Accel Entertainment, Inc. (ACEL) on Q1 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good afternoon. Thank you for attending today’s Accel Entertainment Q1 2022 Earnings Call. My name is Tamia and I will be your moderator for today’s call. I would now like to pass the conference over to our host, Derek Harmer, General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer. Please go ahead. Derek Harmer: Welcome to Accel Entertainment’s first quarter 2022 earnings call. Participating on the call today are Andy Rubenstein, Accel’s Chief Executive Officer; and Matt Ellis, Accel’s Chief Financial Officer. Please refer to our website for the press release and supplemental information that will be discussed on this call. Today’s call is being recorded and be available on our website under Events & Presentations within the Investor Relations section of our website. Some of the comments in today’s call may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, including those relating to COVID-19 and its variant strains. Actual results may differ materially from those discussed today, and the company undertakes no obligation to update these statements unless required by law. For a more detailed discussion of these and other risk factors, investors should review the forward-looking statements section of the earnings press release available on our website as well as other risk factor disclosures in our filings with the SEC. During the call, we may discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures. For reconciliations of the non-GAAP measures as well as other information regarding these measures, please refer to our earnings release and other materials in the Investor Relations section of our website. I will now turn the call over to Andy. Andy Rubenstein: Thanks, Derek and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us for Accel’s first quarter earnings call. Before we dive in, I would like to thank Brian Carroll for his hard work and dedication over the last 8 years as our Chief Financial Officer. We would not be the company we are today without them. I would also like to congratulate Matt Ellis on his promotion to succeed Brian. Matt has played an integral role in our transformation into a public company, and we’re confident he’s the right person to lead our financial organization as we continue to expand into new markets. Turning to the quarter. I’m pleased to report we had another strong quarter despite the impact of Omicron. We reported revenue of $197 million with year-over-year same-store sales growth of 3%. When you think about the Omicron headwinds we experienced this quarter versus the fourth round of stimulus checks going out in March of 2021, the year-over-year growth we achieved further demonstrates the strength and resilience of our business. In the current inflationary environment, the cost of virtually everything is increasing. For example, it costs more to eat, travel, shop and commute. Our offering, however, has not increased in price, and our players usually live less than 15 minutes from our locations. We believe local businesses will continue to invest in gaming due to the incremental profits they receive. And players will continue to choose our local, price stable, high-quality offering due to its appeal and convenience. Looking at our number of locations. This is the first quarter where our number of locations dropped due to a change in regulatory practices. While we usually see an increase in closures after the holidays, the reason for this decrease is due to the IGB’s recent enforcement of the 72-hour rule. The rule requires terminal operators to disconnect and remove their equipment from a location if there is no activity for 72 hours. In the past, we could leave our equipment if a location was temporarily closed for repairs, remodeling or an ownership change. In addition, if a location went out of business, we could remove our equipment at our convenience. The 72-hour rule accelerated all planned removals for the next several months. As a result, we removed our equipment from approximately 30 locations totaling 150 VGTs. We view the drop as onetime in nature, and we expect to resume our normal growth trend going forward. More importantly, this change has almost no impact on our revenue. Expense side, just like most other businesses, we experienced higher-than-expected costs from COVID-related and macroeconomic-related impacts, such as increased expenses for overtime, fuel and parts. We’re continually monitoring our spend and looking for ways to mitigate increased costs without sacrificing our best-in-class service. Our asset-light business model will allow us to quickly adjust to any further changes in the market. Turning to Century. We believe we are on track to close at the end of May. Century continues to outperform our original estimates, and we’re looking forward to combining the best practices of both companies. We plan to share more about Century in our next earnings call after the acquisition closes. Sticking with M&A. Our pipeline remains active, and we are evaluating multiple opportunities in Illinois and across the country. Our long-term goal is to continue to increase the percentage of our revenue generated outside of Illinois. Century is the first step towards achieving our goal, and we hope to announce additional opportunities in the future. On the organic front, our sales team continue to sign additional competitor in organic locations. For the first quarter, Accel was awarded 67 new licenses or 35% of the total new licenses awarded. Our ability to continually win more licenses than our current market share is a strong testament to our sales capabilities, brand awareness and location owners believing in the Accel difference. When we look at the number of eligible businesses without gaming or the number of VGTs per capita, we believe Illinois still has a significant amount of highly visible growth. Looking at other states, we remain cautiously optimistic that several states will consider distributed gaming in the future. We continue to work with the various stakeholders to educate them about the benefits of distributed gaming and the incremental revenues it generates for state and local governments and small businesses alike. We are confident the growth playbook we built in Illinois can be replicated in any future market, and our leadership position nationally will create advantages for us. Overall, Accel is in a very strong position to capitalize on the future. Our hyperlocal business model, low capital requirements and highly visible growth offers one of the best returns in gaming. With that, I’d like to turn it over to Matt to walk you through the numbers in more detail. Matt Ellis: Thanks, Andy, and good morning, everyone. I’ve had the opportunity to connect with many of you on today’s call, and I look forward to continuing that relationship in my new role going forward. For the first quarter, we had total revenue of $197 million and adjusted EBITDA of $35 million, year-over-year increases of 34% and 37%, respectively. As a reminder, gaming was shut down for the first 18 days of January 2021. Location hold per day for the first quarter was $811, a year-over-year increase of 3%. Considering the Omicron headwinds, perceived pent-up demand we experienced in the first quarter of 2021 as well as the fourth round of stimulus checks issued in March 2021, we believe 3% year-over-year growth further reinforces the strength of our business. As a reminder, the 3% growth only accounts for the days we were open in 2021, so it’s an apples-to-apples comparison. CapEx for the first quarter was $7 million cash spend. As of March 31, we had 13,663 VGTs in 2,565 locations, year-over-year increases of 7% and 4%, respectively. Location attrition continues to remain low and mirror the pre-COVID historical averages. During the quarter, we removed 150 of our VGTs in 30 locations due to the 72-hour rule. As mentioned earlier, we think of the drop as onetime in nature. When business is shut down, we naturally remove our equipment at the appropriate time, but the 72-hour rule effectively accelerated our planned removals for the next several months. Going forward, we expect to resume our normal growth trend. At the end March, our average residual contract length was approximately 7 years, a modest increase from last quarter. Our ability to increase this figure is a true testament to the strong and long-lasting relationships we’ve built with our location partners. I’d now like to provide an update on our share repurchase program. As you’re all aware, we announced a $200 million share repurchase program in November of 2021, as we find the opportunity to return capital to shareholders in the form of buybacks and attractive use of our significant free cash flow. During the quarter, we purchased $14 million of Accel stock at an average purchase price of $12.79 per share. In April, we purchased an additional $6 million of Accel stock at an average purchase price of $12.17 per share. Given our relatively underlevered balance sheet and strong free cash flow, we are in a position to make exciting investments like Century, while thoughtfully continuing to return capital to shareholders. At the end of the fourth quarter, we had approximately $147 million of debt and $745 million of liquidity, consisting of $195 million of cash on our balance sheet and $550 million of availability on our credit. Turning to outlook. As Andy mentioned earlier, demand in our revenue continues to be strong and consistent with our guidance despite Omicron. Q2 is also off to a promising start. That being said, like almost every other business, we are seeing somewhat higher expenses due to inflationary pressures and the tight labor market, the extent to which we’re not known to us back in November. Given this and the pending Century closing at the end of next month, we anticipate updating guidance at our next call. Back to you, Andy. A - Andy Rubenstein: Thanks, Matt. We are pleased with our performance this quarter and even more excited for what the future holds. We can’t wait to officially welcome the Century team to the Accel family, and we continue to focus on additional growth opportunities. We remain confident that our asset-light, hyper local business model creates a platform to outperform in difficult times and really thrive under normal circumstance as demonstrated by our continued performance. We aim to leverage our proven business model, an extremely strong financial positon to continue our expansion and return capital to shareholders. We’ve gone from operating in 1 state when we went public in November of 2019 to 9 states after we close Century. Our success would not be possible without our dedicated employees and loyal customers. They are the true competitive advantages of our business that make Accel the preferred choice in our market. We will now take your questions. Operator: Thank you. The first question is from the line of Chad Beynon with Macquarie. Your line is open. Chad Beynon: Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to start with a high-level one. I know in the past, at the Investor Day, you talked about the difference between you and other land-based properties and the reward system. What we’ve been hearing from a lot of the operators is they are really pulling back on reinvestment rates. And I was wondering if this could be a potential positive for you guys, understanding that it’s not in the near-term outlook, but if this is something that could help you reengage with some players that left or reengage with players who just haven’t – frequent in your locations, particularly in Illinois? Thanks. Andy Rubenstein: Thanks, Chad. Yes, we have seen that benefit in the recent periods where we’re developing relationships with players that we had not seen before, and they have recognized that our offering and our convenience is far superior to what they were receiving currently from the regional brick-and-mortar offerings. And so with a better product and the convenience, we continue to see the increase in player count as well as a lot of new people that basically didn’t realize that our offering is very comparable to the brick-and-mortar business. Chad Beynon: Thanks. And then in terms of M&A, Andy, you mentioned in your prepared remarks that the pipeline remains active and you continue to look to diversify outside of Illinois. How does the changing of interest rates kind of affect how fast you could potentially do some more deals given the cost of capital difference? Thank you. Matt Ellis: Chad, it’s Matt. I can answer this one. I think the first thing to think about it is we actually took some steps to protect against an increase in inflation rates. We took out a $300 million 4-year deferred premium cap, which protects us if LIBOR goes above 2%. The other piece of that, obviously, is we have relatively low rates on our facility, and we will look to continue to protect. But given our availability and that we raised that facility last year, I think, if anything, it puts us in a good position to get M&A done because we have the financing in place. Chad Beynon: Thank you both very much and congrats on the appointment, Matt. Matt Ellis: Thanks, Chad. Operator: Thank you, Mr. Beynon. The next question is from Steve Pizzella with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Steve Pizzella: Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. I think Andy mentioned higher-than-expected costs due to COVID in his prepared remarks. Can you just kind of elaborate on those costs and if you expect those to fall off at all? Matt Ellis: Hey, Steve, it’s Matt again. So I think a lot of those costs are related again not to the business specific, but what we’re seeing with the overall economy, particularly over time, fuel and parts. When we look at it, sort of just stepping back in terms of guide and everything, we now look at the company sort of on a combined basis. And first and foremost, the revenue is remaining strong. When you think about Omicron this year and sort of last year’s stimulus checks, that 3% growth really reinforces the strength of the business. We have always sort of said that those ‘21 levels are here to stay. And I think as the results come in, we continue to reinforce that. April and March are always 2 of the key months of the year. And between March and – as we said, Q2 is off to a promising start, we’re pretty pleased with what we’re seeing. Kind of pulling it all back together to expenses when we think about it in terms of guide, we’re looking at things that, on a combined basis, and what I would say is that the increase in expenses has pushed us sort of to the bottom of that kind of pro forma combined guide. Obviously, we will look for ways to mitigate those expenses, but many of these are sort of what everyone’s dealing with throughout the economy. Steve Pizzella: Okay. I appreciate it. Thanks. And then can you just talk us through what you saw in April kind of relative to March? Are you able to delineate if you’re seeing any degradation on kind of the lower-end consumer? Matt Ellis: So I would say, as you remember, we – player awards is not live in Illinois. So we can’t kind of track at the player level. We do look obviously per machine per day. The strength is still there. April was going to be a challenging month just given what was happening last year, but it came out very well. You’ll obviously get the results from the IGB – or the numbers from the IGB in about a week or so. Overall, I think with everything going on, our offering remains very attractive. It’s close to home. It’s convenient. And as Andy mentioned earlier, it’s a high-quality offering on par with some of the other options out there. Steve Pizzella: Okay. I appreciate it. Thanks, guys. Matt Ellis: Sure. Thank you. Operator: Thank you, Mr. Pizzella. The next question is from Stephen Grambling with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Stephen Grambling: Hi, there. Maybe just following up on the macro question, I guess has anything changed as you think about the relationship of the macro and some of the inflationary pressures, particularly as it relates to fuel location-by-location basis? Matt Ellis: When you think about it that way, I would say, again, what we’re more focused on is the revenue and the play is stronger. Of course, fuel hits us. We have vehicles out on the road. I think that’s hitting everyone. But like – when you think about our players in fuel, our locations are less than 15 minutes away. Fuel is not going to be a decision on whether they kind of go to one of our nearby establishments. Andy Rubenstein: Yes. And to kind of build on that, they are more likely to go local than to a destination – regional casino where they are driving 45 minutes to 1.5 hours. And the fuel actually in many situations is – the fuel increase in pricing is somewhat beneficial. Stephen Grambling: That’s helpful. And then maybe if you can just give us a follow-up or an update on some of the new market expansion and what you see out there? Are there any other new states that you’ve got your eye on that you could potentially expand into? Thank you. Andy Rubenstein: Yes. Unfortunately, the spring legislative sessions were not as productive as we hoped. We’re seeing an opportunity of – to continue to expand the pilot that we’re involved in, in Georgia. And so I think we will get some more locations involved in that pilot. The other states – I mean there is a chance that legislation get passed. It’s not looking that promising. And we continue to investigate and pursue some of the legacy states. And hopefully, Century is the beginning of those efforts. Stephen Grambling: Awesome. Thanks. I will get back into queue. Operator: Thank you, Mr. Grambling. The next question is from Greg Gibas with Northland Securities. Your line is open. Greg Gibas: Hi, Andy and Matt. Thanks for taking the questions and Matt, congrats on the new role. I guess I just wanted to confirm, you talked about seeing no impact from the decline in those – I guess, the removal of those 30 locations, no impact on revenue. Is that essentially because they are just inactive locations? Thank you. Matt Ellis: That’s exactly it. I mean this is more of a change in methodology than anything. We’ve always reported the number of locations in VGTs by what the central system tells us. We’re not going to make adjustments to that. And those locations that are being disconnected were not generating revenue. So it’s – there is no real change on the revenue. It’s just really – we look at it as a change in methodology. Greg Gibas: Got it. Thanks for confirming. And when I guess you think about expectations for new location license issuances from the IGB, maybe this year versus last, any thoughts there on how that might trend? Matt Ellis: I think it’s too soon to tell. I mean where our focus is, is continuing to sign high-quality locations and get them into the backlog. I think the IGB is working hard to work through their queue to get stuff licensed. But from our standpoint, it’s let’s sign high-quality locations and get them into the queue. A little too soon to tell on what sort of the ongoing licensing pace will be. Greg Gibas: Got it. And I know you talked about readdressing guidance in Q2 after the Century acquisition closes. Are you withdrawing the current guidance or just kind of waiting for that acquisition to close at the end of this month? Matt Ellis: I would say we’ve left it unchanged and waiting to provide an update next month after – or next quarter, excuse me, after Century’s closed. Greg Gibas: Okay. Sure. I guess last one for me. You talked about buying a few other opportunities, both within Illinois and other markets. What type of multiples do you maybe expect to pay on those future M&A opportunities? Andy Rubenstein: It’s a range. And it really depends on length of the contract, the nature of the leadership of that business and the opportunity for growth. So traditionally, we’re targeting around the 7ish range, but it all depends on the actual business. Greg Gibas: Okay. Appreciate it. Operator: There are no additional questions waiting at this time. I will now turn the conference over to Andy for any concluding remarks. Andy Rubenstein: Yes. Thank you. I just wanted to thank, everyone, for joining us today. We have a very bright summer ahead of us, a lot of exciting things happening, and we look forward to updating you with a lot of good news the next time we get together. So thank you for joining us, and have a nice weekend. Operator: That concludes the Accel Entertainment Q1 2022 earnings call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.
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