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BOYD GAMING CORP (BYD)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- BYD delivered a clean top-line and EPS beat on Q3 2025: revenue $1.004B vs $961M YoY and Adjusted EPS $1.72 vs $1.52 YoY; GAAP EPS of $17.81 was inflated by a ~$1.4B after‑tax gain on the FanDuel stake sale . Versus S&P Global consensus, revenue and EPS came in above, while EBITDA was in line to slightly below on SPGI’s EBITDA basis (see tables) (Values retrieved from S&P Global).*
- Segment mix: broad-based gaming strength across all three property segments; Midwest & South posted its best third‑quarter revenue and Adjusted EBITDAR in three years; Las Vegas Locals saw gaming growth but continued destination softness at the Orleans weighed on results .
- Capital allocation: $175M returned to shareholders in Q3 (dividends + $160M buybacks); leverage fell to ~1.5x post FanDuel proceeds, with $319M cash and $1.9B total debt at 9/30/25 .
- Guidance/tone: Online segment 2025 EBITDA guidance raised to $60M; 2026 view ~$30M reiterated; 2025 capex ~ $600M; Q4 commentary called out negligible Tunica closure impact and breakeven Norfolk temporary opening, with stable Managed & Other .
- Potential stock catalysts: continued core/retail customer strength and M&S outperformance; execution on $150M/quarter buyback; clarity on destination demand at Orleans; and progress on high‑return projects (Suncoast/Orleans renovations, Ameristar St. Charles expansion, Cadence Crossing) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Core and retail strength drove “healthy gaming revenue growth across all three of our property operating segments,” with “margins…consistent with the prior year at 37%” excluding FanDuel effects .
- Midwest & South achieved its “strongest third‑quarter revenue and EBITDA performance in three years,” with margins >37% on disciplined marketing and costs .
- Capital returns and balance sheet: $160M in buybacks (1.9M shares at $84.05) plus $0.18 dividend ($15M); leverage reduced to ~1.5x (lease‑adjusted ~2.0x) following the FanDuel sale .
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What Went Wrong
- Destination weakness in Las Vegas—concentrated at the Orleans—offset Locals gaming growth; management said Orleans accounted for the segment’s EBITDA decline in Q3 .
- Online segment Adjusted EBITDAR fell YoY (Q3 2025 $9.4M vs $26.0M in Q3 2024) given FanDuel market‑access fee changes; company-wide Adjusted EBITDAR also down YoY ($322M vs $337M) .
- Downtown Las Vegas faced lower destination business and reduced Fremont Street pedestrian traffic, limiting growth despite Hawaiian core strength .
Financial Results
Headline metrics (chronological: Q3 2024 → Q2 2025 → Q3 2025)
Q3 2025 actuals vs S&P Global consensus (SPGI)*
- Consensus source: Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Notes: BYD reports Adjusted EBITDAR/Adjusted EBITDA; SPGI tracks EBITDA on a standardized basis, which may differ from company-adjusted definitions . Results also reflect lower market-access fees post-FanDuel transaction .
Segment revenues and Adjusted EBITDAR (YoY comparison)
Selected KPIs and Balance Sheet
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “The third quarter was another quarter of growth… revenues once again exceeding $1 billion, while EBITDA was $322 million… margins were consistent with the prior year at 37%” .
- “Midwest & South segment achieved its strongest third quarter… revenues rose 3% to $539 million, while EBITDA grew to $202 million… Operating margins once again exceeded 37%” .
- “We repurchased $160 million in stock… Actual shares outstanding at the end of the quarter were 78.6 million… leverage… declined… to 1.5 times at the end of the third quarter” .
- “Given current trends, we are increasing our [Online] guidance to $60 million in EBITDA for this year. For 2026, we expect approximately $30 million” .
- “90‑day booking results certainly look better than… three months ago… still soft” .
Q&A Highlights
- Las Vegas dynamics: Management attributed Las Vegas softness to destination business centered at the Orleans; ex‑Orleans, LV Locals saw growth in gaming revenues, overall revenues, EBITDA and consistent margins; 90‑day bookings improved sequentially though remain soft .
- Promotional environment: Competitors stepped up in some markets, but BYD remained disciplined; margins stayed consistent; incremental marketing was targeted at destination softness rather than competitive response .
- Capital structure and returns: Optimal leverage targeted around ~2.5x over time, but no urgency to lever up from ~1.5x; intent to maintain ~$150M/quarter repurchases plus dividend .
- Near‑term 4Q modeling: Tunica closure negligible; Norfolk temporary breakeven; Managed & Other steady; tax payment on the FanDuel sale expected in Q1 2026; cyber event had no operational impact .
- Missouri sports betting: BYD’s partnership with Fanatics in MO acknowledged; potential expansion TBD .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q3 2025: Revenue $875.1M*, Primary EPS $1.625*, EBITDA (SPGI basis) $280.6M*. Actuals: Revenue $1,004.4M (beat), Adjusted/Primary EPS $1.72 (beat), EBITDA (SPGI basis) $280.5M (in line/slightly below)* .
- Takeaways: Revenue upside was broad-based (gaming across segments), while company‑defined Adjusted EBITDAR was below prior year due to FanDuel market‑access fee changes; Online guidance raised to $60M supports upward estimate revisions for 2025 Online EBITDA.* (Values retrieved from S&P Global.)*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core customer and improving retail demand continue to underpin results; M&S outperformance supports the near‑term earnings base as Las Vegas destination demand normalizes .
- Online guidance raised to $60M EBITDA for 2025 with 2026 ~$30M indicates a more resilient digital earnings contribution post FanDuel restructuring .
- With leverage ~1.5x and a stated $150M/quarter buyback cadence, capital returns should remain a steady support to EPS and share count reduction .
- Watch the Orleans: management flagged it as the locus of destination softness; improving 90‑day bookings could be a leading indicator into Q4/Q1 .
- Project execution (Suncoast/Orleans renovations, Ameristar St. Charles expansion, Cadence Crossing) offers visible ROI and medium‑term growth catalysts .
- Limited Q4 noise expected: Tunica negligible, Norfolk temporary breakeven, Managed & Other steady; tax cash outflow in Q1 2026 for FanDuel proceeds should be planned for in models .
- Policy tailwinds (tips/overtime/seniors deductions) and local wage growth support Locals demand into 2026; management has not quantified the benefit yet .
Footnotes:
*Consensus and EBITDA (SPGI basis) values retrieved from S&P Global.