The Rangers, who reached the Stanley Cup finals, will show a season-ticket renewal rate of 93 percent, and the Knicks, who missed the playoffs, will announce at 91 percent during the Garden’s earnings call Wednesday.

Though the Knicks are coming off a 37-45 season, the $60 million hiring of team president Phil Jackson appears to have created a sense of optimism among their fan base. The Rangers’ renewal rate was the highest in seven years, though Blueshirts fans will see an average ticket price hike of 3 percent.

The Knicks didn’t raise ticket prices because they missed the playoffs, as has been the Garden’s practice over the last 10 years.

The earnings call also will reveal the Knicks and Rangers have sold out of season tickets. The Knicks have done so for the fifth straight season, the Rangers for the eighth. Projections on the call also will reveal the two clubs expect to sell out every game this season. The Knicks sell-out streak is at five seasons, the Rangers at eight.

The last time the Knicks missed the playoffs — 2009-10 — their renewal rate was also 91 percent. But that was entering the summer many Knicks fans thought they would be landing LeBron James as a free agent. Instead, they signed Amar’e Stoudemire.