Technology
Scripps reports Q1 2025 financial results
Published
12 months agoon
By
CINCINNATI, May 8, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — The E.W. Scripps Company (NASDAQ: SSP) delivered $524 million in revenue for the first quarter of 2025. Loss attributable to the shareholders of Scripps was $18.8 million or 22 cents per share. Year to date, the company has successfully completed negotiations covering 25% of its pay TV households, significantly grown its Scripps Networks margins and closed its previously announced refinancing transactions.
Business notes:
On April 10, the company successfully completed the refinancing of its 2026 term loan, 2028 term loan and revolving credit facility and entered into a new accounts receivable (AR) securitization facility, and is committed to proactive management of its remaining debt maturities.In the Scripps Networks division, margins reached 32%, attributable to growth in connected TV revenue, a steady general market and strong sales execution as well as cost savings announced in Q4 2024. First-quarter expenses decreased 16% over Q1 2024.In the second quarter, the Scripps Networks division will benefit from the return of the WNBA and the National Women’s Soccer League to the ION network. A large percentage of the advertising dollars for the 2025 season were laid in during last year’s upfront, and the remaining inventory is commanding premium advertising rates.In the Local Media division, the company completed legacy distribution revenue contracts that expired at the end of the first quarter covering about 25% of its pay TV households. Due to those renewals, both Q2 and full-year distribution revenue are expected to be about flat despite subscriber count declines.Real estate sales of Scripps’ West Palm Beach station building and five transmission towers have generated a total of $63 million from late last year through early spring.Net leverage at the end of Q1 was 4.9x due to a positive financial performance, and the company expects to continue to reduce its leverage ratio this year.
From Scripps President and CEO Adam Symson:
“We began the year strong, outperforming financial expectations despite an uncertain macroeconomic environment. In the Scripps Networks division, effective sales execution combined with disciplined expense management produced our highest margins since Q4 2022. With the return of the women’s sports seasons, we are optimistic about the division’s growth outlook in the second and third quarters.
“To help our sales team meet the demand for live women’s sports, we recently completed two new distribution agreements, including with Sports Illustrated for the SI Women’s Games – a six-day competition of elite women athletes across six sports, taking place live nationally Oct. 28-Nov. 2 on ION. Scripps will share in profits from the event. ION also will become the exclusive television home for the Elevance Health Women’s Fort Myers Tip-Off, a premier early-season women’s college basketball tournament in November. These events will bring live women’s sports to ION in the fourth quarter, when the WNBA and NWSL seasons have concluded, helping us fulfill advertiser demand for women’s sports and more deeply connecting ION with women’s sports fans and advertisers across the U.S.
“On the local broadcast station front, we expect industry deregulation to be a tailwind for Scripps and the sector when the Federal Communications Commission revisits the outdated ownership rules that govern us today. Greater broadcaster national scale and in-market depth will power new economic growth and support our ability to serve audiences and local communities.
“Over the past year, we have made significant progress on debt paydown and reducing leverage. Debt paydown remains our highest capital allocation priority. As we move through the first half of this year, we are navigating the headwinds of business uncertainty while maximizing revenue growth in connected TV and sports, delivering on Scripps Networks’ margin expansion and positioning the company to benefit from the new regulatory environment.”
Operating results
First-quarter company revenue was $524 million, a decrease of 6.6% or $37.1 million from the prior-year quarter. Costs and expenses for segments, shared services and corporate were $454 million, down from $474 million in the year-ago quarter.
Loss attributable to the shareholders of Scripps was $18.8 million or 22 cents per share. The current-year quarter included a $4.1 million restructuring charge that increased the loss attributable to shareholders by 4 cents per share. In the prior-year quarter, the loss attributable to shareholders was $12.8 million or 15 cents per share. The prior-year quarter included an $18.1 million investment gain and $5 million in restructuring costs. When taken together, these items decreased the loss attributable to shareholders by 12 cents per share.
First-quarter 2025 results by segment compared to prior-period amounts:
Local Media
Revenue was $325 million, down 7.8% from the prior-year quarter.
Core advertising revenue decreased 3.1% to $132 million.Political revenue was $3.3 million, compared to $15.2 million in the prior-year quarter, an election year.Distribution revenue was $187 million, compared to $197 million in the prior-year quarter, as a result of declining legacy pay TV subscribers.
Segment expenses increased 1.1% to $290 million.
Segment profit was $34.9 million, compared to $65.6 million in the year-ago quarter.
Scripps Networks
Revenue was $198 million, down 5.4% from the prior-year quarter. Segment expenses were $134 million, down 16.1% from the prior-year quarter.
Segment profit was $64.1 million, compared to $49.7 million in the year-ago quarter.
Financial condition
On March 31, cash and cash equivalents totaled $24 million, and total debt was $2.6 billion.
During the first quarter of 2025, we had $25 million outstanding under the revolving credit facility. We made mandatory principal payments of $3.9 million on our term loans.
On April 10, we completed a series of previously announced refinancing transactions. Following the completion of the transactions, no amounts remain outstanding for our prior term loan that was due in 2026, our prior term loan that was due in 2028, or our prior revolving credit facility. We now have a new term loan due 2028 with $545 million aggregate principal outstanding and a new term loan due 2029 with $340 million aggregate principal outstanding. We also replaced the prior revolving credit facility with a new $208 million revolving credit facility, maturing on July 7, 2027, and a $70 million non-extended revolving credit facility, maturing on Jan. 7, 2026. Additionally, we entered into a new three-year accounts receivable securitization facility with aggregate commitments of up to $450 million.
We did not declare or provide payment for the first-quarter 2025 preferred stock dividend. Deferral of preferred stock dividend payments provides us better flexibility for accelerating deleveraging and maximizing the paydown of our traditional bank debt. The 9% dividend rate on the preferred shares compounds quarterly. At March 31, aggregated undeclared and unpaid cumulative dividends totaled $70.6 million. Under the terms of Berkshire Hathaway’s preferred equity investment in Scripps, we are prohibited from paying dividends on or repurchasing our common shares until all preferred shares are redeemed.
Looking ahead
Comparisons for our segments are to the same period in 2024.
Second-quarter 2025
Local Media revenue
Down high single-digit percent range
Local Media expense
Up low single-digit percent range
Scripps Networks revenue
About flat
Scripps Networks expense
Down low double-digit percent range
Shared services and corporate
About $22 million
Conference call
A call with the company’s senior management team will take place at 9:30 a.m. Eastern time tomorrow, Friday, May 9. The company’s protocol for joining its earnings calls is as follows:
To access a live webcast of the call, participants will need to register by visiting http://ir.scripps.com/. The registration link can be found on that page under “upcoming events.”To dial in by phone, participants will first need to visit a website to receive the phone number. To receive a listen-only dial-in and PIN code, visit https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/aeukwtug/.Analysts who will be asking questions should visit this webpage to receive a different dial-in and PIN, which will identify them by name on the call: https://register-conf.media-server.com/register/BIccb5710608ad4a019fe29699909354bd
A replay of the conference call will be archived and available online for an extended period of time. To access the audio replay, visit http://ir.scripps.com/ approximately four hours after the call, and the link can be found on that page under “audio/video links.”
Media contact: Becca McCarter, The E.W. Scripps Company, (513) 410-2425, rebecca.mccarter@scripps.com
Investor contact: Carolyn Micheli, The E.W. Scripps Company, (513) 977-3732, carolyn.micheli@scripps.com
Forward-looking statements
This document contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements can be identified by words such as: “believe,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “expect,” “estimate,” “could,” “should,” “outlook,” “guidance,” and similar references to future periods. Examples of forward-looking statements include, among others, statements the company makes regarding expected operating results and future financial condition. Forward-looking statements are neither historical facts nor assurances of future performance. Instead, they are based only on management’s current beliefs, expectations, and assumptions regarding the future of the industry and the economy, the company’s plans and strategies, anticipated events and trends, and other future conditions. Because forward-looking statements relate to the future, they are subject to inherent risks, uncertainties, and changes in circumstance that are difficult to predict and many of which are outside of the company’s control. The company’s actual results and financial condition may differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements. Therefore, you should not rely on any of these forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause the company’s actual results and financial condition to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements include, among others, the following: change in advertising demand, fragmentation of audiences, loss of affiliation agreements, loss of distribution revenue, increase in programming costs, changes in law and regulation, the company’s ability to identify and consummate strategic transactions, the controlled ownership structure of the company, and the company’s ability to manage its outstanding debt obligations. A detailed discussion of such risks and uncertainties is included in the company’s Form 10-K, on file with the SEC, in the section titled “Risk Factors.” Any forward-looking statement made in this document is based only on currently available information and speaks only as of the date on which it is made. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statement, whether written or oral, that may be made from time to time, whether as a result of new information, future developments, or otherwise.
About Scripps
The E.W. Scripps Company (NASDAQ: SSP) is a diversified media company focused on creating connection. As one of the nation’s largest local TV broadcasters, Scripps serves communities with quality, objective local journalism and operates a portfolio of more than 60 stations in 40+ markets. Scripps reaches households across the U.S. with national news outlets Scripps News and Court TV and popular entertainment brands ION, ION Plus, ION Mystery, Bounce, Grit and Laff. Scripps is the nation’s largest holder of broadcast spectrum. Scripps Sports serves professional and college sports leagues, conferences and teams with local market depth and national broadcast reach of up to 100% of TV households. Founded in 1878, Scripps is the steward of the Scripps National Spelling Bee, and its longtime motto is: “Give light and the people will find their own way.”
THE E.W. SCRIPPS COMPANY
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
Three Months Ended
March 31,
(in thousands, except per share data)
2025
2024
Operating revenues
$ 524,393
$ 561,464
Segment, shared services and corporate expenses
(454,392)
(474,226)
Restructuring costs
(4,144)
(5,015)
Depreciation and amortization of intangible assets
(38,460)
(38,688)
Gains (losses), net on disposal of property and equipment
78
(147)
Operating expenses
(496,918)
(518,076)
Operating income
27,475
43,388
Interest expense
(43,750)
(54,917)
Defined benefit pension plan income (expense)
(338)
177
Miscellaneous, net
156
16,821
Income (loss) from operations before income taxes
(16,457)
5,469
Benefit (provision) for income taxes
13,002
(3,843)
Net income (loss)
(3,455)
1,626
Preferred stock dividends
(15,388)
(14,377)
Net loss attributable to the shareholders of The E.W. Scripps Company
$ (18,843)
$ (12,751)
Net loss per diluted share of common stock attributable to the shareholders of The E.W.
Scripps Company
$ (0.22)
$ (0.15)
Weighted average diluted shares outstanding
86,912
84,891
See notes to results of operations.
Notes to Results of Operations
1. SEGMENT INFORMATION
We determine our operating segments based upon our management and internal reporting structure, as well as the basis that our chief operating decision maker makes resource-allocation decisions.
Our Local Media segment includes more than 60 local television stations and their related digital operations. It is comprised of 18 ABC affiliates, 11 NBC affiliates, nine CBS affiliates and four FOX affiliates. We also have 11 independent stations and 10 additional low power stations. Our Local Media segment earns revenue primarily from the sale of advertising to local, national and political advertisers and retransmission fees received from cable operators, telecommunications companies, satellite carriers and over-the-top virtual MVPDs.
Our Scripps Networks segment includes national news outlets Scripps News and Court TV as well as popular entertainment brands ION, Bounce, Grit, ION Mystery, ION Plus and Laff. The Scripps Networks reach nearly every U.S. television home through free over-the-air broadcast, cable/satellite, connected TV and/or digital distribution. These operations earn revenue primarily through the sale of advertising.
Our segment results reflect the impact of intercompany carriage agreements between our local broadcast television stations and our national networks. The intercompany carriage fee revenue earned by our local broadcast television stations is equal to the carriage fee expense incurred by our national networks. We also allocate a portion of certain corporate costs and expenses, including accounting, human resources, employee benefit and information technology to our segments. These intercompany agreements and allocations are generally amounts agreed upon by management, which may differ from an arms-length amount.
The other segment caption aggregates our operating segments that are too small to report separately. Costs for centrally provided services and certain corporate costs that are not allocated to the segments are included in shared services and corporate costs. These unallocated corporate costs would also include the costs associated with being a public company. Corporate assets are primarily cash and cash equivalents, property and equipment primarily used for corporate purposes and deferred income taxes.
Our chief operating decision maker evaluates operating performance and makes decisions about the allocation of resources to our segments using a measure called segment profit. Segment profit excludes interest, defined benefit pension plan amounts, income taxes, depreciation and amortization, impairment charges, divested operating units, restructuring activities, investment results and certain other items that are included in net income (loss) determined in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
Information regarding our operating performance is as follows:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
(in thousands)
2025
2024
Change
Segment operating revenues:
Local Media
$ 325,389
$ 352,836
(7.8) %
Scripps Networks
198,007
209,278
(5.4) %
Other
5,680
4,113
38.1 %
Intersegment eliminations
(4,683)
(4,763)
(1.7) %
Total operating revenues
$ 524,393
$ 561,464
(6.6) %
Segment profit (loss):
Local Media
$ 34,919
$ 65,556
(46.7) %
Scripps Networks
64,093
49,654
29.1 %
Other
(6,405)
(6,397)
0.1 %
Shared services and corporate
(22,606)
(21,575)
4.8 %
Restructuring costs
(4,144)
(5,015)
Depreciation and amortization of intangible assets
(38,460)
(38,688)
Gains (losses), net on disposal of property and equipment
78
(147)
Interest expense
(43,750)
(54,917)
Defined benefit pension plan income (expense)
(338)
177
Miscellaneous, net
156
16,821
Income (loss) from operations before income taxes
$ (16,457)
$ 5,469
Operating results for our Local Media segment were as follows:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
(in thousands)
2025
2024
Change
Segment operating revenues:
Core advertising
$ 132,146
$ 136,443
(3.1) %
Political
3,263
15,166
(78.5) %
Distribution
187,191
197,499
(5.2) %
Other
2,789
3,728
(25.2) %
Total operating revenues
325,389
352,836
(7.8) %
Segment costs and expenses:
Employee compensation and benefits
105,169
106,726
(1.5) %
Programming
139,697
130,744
6.8 %
Other expenses
45,604
49,810
(8.4) %
Total costs and expenses
290,470
287,280
1.1 %
Segment profit
$ 34,919
$ 65,556
(46.7) %
Operating results for our Scripps Networks segment were as follows:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
(in thousands)
2025
2024
Change
Total operating revenues
$ 198,007
$ 209,278
(5.4) %
Segment costs and expenses:
Employee compensation and benefits
20,873
29,981
(30.4) %
Programming
76,410
89,162
(14.3) %
Other expenses
36,631
40,481
(9.5) %
Total costs and expenses
133,914
159,624
(16.1) %
Segment profit
$ 64,093
$ 49,654
29.1 %
2. CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(in thousands)
As of
March 31,
2025
As of
December 31,
2024
ASSETS
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents
$ 23,959
$ 23,852
Other current assets
574,189
606,163
Total current assets
598,148
630,015
Investments
15,275
8,884
Property and equipment
430,737
453,900
Operating lease right-of-use assets
84,229
90,136
Goodwill
1,968,574
1,968,574
Other intangible assets
1,613,077
1,635,488
Programming
391,359
402,459
Miscellaneous
14,790
9,119
TOTAL ASSETS
$ 5,116,189
$ 5,198,575
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
Current liabilities:
Accounts payable
$ 91,497
$ 100,669
Unearned revenue
12,336
18,159
Current portion of long-term debt
40,612
15,612
Accrued expenses and other current liabilities
295,225
347,954
Total current liabilities
439,670
482,394
Long-term debt (less current portion)
2,558,994
2,560,560
Other liabilities (less current portion)
797,802
837,607
Total equity
1,319,723
1,318,014
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
$ 5,116,189
$ 5,198,575
3. EARNINGS PER SHARE (“EPS”)
Unvested awards of share-based payments with non-forfeitable rights to receive dividends or dividend equivalents, such as certain of our RSUs, are considered participating securities for purposes of calculating EPS. Under the two-class method, we allocate a portion of net income to these participating securities and, therefore, exclude that income from the calculation of EPS for common stock. We do not allocate losses to the participating securities.
The following table presents information about basic and diluted weighted-average shares outstanding:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
(in thousands)
2025
2024
Numerator (for basic and diluted earnings per share)
Net income (loss)
$ (3,455)
$ 1,626
Less preferred stock dividends
(15,388)
(14,377)
Numerator for basic and diluted earnings per share
$ (18,843)
$ (12,751)
Denominator
Basic weighted-average shares outstanding
86,912
84,891
Effect of dilutive securities
—
—
Diluted weighted-average shares outstanding
86,912
84,891
4. NON-GAAP INFORMATION
In addition to results prepared in accordance with GAAP, this earnings release discusses adjusted EBITDA, a non-GAAP performance measure that management and the company’s Board of Directors uses to evaluate the performance of the business. We also believe that the non-GAAP measure provides useful information to investors by allowing them to view our business through the eyes of management and is a measure that is frequently used by industry analysts, investors and lenders as a measure of valuation for broadcast companies.
Adjusted EBITDA is calculated as income (loss) from continuing operations, net of tax, plus income tax expense
(benefit), interest expense, losses (gains) on extinguishment of debt, defined benefit pension plan expense (income), share-based compensation costs, depreciation, amortization of intangible assets, impairment of goodwill, loss (gain) on business and asset disposals, acquisition and integration costs, restructuring charges and certain other miscellaneous items. We consider adjusted EBITDA to be an indicator of our operating performance.
A reconciliation of the adjusted EBITDA measure to the comparable financial measure in accordance with GAAP is as follows:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
(in thousands)
2025
2024
Net income (loss)
$ (3,455)
$ 1,626
Provision (benefit) for income taxes
(13,002)
3,843
Interest expense
43,750
54,917
Defined benefit pension plan expense (income)
338
(177)
Share-based compensation costs
5,605
4,606
Depreciation
14,904
15,120
Amortization of intangible assets
23,556
23,568
Losses (gains), net on disposal of property and equipment
(78)
147
Restructuring costs
4,144
5,015
Miscellaneous, net
(156)
(16,821)
Adjusted EBITDA
$ 75,606
$ 91,844
5. SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW INFORMATION
The following table presents additional information on certain sources and uses of cash:
Three Months Ended
March 31,
(in thousands)
2025
2024
Capital expenditures
$ (1,854)
$ (17,897)
Interest paid
(57,867)
(67,347)
Income taxes (paid) refunded
185
(182)
Mandatory contributions to defined retirement plans
(277)
(297)
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/scripps-reports-q1-2025-financial-results-302450542.html
SOURCE The E.W. Scripps Company
You may like
Technology
MARIANA MINERALS RESTARTS UTAH COPPER MINE AS THE WORLD’S ONLY AUTONOMOUS-FIRST MINE AND REFINERY
Published
3 hours agoon
April 27, 2026By
Software-first minerals company integrates autonomous haulage, drilling, and robotic sensing across mining and refining under a single AI operating platform
SAN JUAN COUNTY, Utah, April 27, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Mariana Minerals, the world’s only software-first, vertically integrated minerals company, today announced the restart of mining operations at Copper One in southeastern Utah. The restart marks a milestone in mining history: Copper One becomes the world’s first mine to deploy autonomous tools across all three operational domains (mining, refining, and capital project execution) unified under a single operating system.
Mariana acquired Lisbon Valley Mining Company in Q4 2025, gaining control of a roughly 10,000-acre permitted land package that has produced high-purity copper cathode since 2009. While refinery operations continued uninterrupted, mining was paused in late 2024. Mining operations resume this month with autonomous systems and autonomous orchestration active from day one.
“Copper One will be the first mine where delivering end-to-end autonomy is the priority, where it’s being rapidly deployed across mining and refining operations and coordinated by our internal software stack. That’s what MarianaOS makes possible. We chose to prove it here because the stakes are real: the U.S. has a structural copper deficit, and the window to close it is narrowing. We’re producing now and ramping output aggressively, with the primary goal of achieving fully-autonomous mining operations,” said Turner Caldwell, Co-Founder & CEO, Mariana Minerals.
MarianaOS: An Autonomy-First Mining Operating System
What makes Copper One unprecedented is not any single piece of autonomous equipment, but the intelligence layer coordinating them. MarianaOS integrates three core subsystems, MineOS, PlantOS, and CapitalProjectOS, into a unified platform spanning project execution through copper production.
On the mining side, Copper One will begin with integrating three best-in-class autonomous equipment platforms. Pronto’s turnkey Autonomous Haulage System (AHS) uses camera-based machine learning and Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) to enable fully driverless haul truck operation, with OEM-agnostic retrofit capability across mixed fleets. Sandvik’s AutoMine® platform enables autonomous production drilling, allowing operators to simultaneously monitor multiple surface machine operations from a remote-operations control center. And Boston Dynamics’ Spot quadruped robots autonomously patrol the open pit, heap leach pad, and solvent extraction-electrowinning (SX-EW) refinery infrastructure. All of these data feed directly into MineOS, enabling fleet-wide optimization and continuous improvement.
PlantOS extends autonomous operations into refining by integrating real-time sensor data across the entire refining process (solution chemistry, flow rates, temperature, and electrowinning cell performance) into a unified control system. Machine learning models predict process drift, automatically adjust reagent dosing, and flags maintenance needs before they impact output. The result is a continuously optimized refinery that operates with minimal human intervention.
CapitalProjectOS redefines how capital-intensive infrastructure projects are planned and executed. Traditional projects often take a decade or more and frequently suffer from chronic cost overruns. CapitalProjectOS integrates process development, engineering, procurement, construction, and commissioning data into a single platform that enables real-time progress tracking, predictive risk modeling, and automated schedule optimization. At Copper One, CapitalProjectOS is managing the expansion roadmap to scale output to 50,000 metric tons per year, coordinating heap leach pad expansions, refinery upgrades, and autonomous equipment deployment in parallel.
Built to Move Fast
While Mariana is actively constructing and developing greenfield projects – with the goal of compressing engineering, procurement, construction, and commissioning timelines leveraging CapitalProjectOS – Copper One is uniquely positioned to accelerate deployment of MarianaOS at scale. With an existing open pit mine, heap leach pad, and SX-EW refining infrastructure already in place, Mariana will rapidly ramp production that would take years to replicate elsewhere.
Mariana’s longer-term plan is to scale Copper One output to 50,000 metric tons per year of high-purity copper cathode by 2030, leveraging additional proven deposits on the property and integrating copper scrap recycling.
A Critical Supply Gap
The U.S. currently imports approximately 50% of its refined copper. With domestic demand projected to nearly double by 2035 — driven by AI data centers, defense systems, EVs, and grid modernization — the supply gap is a national security issue. The Trump Administration’s Section 232 investigation cited copper imports as a direct concern, and the Pentagon has identified critical minerals vulnerability as a threat to the defense industrial base.
Domestic operations like Copper One, and the step-change in productivity that autonomous operations deliver, have become strategically essential.
About Mariana Minerals
Mariana engineers, builds, and operates mines and refineries, using proprietary AI and machine learning tools to accelerate project execution and optimize production across critically needed metals. Copper One is Mariana’s second active project, alongside Lithium One, the world’s first GWh-scale lithium extraction facility from oil and gas produced water, currently under construction in East Texas. Mariana has raised $120 million in total capital, including a Series A led by Andreessen Horowitz with participation from Breakthrough Energy Ventures, Khosla Ventures, and strategic investors.
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/mariana-minerals-restarts-utah-copper-mine-as-the-worlds-only-autonomous-first-mine-and-refinery-302753491.html
SOURCE Mariana Minerals
Technology
State CISOs Report Lower Confidence Across the Public Sector Cyber Ecosystem, 2026 NASCIO-Deloitte Survey Finds
Published
3 hours agoon
April 27, 2026By
The 2026 National Association of Chief Information Officers – Deloitte biennial cybersecurity study finds state officials face increasingly sophisticated threats, including new artificial intelligence-enabled tactics, and highlights steps CISOs are taking to better protect public data and critical digital services
NEW YORK, April 27, 2026 /PRNewswire/ —
Key takeaways
The survey of Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) from all 50 states and two territories found that just 26% of state CISOs are “extremely” or “very” confident that their state’s information assets are protected from cyber threats, down from 48% in 2022.Implementing effectiveness metrics is now CISOs’ top priority: 49% named it a top cybersecurity initiative in 2026, up from 15% in 2022.Nearly all state CISOs (94%) said they are involved in developing Generative AI security policies and 84% are involved in Generative AI strategy development.Budget pressure is rising with 16% of CISOs reporting their budgets have been cut, up from none in 2024.The percentage of CISOs who described themselves as “not very confident” in the ability of local government and public higher education to secure public data rose significantly, from 35% in 2022 to 63% in 2026.
Why this decline in confidence matters
States share data and systems with counties, cities, and public colleges and universities, so a vulnerability in one network can cascade, exposing personal information, disrupting essential services and driving costly incident response. As attackers adopt AI-enabled tactics, the urgency is growing for faster coordination, clearer policy and stronger baseline defenses across the public sector. This may explain why roughly one-fifth of CISOs indicated that their states were moving toward a “whole-of-state” approach to cybersecurity.
Metrics reporting becomes CISOs’ top priority
Top priorities for CISOs have shifted since the 2024 survey. When asked to identify their states’ top cybersecurity initiatives for 2026, half of CISOs named implementing effectiveness metrics (49%, up from 25% in 2024 and 15% in 2022). Capturing the effectiveness of cyber spending can be difficult, but without metrics, it is challenging to show the benefits of investments. Tracking operational, compliance and risk-based key performance indicators, such as incident response time and phishing click rate, can help demonstrate the return on cyber investment.
AI both accelerates threats and becomes a frontline defense
AI is accelerating the scale and sophistication of attacks targeting public sector systems, making it easier and cheaper for adversaries to generate and automate cyberattacks. CISOs also point to an emerging threat toolkit, including deepfakes that can fool people and evade detection, AI agents that probe for weaknesses and adapt, and AI-driven ransomware-as-a-service operations.
At the same time, CISOs describe AI as a practical way to keep pace, using it to triage security alerts, summarize events, and explore faster report creation, threat identification and training. Several states are already utilizing Generative AI in core security operations, including security information and event management (SIEM) and security orchestration, automation and response (SOAR). The report also underscores how central CISOs have become to state AI efforts.
Key quotes
“We’re seeing more states move toward a ‘whole-of-state’ cybersecurity approach where the state helps extend protection beyond state agencies to local governments, public education and other critical entities that can become an entry point for attackers. At its core, it’s about scaling capabilities through shared services and better collaboration so a weakness in one part of the ecosystem doesn’t become a statewide incident. Many states are looking to scale capabilities through security operations centers and regional support, so counties, cities and schools can benefit from the same cyber-defense muscle as the enterprise.”
Mike Wyatt, Stale local and higher education cyber risk leader, Deloitte
“It’s an encouraging development that state CISOs are being placed at the center of Generative AI security. They are helping shape the strategy, establishing security policies and reviewing proposed use cases. By being involved from the beginning, CISOs are helping governments move faster without sacrificing safeguards because security and governance complement each other. We’re also seeing CISOs explore practical uses of AI to strengthen day-to-day defense, while putting clearer guardrails around responsible uses.”
Meredith Ward, deputy executive director, NASCIO
Additional data
To read the 2026 NASCIO-Deloitte report in its entirety, click here.
About NASCIO
The National Association of State Chief Information Officers is the premier network and resource for state CIOs and a leading advocate for technology policy at all levels of government. NASCIO represents state chief information officers and information technology executives from the states, territories, and the District of Columbia. For more information about NASCIO visit www.nascio.org.
As used in this document, “Deloitte” means Deloitte & Touche LLP, a subsidiary of Deloitte LLP. Please see www.deloitte.com/us/about for a detailed description of our legal structure. Certain services may not be available to attest clients under the rules and regulations of public accounting.
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/state-cisos-report-lower-confidence-across-the-public-sector-cyber-ecosystem-2026-nascio-deloitte-survey-finds-302751899.html
SOURCE Deloitte
Technology
Duck Creek Kicks Off Formation ’26 as Strong Fiscal Momentum Signals Accelerating Demand for its Intelligent Core Insurance Platform
Published
3 hours agoon
April 27, 2026By
Company highlights double-digit SaaS growth, global expansion, and launch of its new agentic AI platform as industry leaders gather in Orlando
BOSTON, April 27, 2026 /CNW/ — Duck Creek Technologies, the intelligent core of insurance, today kicks off Formation ’26: Agents of Innovation, its flagship user conference, as the company builds strong momentum in the first half of fiscal 2026, marked by double-digit year-over-year SaaS ARR growth fueled by new logos and expansion across its global customer base.
Duck Creek’s strong start to fiscal 2026 reflects this demand, with double-digit new customer wins and existing customer expansions across its core, specialty, and AI-powered solutions. Adoption of Duck Creek’s intelligent cloud continues to scale globally. Insurers are selecting Duck Creek for its enterprise depth including policy, billing, claims, rating, loss control, reinsurance, distribution management, and payments solutions to operate faster, more accurately, and maintain regulatory compliance.
“We are expanding our leadership in insurance technology with more than 370 customers globally. Including 33 of the top 50 North American insurers,” said Hardeep Gulati, Chief Executive Officer of Duck Creek. “Insurers modernizing their core systems are looking for more from their technology. They need a trusted partner like Duck Creek with proven enterprise scale and speed-to-value to help them drive profitable impact and growth. At Formation, we are excited to announce our new agentic platform that will help further improve the combined ratios for insurers with more than $150B in premium flowing through Duck Creek annually.”
Formation ’26 will bring together more than 800 insurance professionals, ecosystem partners, and industry leaders to explore how technology is transforming the insurance lifecycle. The event underscores growing market demand for intelligent, cloud-native platforms that enable insurers to accelerate cloud migration, product development, and automate core insurance workflows to accelerate decision-making and improve operational agility. A highlight of the event will be Duck Creek unveiling its agentic AI platform and showcasing live demonstrations of agentic applications and agents.
Formation ’26 will feature a distinguished lineup of guest speakers joining Gulati during his keynote, including Stephen Lord, Global CIO of AXIS Capital, and Monti Saroya, Senior Managing Director and Co-Head of the Flagship Fund at Vista Equity Partners. Together, they will share perspectives on large-scale transformation, AI adoption, and the future of agentic insurance.
The conference will also include a customer panel moderated by Chief Operating Officer Chris McCloskey, featuring leaders from Core Specialty, Europ Assistance, and Arbella Insurance, who will discuss their transformation journeys and business outcomes achieved through modern core systems. An analyst panel moderated by SVP of Sales William Magowan will bring together experts from AM Best, Celent, and Datos Insights to provide an external view on market trends and innovation benchmarks.
Customer Momentum
Millers Mutual Insurance advanced its modernization strategy with Duck Creek OnDemand, implementing Policy, Billing, and Reinsurance Clarity to modernize its core systems and support continued growth in the multifamily housing insurance market.Anchor Group Management Inc. partnered with Duck Creek to modernize its insurance payments infrastructure, enabling more streamlined billing processes and improved digital payment experiences for policyholders.Frankenmuth Insurance adopted Duck Creek OnDemand Distribution Management to transform how it manages agencies and producers, increasing visibility, improving operational efficiency, and strengthening collaboration across its distribution network.Indigo Insurance turned to Duck Creek OnDemand to accelerate its modernization strategy and support rapid growth, gaining a scalable cloud-based core platform designed to bring new products to market faster.Encova Insurance went live on an upgraded Duck Creek OnDemand Distribution Management system, unifying agency operations across lines of business, streamlining onboarding, and improving the overall agent experience.New Zealand’s Medical Assurance Society (MAS) selected Duck Creek’s full suite of core solutions delivered via OnDemand to modernize its general insurance business, enhance member experiences, and support a broader digital and data-driven transformation.Country-Wide Insurance selected Duck Creek Clarity to strengthen its data and analytics capabilities, enabling real-time insights and preparing for its upcoming OnDemand go-live with Active Delivery.Fortegra selected Duck Creek Reinsurance and Duck Creek Clarity to modernize financial operations, improve portfolio transparency, and support continued growth across products, geographies, and distribution models.Duck Creek secured more than a dozen additional new customer engagements across commercial specialty and personal lines.
Industry Recognition
Named a Leader in the 2025 Gartner Magic Quadrant for SaaS P&C Insurance Core Platforms North America, marking the seventh consecutive year the company has been recognized as a Leader.Named a Leader in the Everest Group 2025 Underwriting Orchestration Products PEAK Matrix Assessment, recognizing Duck Creek’s strength in delivering AI-driven underwriting, integrated core workflows, and measurable value across global P&C carriers.Featured in Everest Group’s 2026 Voice of the Customer Report for Insurance CXOPs, outperforming both core system peers and the market average, with customers citing strengths in seamless implementation, deep core system integration, and enterprise scalability and more.Received the 2025 IDC FinTech Real Results Award for Insurance Transformation for measurable customer outcomes.
About Duck Creek
Duck Creek is the intelligent core that leading insurers choose to build on. Purpose-built for property and casualty (P&C) and general insurance, Duck Creek unifies the full insurance lifecycle on a single platform with one data foundation. As an agentic platform, it connects intelligence across underwriting, policy, billing, claims, and payments workflows where decisions are made and compliance is non-negotiable. Duck Creek enables carriers to launch products faster, adapt quickly to change, and grow with precision and confidence. Solutions are available individually or as a full suite via Duck Creek OnDemand. Visit www.duckcreek.com and follow Duck Creek on LinkedIn and X.
Media Contacts:
Marianne Dempsey / Tara Stred
duckcreek@threeringsinc.com
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/duck-creek-kicks-off-formation-26-as-strong-fiscal-momentum-signals-accelerating-demand-for-its-intelligent-core-insurance-platform-302753478.html
SOURCE Duck Creek Technologies, Inc.
ETH price up 10% in April, so why is Ethereum Foundation selling?
First 21-week trend line reclaim since October 2025: Five things to know in Bitcoin this week
MARIANA MINERALS RESTARTS UTAH COPPER MINE AS THE WORLD’S ONLY AUTONOMOUS-FIRST MINE AND REFINERY
Send Rakhi to UK swiftly with UK Gifts Portal
Whiteboard Series with NEAR | Ep: 45 Joel Thorstensson from ceramic.network
New Gooseneck Omni Antennas Offer Enhanced Signals in a Durable Package
Why You Should Build on #NEAR – Co-founder Illia Polosukhin at CV Labs
Whiteboard Series with NEAR | Ep: 45 Joel Thorstensson from ceramic.network
NEAR End of Year Town Hall 2021: The Open Web World, MetaBUILD 2 Hackathon and 2021 recap
Trending
-
Coin Market5 days agoThailand regulator mulls crypto futures expansion in licensing overhaul
-
Coin Market5 days agoLazarus-linked macOS malware hits crypto and fintech firms
-
Technology4 days agoSBI Life Insurance registers New Business Premium of ₹42,551 crores for the year ended on 31st March, 2026
-
Technology4 days agoCGI renews global SAP S/4HANA operations and SAP BTP operations certifications, reinforcing its consistent, quality delivery at scale
-
Technology3 days agoLifeWave’s “Code of Creation” Debuts at Sold-Out Beverly Hills Film Festival
-
Technology5 days agoMILLROCK TECHNOLOGY APPOINTS NEIL A. GOLDMAN AS CFO
-
Technology5 days agoRhythMedix Launches Next-Generation RhythmStar® SL Cardiac Monitor
-
Technology4 days agoGreenzie releases 2025 Annual Safety Report, documenting multi-year safety performance at commercial scale
