Business World

Wynn’s new Macau casino delivers forecast-topping 1st quarter profit

- Bloomberg

A NEW CASINO in Macau paid off nicely for Wynn Resorts Ltd.

The company founded by Steve Wynn reported first-quarter results that easily topped analysts’ forecasts, benefiting from the new Wynn Palace in the Chinese gambling enclave and improvemen­t in its home market of Las Vegas.

Shares in the local unit, Wynn Macau Ltd., gained as much as 5.1% in Hong Kong trading Wednesday. The Bloomberg Intelligen­ce index of Macau stocks rose as much as 3.5% while the Hang Seng Index gained 0.7%. Wynn shares rose as much as 4.4% to $123.47 in extended trading.

Profit for Wynn Resorts excluding some items grew to $1.24 a share, beating the 98-cent average of analysts’ estimates. Revenue jumped by almost half to $1.48 billion, the company said Tuesday in a statement, also topping forecasts.

Macau is bouncing back from a three-year slump triggered by a Chinese government crackdown on corruption that prompted high rollers to shun the casinos. Gambling revenue in the region rose 13% to $7.92 billion in the first quarter, the strongest growth since a recovery began last August.

“You can see the numbers, business is good for us,” Wynn said on a conference call, adding that he saw a “resurgence of activity at the top end in China.”

Wynn Macau’s adjusted property earnings increased 53% to $293 million, above the consensus of $254 million reported by Union Gaming. The Wynn Palace reported earnings of $112 million.

Wynn in particular benefited from the return of VIP players, who generated a larger increase in revenue in the quarter than mass-market bettors industry wide.

Wynn Resorts got off to a slow start with the $4.2 billion Wynn Palace, which opened in Macau last August. Constructi­on around the resort impeded access, executives said last year.

A new casino under constructi­on in Boston will cost $2.4 billion, the company said Tuesday, up from the original $1.6 billion projection in 2014. Additional meeting space and higherthan-expected bids contribute­d to the increase, the executive said.

The 75-year-old entreprene­ur said the board approved plans to spend $400 million to $500 million building a lake and meeting center behind Wynn’s Las Vegas casinos. Constructi­on could begin in December. Wynn said he was holding off on a planned 2,000-room hotel on the property until he sees how the first wave of additions perform.

The CEO is convinced new attraction­s in Las Vegas, such as the planned move of the Oakland Raiders football team, will enhance the city’s long-term appeal as a tourist destinatio­n.

“This town is a real safe bet,” he said. —

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