Las Vegas casinos cut costs, slash room rates

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LAS VEGAS - Declines in convention business and tourism took their toll on Las Vegas casino operators in the second quarter, as Wynn Resorts Ltd. and Las Vegas Sands Corp. each reported worse results Thursday than they did a year earlier.

Wynn Resorts said profit dropped 91 percent to $25.5 million, or 21 cents per share, down from $272 million, or $2.42 per share last year.

Las Vegas Sands Corp. reported a loss of $175.9 million, compared with a loss of $8.8 million a year earlier.

The two companies - with similar businesses but different philosophies in management - both faced pressures to cut room rates and their operating costs - all while maintaining an experience for guests worthy of high-end prices.

Wynn Resorts, run by billionaire CEO Steve Wynn, has cut about $100 million in annual costs for its two casino resorts in Las Vegas, but Wynn says further cuts could hurt the morale of his employees and affect his guests.

Sheldon Adelson, the billionaire chairman and chief executive of Las Vegas Sands, said cuts that will save the company $500 million each year are an important prong of a three-part strategy that involves finishing its Marina

Bay Sands casino in Singapore

next year and raising additional

liquidity.

Both companies took hits to their room rates and revenue at their hotels in Las Vegas.

Wynn Resorts' two Las Vegas casinos combined generated $188 per available room during the second quarter this year, compared with $292 last year, when Wynn operated only one casino in town.

At Sands, revenue per available room dropped to $190 at its Palazzo resort and $166 at the Venetian.

Sands officials said they were giving away more rooms to slot players instead of lowering prices across the board because they want to preserve higher rates as much as possible.

Business travelers, Sands' core target customers, traditionally are willing to pay more for rooms than tourists, though midweek rates and convention business has been down significantly more than weekend tourism in Las Vegas.

"We think we can get away with something $50 or $75 more than what just a plain hotel room can get," Adelson said. "So not all Vegas properties are created equal."

Michael Leven, Sands' president and chief operating officer, said the company was keeping a close eye on customer responses as it cut costs.

"We're very, very aware of the fact that we can't absorb customer complaints," he said. "We've seen nothing to indicate that we've gone too far."

Sands' adjusted earnings amounted to 1 cent per diluted share, excluding one-time items, in line with analysts' average forecast. The company's net quarterly revenue was $1.06 billion, a decrease of 4.8 percent from $1.11 billion a year earlier and just below the $1.08 billion analysts expected.

Wynn adjusted profit of 9 cents per share, excluding one-time items, beat analyst expectations of a penny loss per share. But the quarterly revenue of $723.3 million fell 12 percent from $825.2 million in last year's second quarter and fell short of analysts' prediction of $739.3 million.

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