The New Zealand Herald

Shares in casino company rise after earnings jump of 17.9 per cent and talk of ‘step-change’ in the future

- — BusinessDe­sk

SkyCity Entertainm­ent Group, the listed casino company, says group revenue is up 17.9 per cent to $415.6 million for the second half of the 2015 year-todate, accelerati­ng from the pace of sales growth posted in the first half.

The Auckland-based company provided the trading update as part of an investor presentati­on yesterday and attributed the revenue rise to strong growth in its internatio­nal business, which has had a 63 per cent turnover boost in the second half of the 2015 financial year to $8.62 billion. The rise in internatio­nal business reflected an improved win rate of 1.37 per cent compared to 1.12 per cent in the previous correspond­ing period.

The shares rose 1.8 per cent to $4.43, and have gained 12 per cent this year. The stock is rated an average “hold” based on 11 analyst recommenda­tions compiled by Reuters, with a median target price of $4.15.

SkyCity said it was expecting a “step-change in earnings delivered” from two major projects, the NZ Internatio­nal Convention Centre in Auckland and expansion of its Adelaide casino in Australia.

Chief financial officer Rob Hamilton said it was also exploring various options to fund major projects and reduce its reliance on debt. Outstandin­g debt is sitting at $696 million — including $399 million of bank debt — and it has unutilised debt funding of $190 million that it expects will meet funding requiremen­ts out to the start of the 2018 financial year.

Hamilton said funding options for the projects include partnering with external investors to develop or own the Hobson St hotel in Auckland, other property-related options which are mutually beneficial for SkyCity and investors, and potential divestment of the Federal St carpark, which is expected to be worth about $40 million.

SkyCity estimated the total project cost of the re-designed and smaller Internatio­nal Convention Centre project to be between $450 million to $470 million, down from the earlier $530 million estimated last December.

The group has already invested $113 million, mainly in land, and has an estimated future capital commitment to complete the developmen­t of between $430 million to $450 million.

Gaming concession­s negotiated with the Government as part of the deal kick in as soon as it signs the building contract. Resource consent is now being sought from Auckland Council following approval of the new design and constructi­on is expected to start later this year with completion expected in early 2019.

SkyCity said plans to activate the gaming concession­s, worth an estimated $458 million by KordaMenth­a, are well-advanced and split into two stages. In the first stage 70 per cent of the new product will be on the existing gaming floor within three months of signing the building works contract with only minor short-term capital works required. The extension of its Auckland venue licence, worth an estimated $75 million, is effective immediatel­y.

Both the NZICC and Adelaide expansion are expected to increase the value of the group’s property assets which currently have a market value of $1.39 billion, compared to a book value in March this year of $890 million. That represents around 43 per cent of SkyCity’s enterprise value of $3.25 billion.

Auckland remains the bedrock of group earnings, generating around 70 per cent of group earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on, and amortisati­on.

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