
Station Casinos dispatched Executive Vice President Rodney Atamian to meet with JP Morgan analysts last week. According to Joseph Greff, he reported, “solid/improving visitation and spend per visit trends.” A possible increase in Nevada casino-capacity limits to 50% should propel that further, one presumes. As with other regional gaming companies, the under-40 crowd is providing the momentum as core Baby Boomers stay on the sidelines. “However, as vaccination trends have improved, this core customer has begun to return as well.” Management doesn’t anticipate promotional wars but expects some upward creep in labor costs. While undecided on the future of the Palms, Station is persuaded that whether by a sale or a reopening under “an improved cost structure/market strategy” it can be successfully monetized, although the potential new market was unspecified. As for its undeveloped real estate, Station noted strong expressions of interest both from industrial developers as well as residential builders. The fates of three closed locals casino remain hazy, however.
As for Station’s archrival, Boyd Gaming, CEO Keith Smith and CFO Josh Hirsberg showed the flag, and teased the 1Q21 numbers by disclosing “strong” January performance with “momentum continuing into February and March.” Visitation and consumer spending are higher, albeit in the 25-to-55 age stratum. Boyd expects older customers to return in 2Q-3Q21. “Of note, BYD has seen a positive uptick in business as stimulus checks get mailed, and thus expects future benefit in the coming weeks.” Indeed. Also, the wider popularity of cashless gaming appears to be increasing the slot manager’s Holy Grail, time on device.








