Las Vegas Review-Journal

At Everi, outlook remains chipper

CEO likes future of cashless tech

- By Mike Shoro Las Vegas Review-journal

Despite a loss in quarterly sales, Las Vegas-based gaming company Everi Holdings Inc. said its cashless gaming systems are providing a boost during the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Tuesday, the company reported a net loss of $68.5 million during the second quarter and also saw only $38.7 million in revenue, compared with $129.7 million during the same quarter last year.

But Everi CEO Michael Rumbolz told shareholde­rs Tuesday that the company had a better-than-expected second quarter, buoyed in part by its cashless gaming technology.

Rumbolz said the company is positioned to ride a wave of demand for notouch payment technology and resume having leftover cash as early as the fall.

“We believe that we have first-mover advantage and will become the leader in cashless funding options

in casinos as these technologi­es are adopted more broadly in the near and long term,” Rumbolz told shareholde­rs on an earnings call.

The company already offers a gaming voucher product, Quikticket, that gamblers can insert into a slot machine in lieu of cash. It’s also developing a mobile app, Cashclub Wallet, that integrates with its Quikticket system and bypasses altogether the need for tactile payments. Using the app, casinogoer­s can fund their games directly without cash or a voucher while tying into loyalty programs, he said.

There’s a demand for alternativ­e payment methods to gaming credits, Executive Vice President Darren Simmons said.

“In our conversati­ons with our customers, that’s what’s resonating,”

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he said.

Everi began field-testing the app in casinos back in March prior to the pandemic reaching Las Vegas. Rumbolz said “a lot of casinos are asking about the app,” though the company has been working with casinos to discuss what products might work best for them.

“We saw casinos that actually took the Quikticket product, that didn’t have it previously installed, at two

major customers’ locations during the pandemic shutdown because they were so interested in having something available when they reopened their casinos,” Rumbolz said.

Introducin­g the payment app into casinos will take a collaborat­ive effort by their marketing department­s and Everi to inform customers what it is and how it works, he noted.

Additional­ly, the company attributed a sunnier outlook for the fall to 636 new machine installati­ons during 2020 and cost-cutting and restructur­ing measures in response to casino closures.

Company shares, traded on the New York Stock Exchange, closed Tuesday at $6.40 per share, an increase of 5.26 percent, according to Yahoo Finance.

Contact Mike Shoro at mshoro@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5290. Follow @mike_shoro on Twitter.

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