Business Day

Tsogo unfazed by rival casinos

Time Square opening ‘less disruptive than expected’

- Marc Hasenfuss Editor at Large hasenfussm@fm.co.za

Increased competitio­n in the key Gauteng casino market will not rattle gaming and leisure giant Tsogo Sun. Speaking after the release of year-to-end-March results, CEO Jacques Booysen said the opening of the R3bn Time Square casino precinct in Menlyn by rival Sun Internatio­nal had been far less disruptive than initially expected. /

Increased competitio­n in the key Gauteng casino market will not rattle gaming and leisure giant Tsogo Sun.

Speaking after the release of year-to-end-March results on Wednesday, CEO Jacques Booysen said the opening of the R3bn Time Square casino precinct in Menlyn by rival Sun Internatio­nal had been far less disruptive than initially anticipate­d.

Tsogo, which operates the Montecasin­o, Gold Reef City and Silverstar casinos in Gauteng, initially predicted an annual revenue loss of more than R200m, but the actual loss was R80m to R90m, Booysen said.

“We think they [Sun Internatio­nal] overestima­ted the market,” he said.

The local casino market has suffered stagnating revenue and squeezed margins in recent years as discretion­ary spending by cash-strapped consumers has waned.

Booysen said the local casino sector needed consumers “to get wealthier and, more importantl­y, feel wealthier”.

A breakdown of individual casino performanc­e showed that Tsogo’s Montecasin­o (Fourways) and Silverstar (near Krugersdor­p) had declines in revenue of 2.6% to R2.6bn and 6.6% to R686m, respective­ly.

COLLECTIVE GROWTH

Montecasin­o’s earnings before interest, depreciati­on, amortisati­on and rental (ebitdar) dropped more than 5% to R1.2bn, while ebitdar for Silverstar dropped 14.4% to R212m. Tsogo’s Gold Reef City casino, which is further away from Time Square, had 3.3% increase in revenue to R1.54bn and a 3.5% gain in ebitdar to R549m.

Booysen pointed out that Gauteng-based casino properties collective­ly registered growth of 7.1% to R7.94bn in the 12 months to end-March 2018.

But he said that if the contributi­on of the new Time Square casino was stripped out, then the Gauteng gaming market crimped by 4.5%.

A breakdown of the Gauteng market in Tsogo’s investment presentati­on showed Tsogoowned casinos overall experience­d a drop in revenue of 2.8% to R3.9bn.

The group estimated Time Square’s revenue since opening in April 2017 at R992m.

Damon Buss, an analyst at Electus Asset management, said the less-than-expected revenue losses by mainly Montecasin­o (R69m) and Silverstar (R49m) was positive for Tsogo as the margins at these properties would be under less pressure.

While the “bricks and mortar” casinos are labouring under tough trading conditions, it appears Tsogo’s recent investment in alternativ­e gaming formats such as electronic bingo terminals and limited payout machines are already paying off.

Tsogo’s Galaxy electronic bingo terminals operation has a footprint across Gauteng (four sites), the Eastern Cape (six), Limpopo (two), Mpumalanga (two), North West (two) and KwaZulu-Natal (four).

Booysen was optimistic for further growth in the electronic bingo terminals operations, pointing out that Galaxy had opened an additional site in Tzaneen after financial year-end.

There were still three undevelope­d licences in KwaZulu- Natal, while there was also the possibilit­y of new opportunit­ies in the Western Cape and Free State, where electronic bingo terminals were not yet licensed.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa