Las Vegas Review-Journal

Wynn ‘refreshing’ its board

New CEO announces departures of two from criticized panel

- By Todd Prince Las Vegas Review-journal

Wynn Resorts Chief Executive Officer Matt Maddox on Wednesday announced two board members will be leaving as he sought to reassure investors the corporate culture is changing amid lawsuits alleging directors ignored sexual harassment claims.

Ray Irani, 83, is stepping down, and Alvin Shoemaker, 79, has said he will not seek re-election, Maddox told investors and analysts on his first public conference call as CEO since taking the helm last month. Maddox did not take questions.

Shoemaker has been a board member since December

2002, making him the second-longest serving director after former Gov. Bob Miller. Irani, a member of the Wynn Corporate Governance Committee, has been on the board since 2007. Miller, 72, has not responded to multiple requests to comment on his plans.

Wynn Resorts is “expanding and refreshing” the board and is “actively engaged with new candidates,” Maddox told investors on the 10-min

WYNN

ute, impromptu call.

The board has come under intense criticism for failing to investigat­e complaints of sexual harassment against Wynn that go back decades. The 10-member board lacked diversity with just one female director and had been too beholden to Wynn, who also served as its chairman until he stepped down Feb. 6, critics said.

“These two changes are not a surprise,” said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, senior associate dean at Yale School of Management. “Adding some women to the board is a good idea, but more of this board needs to be changed over the evident failure of management oversight if not even negligence or collaborat­ion with any alleged misconduct at the top.”

The sexual harassment accusation­s against Steve Wynn sparked gaming regulators in Nevada, Massachuse­tts and Macau to launch investigat­ions. It also raised concerns the reputation­al damage could hurt Wynn Resorts business and force the company to change its name.

But the presentati­on by Maddox addressed both concerns. The “power of the Wynn brand makes Wynn Las Vegas the destinatio­n of choice for the most discerning internatio­nal customers,” Maddox said in his presentati­on.

The new CEO told investors and analysts that Wynn Resorts will raise its quarterly dividend 50 percent to 75 cents. The increase, effective this quarter, lifted shares 2.7 percent after hours to $173.75. Wynn shares are still down about 13 percent from their January peak.

Strong financials

Maddox also gave investors a rosy snapshot of company performanc­e during the first two months of the year.

Wynn Resorts’ adjusted property earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on surged between 27 percent and 34 percent through Feb. 28, driven by a strong Chinese New Year, he said.

Property earnings at Wynn Palace, which opened in the Cotai section of Macau in 2016, is up nearly 100 percent over the first two months of the year. Wynn Macau is up about 30 percent. Those two properties account for roughly 70 percent of company earnings.

Las Vegas adjusted property earnings are down as much as 14 percent, driven by lower table game win of 26 percent versus 32 percent in the year-earlier period. But all other property segments in Las Vegas rose over the first two months with revenue per available room up 11 percent.

Wynn convention-and-meetings demand this year looks strong, Maddox told the investors and analysts. The company is pushing ahead with developing the $360 million convention expansion on the former golf course, he said. But he hinted at changes to Park Paradise plans, saying the company is ”revisiting and scoping” the project.

Contact Todd Prince at 702 3830386 or tprince@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @toddprince­tv on Twitter.

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