TKO's strong earnings sent Wall Street a warning anyway
TKO Group Holdings (TKO) delivered a quarter that generally offers Wall Street a lot to appreciate.
Revenue climbed 26%. Net income rose. Adjusted EBITDA increased 32%. The company reiterated its full-year guidance and approved a further $1 billion in stock buybacks.
On the surface it appeared like a clear victory.
But the quarter also issued a signal investors could not ignore.
The warning was not that TKO is losing steam. The company's fastest growing revenue stream is far less profitable than UFC or WWE.
That is important since TKO is no longer merely a combat-sports and wrestling company. It's also evolving into a bigger sports media, hospitality and live-experiences platform.
That opens up more growth avenues for the organization.
It also provides a fresh question for Wall Street to answer: Can TKO's growing company produce the same profit quality as its main UFC and WWE brands?
"TKO is off to a formidable start in 2026, with strong results and continued momentum across each of our businesses," Executive Chair and CEO Ariel Emanuel said.
TKO's UFC and WWE businesses remain profit machines
UFC is one of the most valued assets in TKO's portfolio.
The division recorded $401.2 million in revenue in the first quarter, up 12% year over year. The rise was mostly driven by higher media-rights payments related to the company's new Paramount distribution arrangement, which started in January.
UFC also achieved $254.5 million of Adjusted EBITDA, providing the organization with a 63% Adjusted EBITDA margin.
That's the kind of margin profile that investors adore.
WWE also had a solid quarter.
Revenue jumped 22% to $475.7 million, boosted by media-rights agreements with Netflix and ESPN, higher live-event income and overseas shows such as the Royal Rumble in Saudi Arabia. WWE delivered $256.1 million of Adjusted EBITDA, reflecting a 54% segment margin.
Those results are why investors are still interested in TKO.
UFC and WWE aren't merely popular entertainment brands. These are high-margin media enterprises with worldwide audiences, substantial rights deals and strong live event demand.
But the biggest revenue rise in the quarter wasn't from UFC or WWE.
That's where the caution begins.
TKO's fastest-growing segment has a margin problem
TKO's IMG business, which includes IMG and On Location, reported first-quarter revenue of $655.4 million.
That was more than UFC and WWE combined in revenue.
It was also up 38% from a year ago and the company's fastest growing primary category. Main drivers for the rise were the hospitality sales linked to the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics.
That seems like wonderful news, and in many ways it is.
More Streaming:
- Paramount Warner Bros. hostile bid has a catch for cable networks
- Apple TV adds key feature Netflix dropped
- Facebook makes daring move to challenge Disney, Netflix
On Location gives TKO the chance to be part of huge global sporting events like the FIFA World Cup. On Location's FIFA World Cup relationship was identified by management as a crucial summer stimulus for the company.
At IMG, meanwhile, adjusted EBITDA was barely $97.3 million.
That equals a 15% Adjusted EBITDA margin.
And it's that margin discrepancy that's likely why TKO's earnings report left as many questions as answers.
TKO first-quarter key takeaways
- Revenue rose 26% to $1.597 billion.
- Net income increased to $249.8 million.
- Adjusted EBITDA climbed 32% to $549.8 million.
- UFC Adjusted EBITDA margin was 63%.
- WWE Adjusted EBITDA margin was 54%.
- IMG Adjusted EBITDA margin was 15%.
- TKO reaffirmed full-year 2026 revenue guidance of $5.675 billion to $5.775 billion.
- TKO authorized up to an additional $1 billion in share repurchases.
The problem is not that IMG is a bad business.
The problem is, TKO's fastest-growing company doesn't appear to be nearly as profitable as UFC or WWE.
That helps to understand why investors may have seen through the headline growth.
This company is built on premium sports intellectual property and revenue quality is as important as revenue growth.
TKO must prove its bigger platform can protect margins
TKO's quarter wasn't that bad.
The company increased revenue, improved profitability, generated excellent cash flow and returned capital to owners. It also finished the quarter with momentum in UFC, WWE, IMG, On Location, PBR and boxing projects.
Wall Street, however, found reasons to stop.
Management did not reiterate guidance; it raised guidance. Full-year 2026 revenue is still expected to be in the range of $5.675 billion to $5.775 billion, and adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $2.24 billion to $2.29 billion.
Second, TKO completed the quarter with a gross debt of $4.67 billion.
Third, TKO's growth mix is changing.
IMG and On Location are getting a bigger piece of the income pie, benefiting from big global events but they have considerably lower margins than UFC and WWE today.
That doesn't spoil the TKO tale.
So the next chapter is more significant.
Now TKO is not required to prove the worth of UFC and WWE. Wall Street understands that by now.
The next trick for the corporation will be to prove that its growing sports hospitality and live-events empire can be more than a revenue story.
Related: Disney's next growth story isn't parks or movies
The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.
This story was originally published June 7, 2026 at 1:07 PM.