During its first quarter earnings report this year, Six Flags Entertainment, North America’s largest theme park company, told investors that attendance declined 17 percent. At the time, CEO Richard Zimmerman told investors that inclement weather was to blame for the slow start to the season, as rainstorms nationwide slowed guests’ visits to the parks.

With those numbers in the rearview mirror, Zimmerman hoped to deliver better news when he met with investors to give the company’s second-quarter earnings, but it was not to be, and Zimmerman paid the price for Six Flags’ decline.
During the second quarter earnings call, Zimmerman told investors that Six Flags saw a $100 million revenue decline, a nine percent attendance decline, and an eight percent season pass purchase decline. Before announcing the numbers, Zimmerman told investors he would step down as CEO as soon as the Board could find a replacement.

Now, the Six Flags decline has claimed another victim in upper management. This week, Six Flags executive chairman Selim Bassoul announced that he would be stepping down from the company at the end of the year.
Six Flags had already cut hundreds of management positions earlier this year to streamline the company after the merger with Cedar Fair, but now it is losing two of its top executives. Six Flags also cuts hundreds of in-park positions, as well as park offerings for the upcoming Halloween and Christmas seasons at some parks nationwide.

With this latest loss for Six Flags, fans are growing even more concerned about the company’s future and its theme parks. With more top executives leaving the company, this could mean that new management will sell or close some of the company’s remaining parks.
Dennis Speigel, a consultant who has studied the amusement park industry for decades and is the president of International Theme Park Services in Cincinnati, told Cleveland.com that the company only has two choices to get back to solvency: sell up to half of its parks or declare bankruptcy. Neither option is optimal, but Speigel believes Six Flags could unload 10-12 parks to help balance its books.

However, that will be the job for a new CEO and executive chairman, as the company now needs to fill two upper management positions.
What do you think the future holds for Six Flags’ theme parks? Let us know in the comments.