We're in a world of hurt, Sands president says of Las Vegas

Unlike the global gaming capital of Macau, Vegas is dependent on business and convention groups for much of its revenue. Picture: Reuters

Unlike the global gaming capital of Macau, Vegas is dependent on business and convention groups for much of its revenue. Picture: Reuters

Published Jul 24, 2020

Share

By Christopher Palmeri

Las Vegas Sands, the world's largest casino company, is painting a bleak picture of the US gambling capital for investors, saying Covid-19 has devastated the city's bread-and-butter convention business, with no significant recovery in sight.

"We're in a world of hurt here," Sands President Rob Goldstein said Wednesday on a conference call, after the company reported a 97 percent drop in second-quarter revenue. Sands' two properties in Vegas, the Venetian and Palazzo, reopened June 4 and generated just $36-million in business during the quarter.

Unlike the global gaming capital of Macau, Vegas is dependent on business and convention groups for much of its revenue. The coronavirus pandemic has put a halt to those, along with leisure travel. And Sands suggested they won't be coming back quickly, even with progress against the disease.

"The slowest return of our business will be large-scale group business because it tends to skew younger, it's more tech-driven and those people are more reluctant to travel," Goldstein said.

Operators in Las Vegas can't make money with negligible midweek hotel occupancy and half-filled properties on the weekends. Air traffic to the city is less than half of what it was, and the city is looking more like a drive-to, regional market, according to Goldstein.

"Las Vegas cannot perform without a return of these segments," he said.

Wynn had previously continued to pay employees through a three-month pandemic shutdown, and its furloughs were another sign America's gambling capital faces a long recovery.

"Although we retained all of our people while we were closed, we now know how challenged business volumes in Las Vegas are and are staffing to the significantly reduced demand," Wynn said in a statement Wednesday.

The company, which reopened its two Las Vegas properties on June 4, declined to say how many employees will go on unpaid leave, but said it's in the single digits as a percentage of total staff.

Related Topics: