Adelaide punters prop up SkyCity amid NZ shutdowns

The Adelaide casino – its only Australian operation – was closed for eight days during July 2021 but still managed to increase revenue by 3.7 per cent for the period to $92.8 million.

The casino reported revenue of $89.5 million in H1 FY21 when it was also subject to a short closure in November 2020.

At its biggest casino in Auckland, SkyCity’s revenue almost halved to $110 million after it was forced to close for 107 days from late August until early December.

Its other NZ casinos in Hamilton and Queensland closed for 65 and 22 days respectively, resulting in a combined revenue fall of more than $12 million.

The figures for the past two years in Adelaide are still significantly ahead of the $72 million in revenue generated in the six months to December 2019, before the completion of a $330 million expansion in late 2020.

The expansion includes new gaming spaces, bars, restaurants and the luxury 120-room EoS hotel.

Adelaide’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) for the six months to December 31 was $10.8 million, down from $23.9 million the previous year.

However, the H1 FY21 figure included $13 million of JobKeeper payments from the Australian Government.

Revenue from gaming machines was up 33 per cent to $34.4 million while table revenue fell 5 per cent to $36.1 million.

Non-gaming revenue was down 12 per cent to $22.3 million.

SkyCity Group chief executive officer Michael Ahearne said COVID-19 continued to extensively impact the business at each of its properties in the first half of the financial year.

“When permitted to reopen, the properties have operated under significant constraints due to restrictions on mass gatherings and physical distancing requirements and I’m extremely proud of how the SkyCity team has adapted to those challengxjmtzywes,” he said.

“SkyCity Adelaide operated with significant capacity limits, CBD disruptions and workforce disruptions due to COVID-19.

“We’ve enacted a flexible operating model across the group, adjusting when necessary to prepare for COVID-19 disruptions, and we’ve mandated vaccination certificates across all our properties in order to keep our staff and customers safe.

“Performance is expected to improve as restrictions are relaxed, interstate borders progressively open and international tourists are welcomed back to Australia.”

Meanwhile, an investigation into the Adelaide casino by the Federal Government agency responsible for detecting money laundering and criminal abuse of the financial system is ongoing.

AUSTRAC’s Regulatory Operations Team reported last June it had identified potential serious non-compliance by SkyCity Adelaide with the Australian Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act and Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Rules Instrument.

The concerns were identified in the course of an AUSTRAC compliance assessment, which began in September 2019.