Shares in SkyCity Entertainment Group dropped to a year-low after the casino operator posted weaker first-quarter revenue due to lower gaming and high-roller activity in Auckland, difficult trading conditions in Darwin, and the higher level of the kiwi dollar against the Aussie.
Revenue slipped 1.3 per cent to $260.7 million in the three months ended September 30, compared with the same period a year earlier, the Auckland-based company said in a statement. On a normalised basis, which adjusts the high-roller win rate to a theoretically 1.35 per cent from the actual rate of 1.29 per cent, revenue fell 5.7 per cent to $262.1m , it said.
Its shares fell as low as $3.69 and were recently down 13 per cent to $3.73.
At its largest complex in Auckland, revenue fell 1 per cent $134m as weaker gaming revenue offset growth in non-gaming revenue. The company said less gamblers had visited its Auckland facility than expected, and there was less activity from premium players and its automated table games weren't fully deployed. Still, it expects Auckland to return to growth for the remainder of the financial year.
In Australia, first-quarter revenue at the company's Darwin casino declined 7.2 per cent to A$32.5m (NZ$34.4m)due to continued difficult local economic conditions and increased rivalry from pubs and clubs, while revenue at Adelaide held unchanged at A$39.1m (NZ$41.49). The company said an appreciation of the kiwi against the Aussie had a $5m impact on normalised revenue.