Las Vegas Sands Upgraded on Macau Optimism

Las Vegas Sands Upgraded on Macau Optimism.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

Las Vegas Sands (NYSE: LVS) notched a modest rally Friday after shares of the casino giant landed an upgrade from a sell-side analyst.

Sands ChinaThe Venetian Macau. Jefferies upgraded shares of operator Las Vegas Sands. (Image: YouTube)

Jefferies analyst David Katz lifted his rating on the Venetian Macau operator to “buy” from “hold” while lifting his price target on the stock to $69 from $60. That implies potential upside of almost 38% from current levels. The analyst cited the possibility of an improving Chinese economy as a potential catalyst for Sands stock in 2025.

Although it is early stages and visibility into progress remains relatively low, we are confident that given LVS exposure to the mass segment, improvements to the macro environment will provide an outsized benefit for the company,” observed Katz.

Jefferies’ price target is based on Sands trading at 20x earnings, 12.5x price-to-free cash flow, and 11x enterprise value/earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EV/EBITDA).

Las Vegas Sands Upgrade Arrives at Important Time

The upgrade of Las Vegas Sands is the first to start 2025 and marks at least the second positive commentary on in the early innings of the new year.

Jefferies’ constructive view on Sands also arrived after the gaming stock gained barely more than 4% last year, trailing the S P 500 by a roughly 6-to-1 margin. In fairness to Sands, 2024 was another rough year for Macau gaming equities despite the fact that gross gaming revenue (GGR) grew. Concessionaires there in GGR last year, which was good for 24% year-over-year growth.

Katz said he expects Macau GGR will rebound to pre-coronavirus pandemic levels in 2026 after reaching 80% of those highs last year.

Sands is poised to capitalize on that growth with upgrades at the Londoner Macau slated to be finished in the first half of this year and if Beijing unveils more targeted monetary stimulus that could boost consumer discretionary spending. Such action could prove meaningful to Sands because in Macau, the operator is heavily reliant on mass and premium mass patrons. The Jefferies upgrade helped LVS to a gain of 1.04% on below-average volume.

Another Jefferies Upgrade

The Sands upgrade was part of a slew of adjustments by Katz on a variety of gaming stocks, another of which was Boyd Gaming (NYSE: BYD). The Orleans operator jumped 1.52% today after upgraded the shares to “buy” from “hold” with a $92 price target, implying upside of 26.7% from today’s close.

Las Vegas-based Boyd in its home market, including Aliante, California, Cannery, Fremont, Gold Coast, Jokers Wild, Main Street Station, Sam’s Town, Suncoast, and The Orleans. It also operates regional casinos in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

Katz said the opening of the operator’s temporary casino in Norfolk, Va. later this year could be a spark for the shares adding that investors continue to underappreciate the company’s 5% stake in FanDuel the largest domestic online sportsbook firm.

Article Sources
Dana White Gets Slap Fighting Approved as Actual Nevada Sport editorial policy.
  1. Remembering Jerry Springer’s Short Lived Las Vegas ‘The Price is Right’

Compare Accounts
×
Macau Shutters Casinos For Two Weeks as Coronavirus Case Count Reaches Ten
Provider
Name
Description
Argentina Casino Thief Allegedly Kills Partner for Refusing to Continue Life of Crime  2018 Macau Casino Revenue Projections Looking Sexy and Stable, Ongoing Upward Trends  Gaming Expansion a ‘Threat to Public Health,’ Policy Experts Opine  Reporter Who Exposed Crown Resorts Wins ‘Journalist of the Year’ At Crown Melbourne  Sports Bettor in Spain Accused of Credit Card Fraud Walks Free as Case Falls Apart  Boyd Reinstates, Boosts Dividend, Among First Casino Companies to Do So  Las Vegas F1 Grand Prix Tickets on Sale Soon, Start at $500  United States Favored Over Underrated Netherlands in Women’s World Cup Final  Churchill Downs CEO Carstanjen Says TwinSpires Isn’t For Sale  Churchill Downs CEO Carstanjen Says TwinSpires Isn’t For Sale