Shares of casino operators got a big boost Monday after Macau officials announced that an easing of pandemic-era travel restrictions would begin in the coming weeks.
News surfaced over the weekend that Macau had been OK’d to resume issuing electronic visas for individuals and tour groups in late October or early November. J.P. Morgan analyst Joseph Greff said that would be the “first meaningful” easing of travel restrictions to the gambling center since the start of the COVID-19 outbreak.
“This positive development isn’t something the industry or investors were expecting and so we look at this policy news as [a] sizable positive for a sector that has been viewed as very tough to invest in by the buy-side,” Greff wrote in a note to clients, for two key reasons:
- A “miserable” near-term operating environment in which recent gross gaming revenue run rates are only about 10% of prepandemic levels.
- The lack of capacity to reasonably predict when travel mobility would start improving among mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau.
Shares of Wynn Resorts Ltd.
WYNN,
shot up 12.7% to pace the gainers in the S&P 500 index
SPX,
and Las Vegas Sands Corp.’s stock
LVS,
surged 12.4% to place second in the benchmark index.
Elsewhere, Melco Resorts & Entertainment Ltd. shares
MLCO,
rocketed 28.2% to a five-month high and MGM Resorts International’s shares
MGM,
gained 0.8%.
Greff said that although the e-visa news is positive for all Macau-centric stocks, he likes Las Vegas Sands, or LVS, the best, as he views it as a play on not just the Macau recovery but expected estimate increases for its Marina Bay Sands property in Singapore.
“We’d expect incremental capital return as both of its markets experience a recovery (something that should distinguish LVS from the others),” Greff wrote.
For the second quarter, LVS reported total Macau revenue of $374 million, or 35.8% of total revenue, while revenue from the Marina Bay Sands totaled $679 million. For Wynn, total Macau operations revenue was $117.2 million for the quarter, or 12.9% of total revenue, while MGM’s China revenue of $143 million was 4.4% of total revenue.
“Of course, there likely will be fits and starts with COVID outbreaks, but this news has to be a positive for a sector that has experienced massive multiyear underperformance where sentiment can be described as negative to apathetic,” Greff wrote.