Century Casinos, Inc.
Q1 2022 Earnings Call Transcript
Published:
- Operator:
- Welcome to Century Casinos Q1 2022 Earnings Conference Call. This call will be recorded. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later we will conduct a question-and-answer session. I would now like to introduce our host for today's call, Mr. Peter Hoetzinger. Mr. Hoetzinger, you may begin.
- Peter Hoetzinger:
- Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our earnings call. With me on the call are; my co-CEO and the Chairman of Century Casinos, Erwin Haitzmann; as well as our Chief Financial Officer, Margaret Stapleton. As always, before we begin, we would like to remind you that we will be discussing forward-looking information, which involves a number of risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from our forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise the forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. We provide a detailed discussion of the various risk factors in our SEC filings, and we encourage you to review this filings. In addition, throughout our call, we refer to several non-GAAP financial measures, including, but not limited to, adjusted EBITDA. Reconciliations of our non-GAAP performance and liquidity measures to the appropriate GAAP measures can be found in our news release and SEC filing available in the Investors section of our website at cnty.com. I will now provide an overview of the results of the first quarter. After that there will be a Q&A session. Our first quarter results continued the streak of record breaking performances that we have shown throughout last year. It was a great start to 2022 with record first quarter revenue and record first quarter adjusted EBITDA. Revenues were up by more than 42% year-over-year, and EBITDA growing impressive 62% compared to the first quarter of last year. Earnings per share for the quarter were impacted by our loss on the sale of land and building in Calgary, as well as by costs related to the acquisition of the market in Nevada returned a combined impact of approximately $3.3 million or $0.11 per share. In addition, our effective income tax rate increased from 22.6% last year to 34.6% this year, due to the total earnings we project for this year. Our revenue growth was broad based, as each of our three operating segments posted new first quarter revenue records. The continued focus on our core customer and a streamlined cost structure contributed to this great results and margins and allowed us to continue our strong operating momentum from last year. Sequentially, we managed to keep the high margins the same in the first quarter. It maintains the 23% EBITDA margin that we achieved in the fourth quarter of last year. Compared to pre-COVID times, meaning the first quarter of 2019 we are well ahead, we actually increased the margin by 800 basis points. Marketing spend continues to remain significantly below pre-COVID levels, and is expected to continue at its current run rate moving forward. Reductions in advertising, direct mail and promotional expense appear to be sustainable, and have not had any negative impact on gaming volumes. The promotional environment across all our markets remains relatively stable. I would call it disciplined and rational for the most part, not much has changed for the last several quarters. Other factors impacting margins include labor, food cost, and utilities. And while labor is tight in some markets, it's been able to maintain our high standards of guest experience. Staff count is down by between 15% to 20% compared to pre-COVID levels and that appears sustainable. Higher food cost came to a large extent be offset by increased menu prices. Rising utility costs are hard to offset obviously. So there are some incremental expenses, but it has no material impact to our P&L. So we are facing this cost increases we're able to maintain margins due to our disciplined operating philosophy and then efficient targeted marketing to our high value customers. In spite of some macroeconomic chain challenges, we have not noticed any meaningful shift in consumer behavior as we look at April and even in May. The customer trends we experienced at the end of 2021 are continuing. Looking ahead, we had impact from stimulus payments in April, May of last year making second quarter year-over-year comparison challenging for the U.S. operations. But more than offsetting that is the strong comeback of our Canadian operations. Net results in preliminary numbers for April significantly beating April of last year. Our business is largely gaming centric, only a minority of our revenue is coming from non-gaming amenities and will only open more non-gaming amenities by expanding the opening hours, as demand picks up further so that it grows in a profitable way. The geographic diversity of our portfolio with locations in hyperlocal drive to markets with a loyal customer base has proven extremely resilient. Resilient, not only in light of the pandemic, but also in light of changes to oil price or CPI. We have high confidence in the underlying trends of our consumers behavior, which has not changed since we reopened two years ago. Our U.S. operations in Colorado, Missouri, and West Virginia grew revenues by 1% on a combined basis. Market-by-market, we saw revenue and EBITDA growth in Colorado as well as in West Virginia. While Missouri was a bit softer in the year-over-year comparison, due to the impact of the government stimulus payments of last year. In more detail, we saw that the month of January was impacted by Omicron. So it was softer than the year before. In February, business got much stronger, as the case counts went down and mass mandates came off. March was a mixed bag in the year-over-year comparison. Colorado and Virginia were higher. While Missouri couldn't quite achieve last year's results, again, which were driven by the stimulus payments. Win per customer has remained relatively flat to prior year, which has been a positive sign. The main difference is that we saw a significant increase in upgraded play during the prior year, as patrons were not our typical customers came to the property to spend stimulus checks. In Canada, we operated with the new restrictions for half of the first quarter. Our guests needed to provide proof of vaccination, everybody was required to wear a mask, and casinos were not allowed to serve liquor after 11
- Operator:
- Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]. We are now ready to begin. And our first question comes from David Bain with B. Riley. You may proceed with your question.
- David Bain:
- Great, thank you. And congratulations on the execution of the quarter. I guess my first one would be, if you're able to provide any sort of detail or even broad based thoughts on one key performance at the Nugget?
- Peter Hoetzinger:
- Erwin?
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- I don't think that we can discuss it at this point in time, right. Because we don't have the detail [indiscernible].
- David Bain:
- Okay, fair enough. I'll move on. So I guess my next would be, obviously the macro. The environment has not been -- the seeming environment has not been impacting real time results your property? I'm wondering because it's impacted valuations. If you're beginning to see that or here, potentially about that in the M&A environment that that can move more in your favor in the relative near-term?
- Peter Hoetzinger:
- Yes, David. We're seeing some of that, first of all, the M&A environment is more active than it was last year. There are just a handful of properties on the market. We are -- if we looking at two of those. And yes, I mean, it's all vary depending on the market and the circumstance, but I don't want to say prices are coming down at all. But the opportunities are really exciting. And some of the opportunities that are being marketed would fit very well into our portfolio. So we will see as be very active in the next couple of quarters.
- David Bain:
- Okay, all right. Great. Thanks so much, guys.
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- Thank you.
- Operator:
- Our next question comes from Edward Engel with ROTH Capital. You may proceed with your question.
- Edward Engel:
- Hi, thank you for taking my question. And thanks for the April commentary. I recall a couple years ago now when oil prices were falling, it had a pretty negative impact on some of your Canadian properties. Were some of those economies were tied to oil and gas? I guess with energy prices kind of higher again. I was just wondering if you're seeing any kind of signs of life in some of those markets to maybe reinvigorate demand?
- Peter Hoetzinger:
- Erwin, can you just comment that.
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- We see that. First of all, we see as -- before that Canada is really on a very healthy recovery track and we're more or less back at pre-COVID levels. But and we think that will be the next in the coming quarters, which will show the full impact of the recovery. As some of this most of the restrictions are only lifted halfway through the quarter. Now, In China in terms it can only be positive if the oil prices go up as far as Edmonton and Canadian oil operations are concerned. But it would be too early to say that with that increase that we see is due to the oil price raise. I think in the second quarter, we would be able to be more specific on that and have a better picture about that.
- Edward Engel:
- Great, thank you. And I look forward to it. And then, I guess one more kind of housekeeping after the refinancing. I was just wondering, could you kind of give some commentary of how we should expect cash into cash interest expense over the next couple quarters?
- Peter Hoetzinger:
- Can you please.
- Margaret Stapleton:
- So, are you looking for what the interest expenses will be. It's probably around 7%.
- Edward Engel:
- 7% okay. And that's perfect.
- Margaret Stapleton:
- Okay.
- Operator:
- [Operator Instructions]. Our next question comes from Jeff Stantial with Stifel. You may proceed with your question.
- Jeff Stantial:
- Hey, good morning, Peter, Erwin it's great to hear from you both. For my first question, I'd like to hang on, this macro theme that's been common throughout this earnings season. It sounds like on the whole, the consumer still feels pretty healthy into April and thus far into May. But can we unpack that a little bit? You talked about sequential improvement in the older demographic, you talked about continued healthy growth at the high end. Just moving to the third category, how's things trending kind of in that lower end of the database. Anything to call out there? Or do trends feel stable there as well?
- Peter Hoetzinger:
- It is stable.
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- It's stable, exactly. It's stable. So we've watched it very closely as well, same for the opposite interest, but we don't really see anything that would be deviant from what was said before.
- Jeff Stantial:
- Okay, okay. Very good, thank you for that. And then just so the question was, still left in the older demographic? How about over in West Virginia with Mountaineer, how are things working through post Omicron with respect to some of the non-gaming amenities that have been called relatively more impacted through COVID? Do you still see significant sequential outside as we kind of roll through 2022?
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- In the non-gaming sector, it is obviously really secondary. And in West Virginia as said in earlier times, post-COVID, we opened with significantly less SMP capacity. And it hasn't hurt us at all, on the customer side, that certainly has helped us a lot on the cost side. And what we have now is, is just right size and also as Peter mentioned before, we would expand the opening times for example on offer, we look very closely whether we think it's justified. Concerning the player base, I think you could say that in very general terms, we see that the upper end of our players tend to stay little longer, tend to come off and tend to spend a little more money. And maybe we have a few less customers on the lower end, something that we're not unhappy about because it really helps us on the staffing side and on the cost side for simple terms for less customers, we need less employees, and certainly helpful.
- Jeff Stantial:
- Okay, great. That's really helpful. Thank you, then. If I can just squeeze in one more, I saw your commentary in the deck around upgrades to your marketing app. Just curious, are you evaluating anything else on the technology front, whether it's some sort of cashless gaming wallet or anything else that you think is interesting out there as you evaluate potential technology upgrades on your properties?
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- Nothing that would be, nothing other than routine upgrades of the existing systems. One upgrade that we did in West Virginia was that you can now open your hotel room with a mobile phone and you can also check in mobile and don't have to stand in line anymore, which is really helpful like on a Friday afternoon when all the people, or all our guests that are coming for the weekend in the past had to line up.
- Jeff Stantial:
- Okay, great. That's super helpful guys. Thanks for all the color.
- Operator:
- Our next question comes from Chad Beynon with Macquarie. You may proceed with your question.
- Unidentified Analyst:
- Hi, this is Aaron on for Chad. Thanks for taking my question. And congrats on closing the first part of the Nugget acquisition. You noted the large convention facility at that property, do you have a sense for what the Reno convention and event calendar looks like in '22 and '23 is expected to be at pre-pandemic levels?
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- That syndication we have Yes, it's come back strongly and the bookings are good. And we see and we're told that it's in the area of pre-pandemic.
- Unidentified Analyst:
- Okay, great. And moving on, I want to touch on Poland for a second, it looks like demand remains strong. But margins were ticked down a little bit sequentially. Was that just seasonality or is there anything you would call out and how should we think about that going forward? Thanks.
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- In Poland, we had the best, the best quarter ever. And so did you say that you saw that the numbers are going down?
- Peter Hoetzinger:
- Margins, margins he said.
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- The margins, okay, okay. Yes, that is one simple reason, namely the salaries. We had to increase salaries, because we hadn't done so in a long time. And it's really difficult to get start to begin with and to get good start is even harder. But it's obviously more than in absolute numbers. It's more than compensated by the higher revenues.
- Unidentified Analyst:
- Got it. Okay, understandable. Thanks for the color.
- Erwin Haitzmann:
- Okay.
- Operator:
- We have no further phone questions at this time, sir. I will turn the call over to yourself for any closing remarks.
- Peter Hoetzinger:
- Thank you everyone for joining our call today. For a recording of the call, please visit the financial results section of our website at cnty.com. Stay well and goodbye.
- Operator:
- This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for attending.
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