Red Rock Slumps Following Q2 Earnings, Analysts Upbeat on Durango

Shares of Red Rock Resorts (NASDAQ: RRR) tumbled Wednesday despite solid second-quarter results as some analysts took issue with the stock’s rich valuation.

Durango
Durango Casino & Resort in Southwest Las Vegas. The casino hotel was a major contributor to operator Red Rock Resorts’ strong second-quarter results. (Image: Eater Las Vegas)

The regional casino operator reported earnings per share of 59 cents on revenue of $486.4 million for the June quarter. Analysts expected earnings of 43 cents on sales of $475.81 million. Shares of Red Rock, which are lower by 5.82% at this writing, trade close to 11x 2025 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, sparking concern that the stock might be overvalued at this juncture. It’s up 9.08% over the past month.

Valuation aside, the company and some analysts remain bullish on the Durango Casino & Resort in Southwest Las Vegas, the operator’s newest property. On Red Rock’s earnings conference call, CFO Stephen Cootey discussed the company’s expansion plans at the new venue.

Our current plans for the next phase of Durango will add over 25,000 square feet of additional casino space, including a new high-limit slot and bar area,” said Cootey. “In total, the expansion will add to the Durango casino floor an additional 230 slot machines, including 120 slot machines dedicated to our new high-limit room.”

The expansion, which will also include nearly 2,000 new parking spots, is in the budgeting and planning stages and could commence later this year, according to the Red Rock chief financial officer.

Red Rock Stands Out Among Regional Casino Stocks

With the benefit of the aforementioned 9.08% gain over the past month, shares of Red Rock are up 9.14%, making it one of the best-performing names in the mostly moribund regional casino space.

That indicates the Las Vegas locals market — Red Rock’s only operating jurisdiction — is proving more vibrant than other regional casino locations and that while Durango is pilfering business from the operator’s namesake casino hotel in Summerlin, that situation will shift over time due to the population boom in the Las Vegas Valley.

“There is no doubt about it, RRR remains one of the more compelling stories right now within the lackluster regional gaming,” wrote Stifel analyst Steven Wieczynski in a note to clients. “The Las Vegas locals market continues to outperform all other regional gaming markets by a wide margin. And with RRR essentially taking market share given their better/new asset quality, it doesn’t surprise us shares have outperformed regional gaming peers so far year-to-date.”

While there is some cannibalization between Durango and Red Rock, the revenue from the new property was important to the operator in the second quarter because there were disruptions at Palace Station and Sunset Station that affected traffic at those properties.

Red Rock Financial Picture Sturdy

Red Rock concluded the second quarter with $136.4 million in cash and $3.5 billion in debt, and the operator has a net leverage ratio of 4.3x. Wieczynski said it would be beneficial to see that ratio decline, noting that could be accomplished via real estate sales.

Red Rock owns all of the land on which its casinos reside and when it sells property, it’s never to a gaming company nor does the operator engage in sale-leaseback transactions. Even without real estate sales, the gaming company is turning EBITDA into free cash flow (FCF) at an impressive rate.

“We continue to be impressed at how RRR is managing/running their business at this point and converting more EBITDA into FCF which has/should rapidly improve (relatively speaking as their balance sheet is already pretty clean compared to peers) their balance sheet,” concluded Wieczynski. “Durango should deliver returns at or in excess of RRR’s historical average for greenfield projects (~20%), and they noted margins are already run-rating around the portfolio average today and improving every day.”

Todd Shriber
Todd Shriber Financial Reporter

Todd Shriber is a senior news reporter covering gaming financials, casino business, stocks, and mergers and acquisitions for Casino.org.

Todd got his start in financial markets as a reporter with Bloomberg News. Later, he became a trader at a Southern California-based long/short hedge fund, where he specialized in the trading sector and international ETFs leading up to and during the financial crisis. He joined Casino.org in 2019.

Currently, Todd analyzes, researches, and writes on ETFs for various web-based publications and financial services firms. Shriber has been featured and quoted in Barron's, CNBC.com, and The Wall Street Journal. His work can also be found on Benzinga, ETF Daily News, ETF Trends, MarketWatch, Fox Business, and Nasdaq.com.

He currently resides in Las Vegas, where he enjoys golf and taking his black lab to the dog park. He's also an avid sports fan and likes to wager on college football and the NBA. You can also find him at the three-card poker and roulette table, even though he knows better.

Contact Todd at todd.shriber@casino.org.

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