year, delivering stable revenue and adjusted margins consistent with our asset-led strategy. Our cost transformation efforts contributed over $175 million in gross savings across supply chain, product development, and operating expenses, driving margin expansion and helping to offset the impact from tariffs. Through 2025, we have delivered almost $800 million of gross cost savings and are well on our path to the $1 billion commitment. From a cash and balance sheet perspective, 2025 was a strong year.

We generated $893 million of operating cash flow, ended the year with $777 million of cash on the balance sheet. We returned $393 million to shareholders through dividends while continuing to reduce debt and invest behind growth. We reached our gross leverage target, finishing the year at 2.3 times behind increased earnings and a reduced debt load. Looking ahead to 2026, we are entering the year with momentum, clarity, and a durable foundation. Wizards remains our primary growth engine, supported by a robust pipeline and sustained engagement across tabletop, digital, and licensed gaming. And we expect consumer products will benefit from a healthy entertainment pipeline, which will enable improved consistency and margin performance. Turning now to guidance, we expect Hasbro consolidated revenue to grow between 3% and 5% year-over-year on a constant currency basis, with growth across each of our segments.

We expect operating margins to be between 24%-25% for the year, reflecting continued operating leverage and disciplined execution. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $1.4-$1.45 billion. At the segment level, Wizards is expected to deliver mid-single-digit revenue growth, supported by a healthy release cadence and continued engagement across the Magic ecosystem. Operating margins are expected to remain in the low 40% range, reflecting the underlying strength of the business while absorbing higher royalty expense and incremental costs associated with our planned 2027 video game releases, Exodus, and Warlock. In consumer products, we expect revenue to grow low single digits year-over-year, with operating profit margins in the 6%-8% range. Revenue growth is buoyed by the strong entertainment slate from our partners at The Walt Disney Company, creating leverage through the cost structure.

Entertainment revenue is expected to be slightly positive year-over-year, with operating margins of approximately 50%, reflecting the asset-led nature of the business and continued discipline around investment. The 2026 outlook assumes approximately $150 million of gross cost savings from initiatives across supply chain, including the manufacturing diversification efforts, as well as a continuation of our transformation in several areas impacting operating expense. In terms of phasing, we expect stronger revenue growth in the first half, driven by the timing of entertainment-related releases within consumer products, normalized retail order patterns, and year-over-year shifts in the cadence of magic set releases. The stronger revenue growth in the first half will have a negative impact on margin, as the growth in both segments carries a higher royalty expense.

Margin expansion will come in the second half, driven by a favorable business mix within consumer products, a step up in productivity across supply chain, and leverage within operating expenses. Tariff costs will be relatively flat year-over-year in the back half, with much of the incremental costs landing in the front half of the year. Capital allocation priorities are largely unchanged from last year. We will continue to invest in the business, specifically behind our highest return growth opportunities led by Wizards and digital gaming. Second, we are focused on paying down debt and maintaining a healthy balance sheet, and we remain firmly committed to returning cash to shareholders through our dividend. The board has authorized the first quarter dividend, reinforcing our confidence in the durability of our cash flows.

Finally, we are restarting share repurchases, and the board has authorized a new $1 billion share repurchase program, providing additional flexibility to return excess capital to shareholders over time. While we do not provide EPS guidance, there are a few important items below the operating line to highlight for modeling purposes. First, interest expense is expected to be higher year-over-year, primarily related to planned refinancing activity. And second, we expect lower non-operating income driven by translational foreign exchange impacts and the absence of prior year benefits related to the Swiss deferred tax asset. Taken together, these items represent approximately a $40 million year-over-year headwind to EPS, even as operating income continues to grow. In summary, the 2026 outlook reflects the progress we’ve made as we executed the first year of our Playing to Win strategy and the durability of the business we’re building.

We are growing from a stronger earnings base, operating with greater discipline, and allocating capital with intention. As we move through 2026, we believe the cadence of profitability becomes increasingly favorable, keeping us on track to our medium-term financial commitments. With that, I’ll turn it back to the operator for questions.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Thank you. We’ll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. We ask you to please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up so that other callers have a chance to participate. If you’d like to ask a question at this time, you may press star one from your telephone keypad, and a confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you’d like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up the handset before pressing the star keys. Please hold while we poll for questions. Thank you. The first question comes from the line of Megan Alexander with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead with your question.

Megan Alexander, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Hi. Good morning, Chris, Gina. Thanks for taking our questions. I wanted to start with magic. Morning. Obviously, really impressive growth in the fourth quarter and the year, and really nice to hear the momentum has continued with Lorwyn into the start of the year. I think a key investor focus and question we still get a lot is, "How do you lap what you just delivered as we look into fiscal 2026?" You talked about kind of mid-single-digit top-line growth for Wizards. I think most of that’s probably driven by magic. So can you just kind of take a step back and unpack some of the assumptions that are underlying your magic guide for the year? You’ve got the extra half set, the backlist. Obviously, momentum remains strong there. You talked about Secret Lair record in the fourth quarter as well.

And then the player growth up 20% year-over-year. Can you talk about just how what you’re seeing from some of these newer players plays into it as well? Thank you.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Good morning, Megan. I’ll start, and then Gina can correct everything I say. I think it really comes down to several growth vectors. The first one is distribution growth. We’re seeing meaningful growth in our Wizards Play Network. That was up 20% last year. We think it’s going to be up double digits this year again. We’re seeing incremental distribution as the brand expands and the player base expands. So I think mass market and non-WPN-based distribution growth exceeded last year WPN growth and will exceed it again this year. Player growth has been robust. I think the organized play metrics we’re giving you are just kind of hardcore or core player growth, the people who play in stores. Our metrics for non-kind of hardcore players are a little more loose, but we think that those are growing well in excess of that 20%.

Importantly, as we’re bringing on new kind of casual fans or new-to-Magic fans and collectors, they are sticking around, and you’re seeing that evidenced in robust backlist and higher organized play participation. So what we’re seeing going on with Magic is a virtuous cycle of there’s more places to buy, there’s more people playing, they’re engaging longer and sticking around. And that just leads to increased set-over-set performance like we’re seeing with Lorwyn, and we see that continuing into 2026. Not to mention, we’ve got a stacked lineup of partners. You’ve got Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, The Hobbit, Marvel Super Heroes, and Star Trek, plus some real fan-favorite sets like Lorwyn and Strixhaven on tap for this year.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. I guess, Megan, good morning. My add would be as we think about the phasing for the year, there’s a front half and a back half. When you split it, really, most of the growth for the business is going to come in the front half of the year, just purely because of what we’re comping in Q4. If you look kind of quarter-by-quarter basis, all three first three quarters are going to continue to grow for Magic. It’s really about that fourth quarter. Expect really strong performance in the front half of the year, really good performance in the back half of the year as well. It’s just we have a massive comp in Q4.

Megan Alexander, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Right. Okay. Super helpful. And then maybe just a follow-up on partnerships. Chris, you talked a lot about Playing to Win and the growing role partnerships are playing in your prepared remarks. We’ve obviously seen a step up in announcements over the last week, including Harry Potter this morning. So can you just talk a little bit about what’s driving the momentum in this expanded partnership slate and specifically how the business’s transformation, what you can maybe now offer the partners, has changed the conversations and maybe made you more of a partner of choice? And then for Gina, does this change how you think about the medium-term top-line growth for CP just as we’ll have a strong year this year, but a lot of this will layer into 2027? Thanks.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. I read a lot of business books. I geek out about them. I bore the management team with them. Jim Collins is one of my favorites. He has this kind of concept called a hedgehog concept, which is what’s the thing that you’re uniquely the best at in the world as a company or could be the best at in the world? We call it our superpower. We believe Hasbro’s superpower is inspiring a lifetime of play. We are a company that uniquely can engage a consumer as young as two or three and extend that play relationship well into throughout their entire lives, from 2 to 99 and beyond. I think the partners that we’re working with, they have brands that are multi-generational, that have been around for a long time, that appeal to preschoolers, but also appeal to collectors.

I think when a partner chooses Hasbro, they choose us because we can uniquely do that among most toy and collectible companies out there. So whether it’s K-Pop Demon Hunters, which is Netflix’s biggest film ever and really kind of appealing to kind of that tween and teen crowd, or 52-year-old CEOs like myself, Harry Potter, which is celebrating what, its 30th, 25th anniversary, bestselling book series, hundreds of millions of fans, people flocking to theme parks, Voltron, which is like a seminal kind of collector brand from the 1970s and ’80s. I remember having my breakfast cereal watching Voltron as a kid, or iconic video game series like Street Fighter. It just works hand in glove with what Hasbro is great at.

And so I think as you see us announce these partnerships, they’re really going to lean into gamified product opportunities, entertainment, and event-driven kind of brands that supercharge inside of our distribution system. They’re multi-purchase and highly collectible, and they’re multi-generational. And I think that’s true for the toy side of the business as well as the game side of the business. So you’re seeing us execute this playbook on Magic. You’re going to see us execute it on Dungeons & Dragons, and you’re seeing us execute it across our toys and collectibles.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Megan, my add would be first, I want to give a huge shout-out to Tim Kilpin and his team for securing so many valuable partnerships for us on the toy and game side. We’ve been talking for years of the couple of things that are going to continue to move us up the margin scale on CP, and scale is one of them. So these licenses help to build that scale in a very productive way for Hasbro. So as we think about our midterm outlook and really that top-line number for CP, we see this year as the inflection point. We’re back to growth. We’re guiding to growth for CP. When we look out into 2027 and 2028, we see that continuing.

We do think that these licenses serve a really valuable purpose in just bringing our entire kind of fleet of brands and capabilities to life.

Megan Alexander, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Great. Thanks so much.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: The next questions are from the line of James Hardiman with Citi. Let’s just see what their questions are.

James Hardiman, Analyst, Citi: Hey. Good morning. Wanted to sort of follow along that path of obviously, Wizards’ top-line was better, certainly, than any of us would have expected, even the most bullish expectations coming into the year. But I wanted to unpack the margin a little bit because that also blew away expectations, right? I think you were assuming that margins would contract this year or last year, I guess I should say, given the mix of the business. And I think it expanded 420 basis points, right? And so as we think about 2026, clearly, part of the reason we’re, again, expecting contraction is the video games and their dilution to margins.

But maybe help us unpack sort of the structural margins of Wizards versus sort of the or at least the tabletop business versus some of these other offsets that may, for a period of time, compress that a little bit because it feels like this isn’t just sort of a temporary things got better in 2025 and then they’ll contract back to where we thought they would be. It seems like this is maybe more of a permanent benefit.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Morning, James. Good question. We’ve always said that the Wizards segment margins are going to kind of play and dance within that high 30s%-low 40s%. To your point, we ended the year 2025 quite a bit more favorable than that, really driven by mix and leverage that kind of flew through the P&L, as well as we had some nice pickups in cost productivity through the fourth quarter within the supply chain that benefited us. As we look into 2026 and the overall margin profile, we do expect to give back a little bit of that, namely because royalty expense is going to continue to increase. Plus, as we move through the back half of the year, we will be stepping into some additional expenses related to the launch of the 2 games in 2027. So to your point, the overall margin foundation is quite solid.

Being in that high 30s, low 40s is the right range for us. Now, video games, when we get to that point in 2027, that will be, as we’ve talked about in the last call, it will take a bit away from margin in that sense, but we’re going to still be within that high 30s, low 40s business.

James Hardiman, Analyst, Citi: Got it. That makes sense. Then maybe switching to CP guidance, low single-digit revenues, operating profit 6%-8%. Maybe help us unpack that. I mean, what are you assuming from a point-of-sale perspective? And are there any sort of tailwinds as we think about whether it’s inventories being a little depleted heading into the year? Or I think you made the comment that retail ordering patterns were ultimately negative to the top-line for 2025 just based on the tariffs and the DI to DOM shift. Does that become a tailwind at all to 2026, or is CP revenues being up low single digits pretty consistent with how you’re thinking about retail? Thanks.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Got it. Okay. So let’s start with where we landed on the year on inventory. So coming out of the third quarter, if you go back to our comments there, our retail inventory was, call it down, mid-teens. We ended the year probably down high single digits at retail inventory. So we probably filled a little bit of pipeline in through the fourth quarter. I would call that the right resting spot for retail inventory just given the macro environment and what is still happening with tariffs. So I don’t expect, as we move into 2026, any sort of retail inventory as being a big positive or negative for the year. It’s going to kind of hold serve as we move throughout the year. The big tailwinds that I see for us in 2026 really come on the back of a stronger entertainment slate.

So I mean, 4 movie releases from our partners at Disney usually lead to nice top-line growth for us. And when you look at kind of front half, back half for CP, pretty balanced. So we’re expecting kind of low single-digit growth throughout the balance of the year. The one point that we call out when we think about the second quarter, just keep in mind that was where we had all of the tariff-related noise in 2025. So our second quarter is going to be pretty big. The cadence for CP will be the first quarter will be down, and that’s largely driven by some one-time comps that we have within licensing. Q2 will be up pretty strong just given this comp that we have from the tariff event in 2025.

The back half of the year, I believe we’ve got Q3 is up and Q4 is up slightly. It’s a really balanced delivery for the business over the course of the year.

James Hardiman, Analyst, Citi: That’s great color. Thanks, Gina.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Thank you.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Our next question is from the line of Gerrick Johnson with Seaport Research. Let’s see if there are questions.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: Great. Thank you. Good morning, everybody. Hey, Chris.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Good morning.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: I’m Magic.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Good to hear your voice, Gerrick. Good to hear your voice. Welcome back.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: Great to be back. Thank you. So I want to ask on Magic, what do you think the ratio or the proportion of tabletop sales go to players or go to games being played? And what proportion go to collectors and collections?

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Oh, gosh. Well, hey, Gerrick, first off, welcome back. It’s great to have you back on the calls. I would say Magic is overwhelmingly player-based or player-collector. That’s unique among a lot of trading card games. I think some of our competitors are much more heavily collector-based. What’s good about that is it gives us kind of this stable base of play and community that I think can last if there’s any kind of wobbles in kind of collector sentiment or overall kind of value pool available to collectors. If you ask me to kind of pin me down to a number, I think we’re probably 80%-90% players or player-collectors and a relatively small portion of collector-only.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: Okay. Fantastic. Thank you. And in toys, your licensing revenue is down, and I thought that was a major plank in the strategy. So has that out-licensing program stalled, or what’s going on there, and why did that not grow?

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Good question. So no, it has not, excuse me. It has not stalled. That is really our My Little Pony trading cards comp that we had coming out of 2024. So there’s that one. Our partner, Kayou, had a huge year in 2024, and I think it was the first part of 2025, but then we started comping that as we moved through the year. But all of the other kind of underpinnings of the business are quite healthy.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Our point-of-sale for out-licensed toys was up mid-teens%. Location-based entertainment was up probably 20 or 30 locations year-over-year off of a base of around 200. It’s now around 225. Music and entertainment were both pretty solid. A little bit of that is also you have some MGs, and you have some revenue recognition, which smooths out over time. But really, the wobble last year was My Little Pony trading cards specifically in China.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: Okay. Great. Thanks for the detail. Appreciate it.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Thank you.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Our next question is from the line of Stephen Laszcyzk with Goldman Sachs. Please just share with your questions.

Stephen Laszcyzk, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Hey. Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Chris, on the theme of AI, I would be curious to get your latest views on how AI impacts the video game industry, whether that’s on the cost curve, barriers to entry into the industry itself, or the type of gameplay that consumers will come to expect. Then within that, would be curious if you could just detail how Hasbro is positioning itself against maybe AI as an emerging factor here as a relative newcomer to the video game industry.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Well, I’ll break it down short-term, mid-term, long-term. Short-term, I think AI is just a productivity boom, and that will affect every industry, whether it’s finance, operations, how you think about inventory management, forecast planning. It’s just a significant time saver. We conservatively think it’s going to save us about 1 million people-hours’ worth of work this year, a lot of which we already outsource and can kind of harvest that into savings and reinvest into the business. So instead of having to manage, touch a bunch of orders, we can spend that time and innovate or deliver for our customers or our partners. And I think that’ll be true inside of video games as well. Mid-term, I obviously think AI kind of transforms how you think about concepting, how you think about idea generation, even how you think about asset creation.

I think, though, that that’s going to be executed on a game-by-game and brand-by-brand basis based on what the consumer wants and what your partners want you to do. And I think that’s going to take a couple of years to kind of play out. But you’re already seeing AI embedded in creative workflows like the Adobe Creative Suite. It’s just going to be something that will make things faster. We’re seeing tangible benefits from that, particularly in toys, where our ability to concept and make an early kind of prototype real has 10x in terms of speed. And so instead of saving and just doing one toy concept, we do 10 toy concepts in the same amount of time at the same amount of cost. And it just allows us to be able to bring an idea to life better and choose a higher hit rate.

And then long-term, I really think you have to not think about, "Hey, how can I make a current game cheaper or a current toy cheaper or better?" I think it’s going to open up all new categories of play and all new opportunities that we can barely imagine today. I think you’re going to see some of those products from Hasbro. I think they’re going to be physical as well as digital. And I think our focus is going to be on the collector market and adults initially. But I think over time that that’s going to spread as the technology matures and as consumers kind of become more comfortable with it. And it’s going to open up all new engagement opportunities and all new revenue opportunities.

Stephen Laszcyzk, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Great. Thanks for that. And then maybe secondly, on Monopoly Go, it’s held in much better than most of us had been expecting coming into the year. Just be curious if you could unpack some of the key drivers there as we went into year-end and then your expectations as we look ahead into 2026 on what the top-line contributions from the game could be this year? Thank you.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Yeah. Good morning. Really looking into 2026, we see it staying pretty stable. So call it that $12 million-$14 million run rate per month is what we’re planning for. We’re seeing the decay rates in line with expectations, and where we’ve been able to pick up is just the UA expense itself has gone down. So we see that our overall revenue pool is staying pretty consistent.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: I’d say Scopely has been pretty adept at value capture as well in terms of the ways in which people can buy dice or buy product inside of the experience. That’s also helped.

Stephen Laszcyzk, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Great. Thank you both.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: The next questions are from the line of Arpine Kocharyan with UBS. Please just share with your questions.

Arpine Kocharyan, Analyst, UBS: Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Great quarter. Congratulations. All the detail you provided for segment outlook was very helpful. I was wondering, when I look at your overall revenue guidance of 3%-5%, I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about overall top-line growth, put some takes, and specifically what will result in the lower end of that range and what needs to happen for upper end of that range or better. I’m mostly trying to understand whether the lower end of that range is more driven by consumer product business. And then just really for my second question, you had talked about 2 digital game releases a year. It seems like Monopoly Go! is still going pretty strong, which is incredible.

Could you maybe talk about the pipeline of IP that you are looking at that you think sort of lends itself well into digital gaming and what those opportunities could mean for Hasbro for 2026 and 2027? Thank you.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Hey, Arpine. Good morning. A couple of things on the range and what dictates it. I think there are probably three factors that probably play into it the most. The first is our ability to provide supply and chase product. Actually, Magic was rate-constrained last year based on our ability to just produce and drive reprints. You typically have a little bit of wobble inside of your supply chain in terms of availability and timing. So I think that’ll play in both in Magic as well as toys. I think we have a heck of an entertainment slate on tap for this year from Disney, from Amazon, from Legendary Pictures. And depending on how those go, that could be quite a big over/under for us. Then I think the last thing, which is always kind of omnipresent, is just what’s the strength of the consumer?

Right now, we continue to see kind of a tale of two cities. The top 20% of households in terms of wealth are really driving a lot of demand and are staying pretty resilient. The lower quintiles of kind of wealth and income, their pennies are pinched. And so we’re trying to appeal to both. If the economy proves better, if some of the tax refunds that are on tap in the U.S. market proves to be kind of shared out versus going into the bank account, that could be a boon for us as well.

Arpine Kocharyan, Analyst, UBS: That’s super helpful. Thank you.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: I only add, Arpine, by the middle of the year, we will have a better sense for how some of these things are shaking out and how strong the movie releases are, how strong kind of the UB sets are. But we feel good about the guidance range that we went out with.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: I’m sorry. You had a part two, Arpine. I want to make sure we hit it.

Arpine Kocharyan, Analyst, UBS: Yeah. About digital gaming and the pipeline of what that looks like.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. So we continue to have a really strong digital licensing business, which continues to grow. Last year, we had Parchisi STAR from Gameberry Labs that did pretty well. We have Monopoly Go!, which continues to do really well. It’s probably one of the most successful mobile game launches in history. And Scopely have been fantastic partners. From our self-published side, we feel pretty good about the early demand indicators and interest indicators for both Exodus and Warlock. Those will be two pretty big tests for us next year. And we continue to invest in digital games. As we’re thinking about the portfolio moving forward, I think the good thing about digital games is we’re getting past kind of the startup phase. You typically have a lot of costs associated with starting studios and building up publishing capacity. I think that will help with profitability as we get past 2027.

We’re also doing a lot of new partnerships. Last year, we announced a joint venture with Saber on a game. We’re going to have several more that we’re going to announce, and that will help with risk de-riskment. And then we’re investing more heavily in new talent markets for games. So Montreal is about half the cost of what the West Coast or Texas is in the US. We’re leaning in there. And likewise, we’re leaning into a lot of Eastern European and offshore-based talent, which, again, I think could even be half the cost of what even Canada is. And so that’ll allow us to make better games. That’ll allow us to be able to put more man-hours into the games and have more content and hopefully also allow them to be even more profitable over time as we scale the franchises.

Arpine Kocharyan, Analyst, UBS: Very helpful. Thank you, Chris.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: The next question is from the line of Eric Handler with Roth MKM. Please just use their questions.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: Thank you very much. Good morning. I wonder if you could just discuss your thoughts on toy industry POS outlook for 2026?

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Sure. I might have a bit of a cheekier response to this. So, here. I’ll start, and Gina can invite us.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: You know what’s so funny?

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: No, no, no, no, no. For us, I almost think it’s the wrong question. We segment the market in our own unique way. We call it GEM2. It’s an acronym which stands for gamified, entertainment-driven, multi-purchase, and multi-generational. Those categories, 70%-80% of Hasbro’s existing point of sale is focused on those categories, and probably 90%-95% of our investment is going to those categories for the future. We think those categories have a mid- to high-single-digit CAGR, and they are just structurally advantaged. Peers who operate in those categories, they typically have a forward multiple of a 20x, maybe a 25x. Those are companies like Pop Mart or LEGO or Bandai Namco, and we would put Hasbro squarely inside of that peer set.

The other side of the toy market, the more traditional kind of kids-oriented, one-off purchase toy market, I think there’s opportunities to grow there. There’s certainly a lot of innovation there. But I think that’s in a structural set of decline, and it’s probably going to continue to decline over the next several years and has been. And the reality there is there’s just less babies being born, and there’s more substitution happening at earlier ages. So if you ask me kind of what the overall toy industry is going to do, I’d probably give you an I don’t know. If you ask me what the side of the industry that Hasbro is investing in is going to do, I think it’s pretty robust growth.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: Okay. That’s helpful. And I know a lot of this stuff goes hand in hand. You’re spending a lot of time talking about entertainment-driven properties for your consumer products. Wondered if you could talk about the outlook in 2026 for sort of your first-party types of products?

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Well, certainly, I think Magic is going to do pretty well. I think D&D is going to do pretty well as well. And Peppa Pig has some significant room to grow. I think our board games and Play-Doh also look pretty good. Some of our more entertainment-driven properties, like Transformers, are probably going to have a down year, but that’s held up remarkably well. We grew Transformers last year despite not having any entertainment. And so I think for our first party, we see upside. We would like to grow that as a percentage of our business while still working with partners and growing them because obviously, it’s a margin to creative. And we feel pretty good about the hand that we have. I don’t know. Gina, do you have anything to add?

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: I mean, Furby will be a down year. I’m just thinking of another one that.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Furby’s kind of getting near the end of its life cycle.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Head is going to have a good year just given the Toy Story release, so.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: For sure.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. Quick information.

Gerrick Johnson, Analyst, Seaport Research: Appreciate it. Thanks.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: All right. Thanks.

The next question is from the line of Christopher Horvers with J.P. Morgan. Please just use your questions.

Thank you. Thanks for taking my question. So maybe, Gina, if you could simplify the operating margin outlook, you have a range of about 30 basis points of expansion at the midpoint versus the 50-100 bps. Could you bucket the headwinds that bring you down from that between royalties, digital gaming costs, and tariffs? Given Exodus and D&D, digital game doesn’t launch until 2027, we wouldn’t have expected that to be a headwind because the amortization comes in 2027. Thank you.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Got it. Good morning. The couple of things that are hitting, well, I’ll start with the good guys first. So obviously, volume and mix and pricing, that is a good positive margin contributor for us in 2026. Royalties is going to be a headwind. So we have increased royalties across both of our businesses now, just again, given the entertainment slate on CP coupled with the Universes Beyond set. So that’s, call it, a point, a point and a half of margin drag that we’ll have coming into 2026. The other thing is tariffs. So we’ll have a full year of tariff cost. In 2025, we had roughly $40 million of tariff costs hitting the supply chain. Right now, we’re modeling that out to be about $60 million of cost, so an incremental $20-ish million.

Even though we have cost productivity within the supply chain that’s able to offset, typically, our normal model is that that cost productivity is adding to our margin. This year, it’s just kind of that cost productivity is just helping to offset that tariff impact that’s coming at us. And then I would say the last thing that I call it as a headwind is just the investments that we’ll have towards the end of the year, and I shouldn’t say really the end of the year, but marketing will step up as we move through the year, especially in advance of these video game releases, as well as just broad increases in product development as we move through 2026.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: That’s very helpful. Then just to follow up on CP margins, we see the presentation, how you lay out the margin change year-over-year, but could you help us and narrate that because you did have strong sales growth and margins were down year-over-year? So understand the tariff impact. But if you could just narrate the puts and takes between sales allowances versus cost savings versus tariffs? Thanks so much.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Yeah. So I mean, in the fourth quarter, to your point, we had nice volume growth. Our team did a really nice job working with our retail partners and getting a good mix of business in and not going way beyond on promotional spending, a really nice positive kind of volume and mix impact from the fourth quarter. The pieces that came against us were tariffs. Largely speaking, fourth quarter was all about tariffs. So again, of that $40 million of costs that we had in 2025, about 60%-65% of it hit in the fourth quarter. So that’s what really weighed on the margin profile as we move through the year. So as we go into 2026, while volume and mix for CP is going to be a positive for us, we’re continuing to have the tariff headwind.

Plus, we’ll have a step up in royalty expense as well that kind of keeps that in that 6%-8% range.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Thanks so much.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Thank you.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Thank you. Our final question is from the line of Kylie Cohu with Jefferies. Please just use your questions.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Great. Thank you for taking my question, and congratulations on a strong quarter. Just kind of a small one from me. How would you describe sell-through or the POS cadence throughout the quarter? Anything unusual to call out, or was it kind of as usual?

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: I would say for toys, we felt pretty good just given that the SNAP benefits were kind of taken away just given the government shutdown. Other than that wobble, we felt pretty good about the direction of toy point of sale. I think from September through end of December, we gained share in our key categories in 2016, 2017, maybe even 2018 out of 20 weeks. That’s pretty good. We think that momentum continues into this year and augurs well for kind of our outlook for 2026.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Great. That’s all I had. Thank you.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: All right. Thanks.

Gina Goetter, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer, Hasbro: Kylie.

Chris Cocks, Chief Executive Officer, Hasbro: Thank you. At this time, this will conclude today’s question-and-answer session, and we’ll also conclude today’s conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines and have a wonderful day.