Golden Entertainment, Inc.

Q1 2022 Earnings Conference Call

5/5/2022

spk07: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Golden Entertainment First Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in the listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal remarks. Please note that this call is being recorded today, May 5th, 2022. Now I'd like to turn the conference over to Joe Gifoni, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
spk03: Thanks, Kevin. Good afternoon, everyone. On today's call is Blake Sartini, Golden Entertainment's founder, chairman, and chief executive officer, and Charles Brutel, the company's president and chief financial officer. On today's call, we will make forward-looking statements under the safe harbor provisions of the federal securities laws. Actual results may differ materially from those contemplated in these statements. Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to materially differ from these forward-looking statements is contained in today's press release and our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or otherwise. During today's call, we will also discuss non-GAAP financial measures in talking about our performance. You can find the reconciliation of GAAP financial measures in our press release, which is available on our website. We'll start today's call with Charles reviewing the details of the 2022 first quarter results and a business update. Following that, Blake and Charles will take your questions. With that, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Charles Portels. Charles, please go ahead.
spk05: Thanks, Joe. Our record performance of 2021 continued into the first quarter of 2022, with Q1 revenue of $274 million and adjusted EBITDA of $67 million, up 14% and 13% respectively from last year. These results reflect increased visitation to our destination properties, continued strong levels of customer spend at our local casinos and distributed gaming locations, and our ability to maintain margins well in excess of pre-COVID periods. Revenues for Nevada casino resorts rose 29% year-over-year to $96 million, and Ibadan proved 26% to $34 million. Margins were down slightly, primarily due to increased volume at the Strat, which has a higher cost structure, the return of concerts to our large-scale entertainment venue in Laughlin, as well as overall higher labor costs. The Strat's revenue and EBITDA were up meaningfully from last year, despite the impact of COVID in January and the continued lack of midweek occupancy. We saw very strong weekend demand from mid-February on, driving occupancy to over 70% at the Strat for the quarter compared to 45% in Q1 last year. Although midweek business is recovering, we're still missing almost 20 points of occupancy at the Strat, which we expect to return over the rest of the year. In Laughlin, The return of live entertainment helped drive increased visitation, with nearly 16,000 concert tickets sold for various events in the quarter. And we've also seen our core older demographic return to our properties. We have a great entertainment lined up for the remainder of the year, with upcoming concerts in Q2 having already sold over 30,000 tickets. For our Nevada locals casinos, revenue increased 4% to $40 million and EBITDA rose 3% to $20 million for the quarter. Increased employment in Las Vegas, the continued influx of new residents from out of state, and appreciating home equity has created sustained demand at our local properties. We continue to see a rational promotional environment in the locals' market, which has contributed to our success in maintaining margins despite increasing costs. Turning to Maryland, at our Rocky Gap resort, revenue is up 11% to $18 million, and EBITDA was up 14% to $5.6 million for the quarter, with margins up slightly and increased gaming volume. We recently renovated all our rooms at Rocky Gap, revamped the food offerings, and added a sports lounge. So the property is ready for the summer season, when EBITDA is typically 50% higher than the winter quarters of Q1 and Q4. For our distributed gaming operations, revenues were up 9% to $119 million and EBITDA rose 7% year-over-year to $22 million for the quarter. Similar to our casinos, margins were modestly impacted from increased labor costs relative to Q1 of last year. Our Montana distributed gaming operations were affected by weather in January and February, but rebounded nicely in March. In Nevada, the same macro drivers for our local casinos are driving revenue and EBITDA growth for our distributed business, particularly for our 65 owned taverns, most of which are located in Las Vegas. The continued recovery of the Strip has led to increased midweek as well as late night business, which helped drive record win per unit metrics at our taverns this quarter. This February, we opened a new tavern in the northwest part of Las Vegas, and based on early results, it has quickly become one of our top performers. Moving to our balance sheet, in Q1, we continued to return capital to our stakeholders, repaying $25 million of our term loan in addition to repurchasing $15 million of our stock. Since the beginning of 2021, we have paid down approximately $160 million of our debt, and since December, we've repurchased more than $25 million of our common stock. We ended the first quarter with plenty of liquidity, with more than $200 million of cash, no outstanding borrowings on our $240 million revolver. Currently, our total debt outstanding is approximately $1 billion. Given our low net leverage at 2.7 times and the continued strength across all our properties, we expect to remain focused on returning capital to shareholders opportunistically over the course of this year. To support that, this week our Board of Directors reauthorized our $50 million share repurchase program. Our strong operational performance in Q1 has continued into Q2. and we see no signs of slowdown at any of our properties. As we have said before, our cash flow is primarily generated from wholly owned gaming assets in Southern Nevada, which we view as the most attractive and stable gaming market in the world today. We remain focused on optimizing our core business, capturing the upside from our destination resorts while maintaining the performance of our local properties and distributed gaming locations. That concludes our prepared remarks. Blake and I are now available for questions.
spk07: Thank you. So to register for a question, press the 1 followed by the 4 on your keypad. You'll hear a three-tone prompt that acknowledges your request. If your question has been answered and you would like to withdraw your registration, press the 1 followed by the 3. So again, for questions, it's 1, 4. First question is from Omar Sander with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
spk06: Hey, Charles Blake. Thanks for taking my question. A question on EBITDA and margins. Your margins were very strong for the 1Q. And up nicely on a sequential basis. When you think about the aggregate of, one, any COVID impacts early on in the quarter, two, any labor or inflation pressures or any pockets of consumer weakness, some of your peers have talked about. How do you think about one Q, EBITDA on an absolute dollar basis and your margins versus a, quote, unquote, call it clean quarter without those impacts?
spk05: Yeah, I mean, look, I think if you just look in the January and early February, CES was not impactful to the town at all. And that was largely due to Omicron and lack of international travel. So, you know, if you thought a normalized basis, could we be three to four million in EBITDA higher? The answer is yes, and obviously that would benefit our margins.
spk06: Awesome, thanks. And maybe pivoting just to a different topic, you have some more real estate expertise on your board now. Does that change how you think about your own real estate portfolio?
spk00: Yeah, Omar, this is Blake. Andy's a great addition to our board, obviously, with his background, but no, I don't think that portends or signals anything in the short term in regards to how we're viewing our real estate, which continues to provide significant underlying value. So the short answer right now is we welcome Andy, but our approach to our real estate remains the same.
spk06: Awesome. Thanks so much. Nice quarter.
spk05: Thanks.
spk07: Next question is from Carlos Centorelli with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
spk04: Hey, Blake. Hey, Charles. Charles, obviously you talked a little bit about some of the margin slippage in the first quarter year over year. Um, with the soundingly, you know, a little bit will relate to mix of, of the, of the strats EBITDA contribution in the period, which is still kind of under punching. I think where you guys think it will end up and when that occupancy comes back and whatnot from a, from a mix of, of revenue perspective, um, does the strat ultimately get to margins that are kind of comparable with the rest of that portfolio?
spk05: I think it gets closer, not comparable, because the labor costs there are much higher. We have more categories of employees there than we do in other properties. We have actually more employees, and we have more products that we're servicing there from entertainment to food and beverage outlets. So I think it ultimately, when the strat gets busier, it's accretive to EBITDA, but it'll be dilutive a little bit to the overall margins as we get through the year.
spk00: Those are, as Charles mentioned, those are bigger numbers, Carlo. And, you know, underpunching is a relative term, right? We've said we're very happy with the returns we're getting on our current recent capital investment at the property. And even with the white space and capacity that we're experiencing midweek, we're seeing significant year-over-year growth at the property. So I just wanted to back into that, that we are – punching over our weight in terms of return on the capital we invested. I think Charles is accurate regarding the margin discussion going forward.
spk04: Great. Thank you, Blake and Charles. Thanks for that answer. Just one follow-up. It was probably 18 months ago. One of your peers had mentioned to me anecdotally, like, look, all the events and things like that that we do, they're generally going to be they're generally going to degrade margins. With all of that stuff shut down, group gatherings and stuff like that were not allowed, et cetera, that was all very helpful for margins. So you guys obviously mentioned kind of bringing the concerts back in Laughlin and the driver that they've always been. From an EBITDA standpoint, dollar standpoint, I understand from a margin standpoint, they could be a little bit dilutive, but from a dollar standpoint, Does that stuff still make sense in an environment right now where, you know, the gaming dollar, it's a little bit more competitive with other forms of entertainment that are out there?
spk05: Look, for us, we can only speak to Laughlin, which is clearly an event driven market on the weekends. And we have a 10,000 seat outdoor amphitheater that drives those bodies right into our properties after those events, which are directly across the street. So from our perspective, the answer is yes. I mean, we have acts that are already sold out in the upcoming months, and we'll have a good lineup going into the fall as well. So we've seen that. It's actually pulled back some of our core demographic that's been missing. It's giving us the excuse to get back out and reach out to them and draw them back into the market. So absolutely, if the entertainment industry is diluted for a margin perspective. It's absolutely accretive from an EBITDA perspective.
spk00: Yeah, there's a direct correlation between entertainment, attendance, and gaming revenue in that market.
spk04: Great.
spk00: Thank you, guys.
spk04: Thanks, Carlo.
spk07: And so, again, for questions, it's 104 on your keypad. Next question is from Cassandra Lee with Jefferies, and your line's open.
spk01: Hi, good afternoon. Thank you for taking my question. Just one for the team. Can we talk about the strat for a moment? I remember a few quarters ago when the occupancy was running around mid-low to mid-70s. I think you guys were pushing 7 million of EBITDA per month. Just wondering what that looks like today. And also I think the commentaries from other operators have been pretty bullish for the strip for the rest of the year. on the convention and entertainment side. So wondering whether the strat could potentially push above like 100 million EBITDA that week. I think we or a few people have before.
spk00: Yeah, so the strat is clearly in our portfolio and in our minds poised for significant EBITDA growth going forward. I might challenge your memory a little bit. We were running significantly lower midweek occupancies in prior quarters. We are now approaching, I think, an overall occupancy run rate of around 70%, 75%. And that's resulting in that $7 million to $8 million a month run rate currently. We are pretty confident, both in our budgeting process and what we're seeing now, that we can achieve those results. And then the hurdle to get to that $100 million Uh, will come with, you know, the, the, the town experiencing kind of all the shifts, all the ships rising in the high tide of additional international travel and, and, and, uh, attendance and conventions. And the, um, the convention center being, um, you know, fully utilized along with, uh, some additional targeted capital at that property. Where we see the returns, we believe the returns would mimic what we're seeing now. And I think that march toward that 90 to 100 million is very realistic going forward.
spk01: Got it. Thank you very much.
spk05: Thanks, Cassandra.
spk07: Next question is from Chad Bannon with Macquarie's. Please go ahead.
spk08: Hi, this is Aaron on for Chad. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to touch on sequential monthly trends for a second. You noted the Omicron impact in Jan, and it seems like based on other operators, that there was sequential improvement with March being the strongest. I'm curious if that's a trend you saw as well and how trends have gone from March into April.
spk05: Like I said, I mean, our Q2 is picking up right where Q1 left off. So we saw that same trend January growing into February, February growing into a big March, and April is right there. And again, we've seen the strat change. continue to show meaningful improvement month over month over month. Again, with no slowdown and no anticipated slowdown in our mind. So that trend has continued for us like it has with others. I'd say that if you look at our portfolio, it is a little bit different because we have exposure both to the locals, we have taverns, and we have a strip asset. So from that perspective, if you look at our destination properties, are showing the most growth with the most upside as people get back to traveling, not only to the Strip, but to Laughlin and to a Rocky Gap property, while local spend here in town has been very, very strong, and that has continued steadily since reopening seven quarters ago.
spk08: Great, perfect. Last one for me, just on Maryland sports betting, looks like they could launch online later this year or potentially next year. Is there any color you can share on how you're thinking about that potential opportunity? Thanks.
spk05: Look, for us, we really don't think about it, quite frankly, much as an opportunity for our company. We do have a sports lounge at the property, which is unbranded and untethered to any of the sports wagering or online operators. But really for us, it's an amenity for our guests to be able to have a place to sit, watch games, and use what they have already. From a wagering perspective, many of our guests are coming from out of state where they may already have an account established. Even if they can't use it, they've placed the bet before they've come to our property. So, look, I know Maryland's been a little bit slower out of the gate than I think everyone in the state has hoped. For our property, which is a little bit smaller, we don't view it as a big driver to us directly to that asset, but it is something that our customers there do engage in when they come and visit us from other states.
spk08: Okay. Thank you. Congrats on the quarter.
spk07: Appreciate it. Thanks. Next question is from Edward Engel with Roth Capital. Please go ahead.
spk02: Hi, thank you for taking my question. It looks like visitation to Laughlin on a market-wide basis is still down significantly versus pre-COVID, even kind of lagging Las Vegas. I guess, how quickly can you ramp up some of those events in the market? Is the schedule for the summer pretty jam-packed, or could it take a couple quarters to kind of get back to where you were from an event slate perspective?
spk05: Yeah, hey, Ed, just keep in mind part of that is because of us. So we had three properties open last pre-COVID. Now we have two that are opened. And what we've really seen, if you were to just look at the market from a gross gaming revenue perspective, it's that the lower end of our database that we have purposely pulled out of that business. So to us, that was an unprofitable segment of the business, but even though it was generating gross gaming revenues. So from that perspective, we think the market is very healthy. Our properties right there are very healthy right now. And the concerts are bringing back our core customer that was higher worth, higher frequency, higher spend, that has been on the sidelines for COVID or other reasons because they did enjoy the entertainment and other things. Now they're coming back. So we're anticipating. We're already seeing it now. Like I mentioned, we have a lot of tickets sold already for upcoming events in Q2. almost double what we had in Q1, and we think that that momentum is just going to continue throughout the year.
spk00: And part of that entertainment cadence, in fact, a large part of it, is seasonal driven. As you know, the summers down there are very warm, so it tends to be the high season also for visitation. So we have a smaller venue down there that's enclosed for about 2,000 seats that we keep entertainment rolling through there during the summer, but our larger venue the 10,000 to 12,000 seat venue will pick back up in the fall, and we're seeing good momentum for good acts coming. And so I just wanted to make a point, you know, through the summer, it's somewhat our own management of what we provide in entertainment due to the climate. Once that cools down, it'll pick right back up.
spk02: Great. Thanks for the color. And then there's been some talk, I guess, recently about just softening in the lower and consumer segment. I know you just talked about how you're kind of phasing or you're kind of phased out of that part. But I guess anything just kind of commentary you give about that kind of lower kind of tier customer?
spk00: Yeah, I don't think there's much more commentary. I think Charles made the point that we have called or I would say limited our reinvestment into that lower end of the database. Any change that we're experiencing on that level, I think, is due to that marketing approach from what we're seeing. In addition, though, I would add that we are seeing robust new sign-ups in our rewards program, significant new sign-ups coming from new residents moving into this community, into the Valley. And so that's providing a lot of fuel for growth going forward while we retool that lower end of the marketing database. You know, that lower end of the database has kind of been culled, as Charles used that word, by design. And we're seeing significant pickup in our new signups as this valley continues to grow with residents.
spk02: Great. Thank you.
spk07: There are no further questions. I'll turn it back to Charles Patel for closing comments.
spk05: Okay, thanks everyone for joining our call and we look forward to updating you next quarter.
spk07: And that does conclude our call for today. We thank everyone for participating and you can now disconnect.
Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

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