Las Vegas Review-Journal

Caesars: Fewer comps to help

Company to offset $80M in labor costs

- By Todd Prince Las Vegas Review-journal

Caesars Entertainm­ent Corp. said Wednesday it expects to offset $80 million in increased labor costs this year with recently announced corporate level layoffs and fewer giveaways.

The resort operator last month announced it would reduce annual labor costs by $40 million by eliminatin­g some corporate positions such as finance, legal and marketing roles. In an earnings call Wednesday, it said it could reduce costs this year even further.

“Through the combinatio­n of this (corporate cut) effort along with additional efficiency gains across both marketing and labor for the full year, we anticipate being able to successful­ly offset the $80 million in annualized labor headwinds and now anticipate growing margins on a full year basis,” CFO

Eric Hession told Wall Street analysts.

Strip operators are facing rising costs as revenue growth remains tepid, pushing them to seek new ways to increase deficienci­es and profit margins.

MGM Resorts Internatio­nal announced early this week it will have eliminated 1,000 jobs by June as it tries to boost profits. Caesars has already cut property level employment 12 percent since 2014, Hession said.

Caesars and MGM last year signed a new, five-year contract with the culinary union, Culinary Local 226, that includes compensati­on increases. Hession said Caesars is also seeing labor cost pressure in the Midwest region due to a tight labor market. U.S. unemployme­nt is near a 50-year low.

“A lot of it is stemming from basically a lack of labor

— or having difficulty finding great talent in a lot of these markets — and, as a result, that pushes up the price of labor,” he said.

The CFO said the company will continue to improve marketing costs — such as comped rooms and food — through better technology. However, the marketing efficiency gains will be lower than in previous years, he added.

150,000 more room nights

Hession said the company’s second-quarter non-group bookings are about 150,000 room nights higher than at this same time last year. The higher hotel bookings will lead to higher food, beverage and gaming revenue, he said.

Caesars late last year began more aggressive­ly marketing its Las Vegas rooms to leisure guests following a weak convention and entertainm­ent calendar in the third-quarter that resulted in a sharp decline in revenue.

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Hession said those efforts have paid off in the first two quarters of 2019 and anticipate­s the company will continue to pursue that strategy the rest of the year.

However, Hession said Caesars is not raising its 2019 Las Vegas revenue growth forecast of 2.5 percent.

Higher occupancy

2018: 2018: 2018:

Higher occupancy along with a better gaming hold percentage helped Caesars boost its Las Vegas net revenue 5.8 percent in the first quarter, the company said earlier on Wednesday.

Caesars said its Las Vegas net revenue rose to $953 million compared with $903 million in the same period last year.

Its Las Vegas hotel occupancy increased 250 basis points to 95 percent while revenue per available room increased 4.9 percent. The higher hold percentage accounted for about half of its Las Vegas net revenue gains.

Las Vegas cash flow jumped 12 percent to $360 million compared with $321 million in the same quarter last year.

The resort operator’s regional revenues also increased as the acquisitio­n of Centaur offset tougher competitio­n in Atlantic City and temporary closure of Midwest casinos due to bad weather.

Enterprise-wide Caesars net revenues increased 7.3 percent to $2.12 billion.

However, the company’s quarterly loss widened to $217 million from

$34 million in the first quarter last year.

The greater quarterly loss was driven by a $322 million change in the fair value of a derivative security.

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