Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 


SkyCity 1H profit falls 16%, dividend lifted to 10 cents

SkyCity first-half profit falls 16% on lower IB win rate, year-earlier Rugby World Cup

Feb. 13 (BusinessDesk) – SkyCity Entertainment Group, the Auckland-based casino and hotel company, said first-half profit fell 16 percent on a lower win rate for international business and year-earlier Rugby World Cup benefits that weren’t repeated.

Net profit fell to $66.3 million, or 11.5 cents a share, in the six months ended Dec. 31, from $78.8 million, or 13.7 cents a share, a year earlier, the company said in a statement. Revenue, including gaming GST, fell 1.4 percent to $487.3 million.

Profit missed the $75.9 million forecast by First NZ Capital and SkyCity today gave a mixed outlook statement, saying there are “indications of growth returning in New Zealand” while the performance of Adelaide would be “broadly flat” through the remainder of the year and Darwin should show growth as it benefits from investment.

The company said normalised full-year profit is expected to be about $140 million. In October it forecast profit on that basis “in the $140 millions” though it subsequently sold is stake in Christchurch Casino, which had generated $3.1 million in the second half of last year.

The company lifted its interim dividend to 10 cents a share from 9 cents a year earlier, saying it reflected its new dividend policy of making an annual payment of not less than 20 cents and not less than 80 percent of normalised profit.

The shares, which are rated ‘outperform’ based on the consensus of analysts polled by Reuters, last traded at $4 and have gained 6.4 percent this year.

SkyCity said the $12.5 million drop in first-half profit including $4.7 million negative impact from the Rugby World Cup and an $8.4 million impact from a softer international business win rate of 1.06 percent compared to 1.64 percent in the first half last year. The theoretical win rate is 1.35 percent.

Normalised profit , which includes the theoretical win rate and excludes certain one-time costs and gains, fell 3.4 percent to $74.4 million.

SkyCity Auckland, the company’s flagship facilities, recorded a 1.9 percent decline in total revenue to $263.7 million. Of that, slot machine revenue fell 7.9 percent to $108.6 million, revenue from local tables gained to $61.8 million from $60.5 million and international tables, normalised, climbed to $28.8 million from 18.6 million.

Food and beverage sales rose to $24.1 million from $23.1 million, hotels and conventions fell to $30 million from $36.9 million while revenue from the Sky Tower and parking fell to $10.4 million from $11.9 million.

Gross gaming revenue at Adelaide edged up 0.4 percent to A$74 million, while food, beverage and other sales slipped 4.5 percent to $8.5 million.

SkyCity Darwin recorded a 12 percent gain in gross gaming revenue to A$54.9 million, while food, beverage and hotel sales jumped 18 percent to A$17.2 million.

SkyCity Hamilton’s gross gaming revenue rose 5 percent to $23.2 million and food and beverage rose 2.3 percent to $4.5 million. SkyCity Queenstown gross gaming revenue fell 2.9 percent to $3.4 million while food and beverage sales rose to $600,000 from $500,000.

(BusinessDesk)

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 

Scoop Business: Bathurst Gets Nod For DoC Access To Denniston Mine

Conservation Minister Nick Smith has approved access over conservation estate land for Bathurst Resources to develop an open cast coal mine on the Denniston Plateau, above Westport, to the dismay of environmental opponents. More>>

ALSO:

Minding Of Meats: MPI Working To Clear Shipments To China

New export certificates are being issued to release containers of meat products held up at the Chinese border, the Ministry for Primary Industries said today. Shipments of meat into China were delayed after MPI issued export certification in a format which had not been approved by Chinese authorities at AQSIQ. More>>

ALSO:

Banking Ombudsman: Bank Customers Need To Remember Basics

Have you heard the story about the kids who used their mum’s credit card details to buy up large online? Or the one about the person who saved all their PINs disguised as phone numbers on their mobile which was then stolen by a thief who saw through the disguise and went on a spending spree?More>>

TPP: A Global Fair Deal On Copyright - OurFairDeal.org

Alastair Thompson: The orginal "A Fair Deal" campaign brought together Internet NZ with a bunch of other groups including the Royal New Zealand Foundation for the Blind, the Creative Freedom Foundation , NZ Rise , Trademe and Kiwiblog's David Farrar. OurFairDeal.org takes the NZ based campaigns a giant leap forward bringing together 84 lobby groups from across the Asia Pacific in 6 countries into a global alliance. More>>

ALSO:

Business.Scoop: NZOG's Griffiths Backs Director Liability On Health, Safety

New Zealand Oil & Gas chairman Peter Griffiths has thrown his support behind legislative moves to make directors liable if the companies they govern fail to meet health and safety obligations. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: NZ’s Services Sector Expands At Fastest Clip In 5 Mths

New Zealand’s services sector, which accounts for about 70 percent of economic activity, expanded at the fastest pace since October last month, led by activity/sales. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: MRP Senior Managers In Line For $1.2M In Bonus Shares

Senior executives of newly listed, state-controlled MightyRiverPower are in line for shares in lieu of cash bonuses worth $1.2 million for the year to June 30, one of the company’s first disclosures to the NZX and ASX as a listed company show. More>>

ALSO:

Get More From Scoop

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Business
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news