Sharechat Logo

UPDATE: SkyCity first-half profit rises 30%, helped by 'high rollers'

Thursday 11th February 2016

Text too small?

SkyCity Entertainment Group, which has four casinos in New Zealand and two in Australia, posted a 30 percent gain in first-half profit, citing improvements across all its properties and lower funding costs.

Net profit rose to $71 million, or 12 cents per share, in the six months ended Dec. 31, from $54.6 million, or 9.3 cents, a year earlier, the Auckland-based company said in a statement. That's at the top end of the company's forecast range of $69 million to $71 million. Revenue increased 14 percent to $566 million.

SkyCity's New Zealand casinos are benefiting from the country's record tourism and migration while lower interest rates underpin consumer spending. Meanwhile in Australia, where local conditions are softer following the end of the country's lucrative mining boom and car manufacturing, SkyCity wants to lure more high roller gamblers from Asia to bolster activity at its Adelaide and Darwin casinos. Its international business, the term it uses for high roller gamblers, had record activity for the period with group turnover up 51 percent to $7.2 billion.

"We have continued to achieve strong growth across our New Zealand properties and International Business," said chief executive Nigel Morrison. He said trading in January was broadly consistent with the trends seen in the first half of the year.

First-half earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation rose 22 percent to $171.6 million, from $140.8 million in the year earlier period. That’s within the company’s forecast range of $170 million to $173 million.

At its flagship Auckland casino, ebitda increased 8.9 percent to $135.4 million as revenue advanced 7.4 percent to $324.9 million.

“The continued momentum in Auckland reflects the benefits of the significant investment in the property over the past few years and positive external factors which remain supportive of our underlying business with record low interest rates, record high net migration and strong tourist inflows continuing to support discretionary spending levels,” Morrison said.

SkyCity anticipates the Auckland business will benefit from government gaming concessions which were triggered on Nov. 11 in recognition of SkyCity’s $470 million Convention Centre development. 

Morrison said the concessions would allow the Auckland business to lift its activity during peak period, noting it had a record revenue week over the Christmas and New Year period. He declined to disclose the amount of revenue.

At the company’s Adelaide casino, singled out last year as an underperformer, ebitda jumped 59 percent to A$21.4 million as revenue advanced 19 percent to A$103.6 million.

Adelaide’s improvement was driven by significant growth in its international business, as it lured more VIP customers visiting the eastern seaboard of Australia, as well as strong food and beverage activity, improved margins and cost savings.

“Whilst we are pleased with the improved performance in Adelaide, challenges remain delivering growth in a soft local market,” Morrison said. "We have done a lot of the hard work and we are looking forward to building the revenues of that business now that we've invested the capital. The restaurants are now doing well and certainly we are getting very good growth in attracting international high rollers to Adelaide."

The Adelaide property is hindered by not having a hotel or carpark and although the company is in the process of negotiating agreements to secure those, they were still two to three years away, he said. 

Still, Adelaide would now be operating from a lower cost base and was expected to improve future revenue and earnings, he said.

"Once all those things are done, the potential for growth in Adelaide is very exciting."

In Darwin, ebitda increased 6.9 percent to A$23.1 million as revenue rose 2.6 percent to A$75 million. 

Morrison said the local market in Darwin is more  "challenging" as the number of workers involved in the construction of the INPEX liquid petroleum plant winds down.

SkyCity is in talks with local officials to try and get more direct flights from Asia into Darwin to bring in more VIP gamblers, which would help bolster the business.

"Without having good jet service or carrier service with business class or first class flights out of Southeast Asia and into Darwin, it does make it difficult to attract VIP players, notwithstanding that the proximity to Darwin of southeast Asia is very very good and that's why we think the potential for Darwin in that business is significant but the airlift is the challenge," he said.

The company will pay a first-half dividend of 10.5 cents a share on March 18, up from 10 cents a year earlier.

There has been a lot of trading in Skycity shares with average volume being 1.38 million shares in the last 3 months” said Kevin Dutta-Gupta, GM Research at Investment Research Group (IRG) Limited.

“While Auckland and Hamilton increased revenue by 7.4% and 9.9% respectively, Skycity’s Queenstown and other business almost doubled its revenue from $7 million to $13.7 million compared to the previous corresponding period due to significant IB and local gaming activity.

Mr. Dutta-Gupta at IRG Limited also stated "In Australia, Adelaide improved revenues by 18.7% while Darwin was comparatively flat with an increase of 2.6% only. Capital expenditure is expected to increase over the next few years due to NZICC, Hobson Street hotel project and Adelaide redevelopment. However, following the recent $125m NZ bond issue, SKYCITY now has $322m of committed undrawn bank facilities – sufficient headroom to fund the committed NZICC and Hobson St hotel projects. Current debt funding headroom is expected to be sufficient to meet expected funding requirements until at least the start of FY18 as stated by Skycity.”

The shares slipped 0.9 percent to $4.40, and have gained 14 percent the past year. The stock is rated a 'hold', according to 11 analyst recommendations compiled by Reuters, with a mean target price of $4.64.

 

 

 

BusinessDesk.co.nz



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

Now is the time to reassess your investments
Now is the time to reassess your investments
Fonterra looking to lift China's importance in new strategy
A2, Synlait shares climb as takeover bid revives optimism about Chinese appetite for milk
Service sector activity eases in August but still expanding
Lumpy imports drive bigger July trade deficit than expected
Nimbys, carparks and the status quo under threat as govt tells big cities: grow up and out
Dairy manufacturers got better prices in June quarter
Orr defends RBNZ rate cut, says monetary policy looks ahead, not behind
RBNZ's Orr says investors need to put their money to work