Everi - Q1 2024
May 8, 2024
Executive Summary
- Q1 2024 was a transition-heavy, softer quarter: revenue $189.3M, diluted EPS $0.05, Adjusted EBITDA $80.3M, with consolidated gross margin expanding ~80bps to 80.9% amid revenue mix shift; Games revenue fell, FinTech was slightly down on hardware, but financial access volumes hit records.
- Guidance was lowered: FY24 Adjusted EBITDA now expected down y/y (vs “up slightly” in prior guide), Free Cash Flow down, cash taxes $15–$20M; capex flat-to-up slightly; FinTech expected flat y/y in Q2 and back to growth in H2.
- M&A remains the key catalyst: management reiterated expected close of the IGT Global Gaming/PlayDigital merger in late 2024/early 2025, citing $75M cash synergies and $10M capital savings, modest pro forma leverage (3.2–3.4x), and potential special dividend; to preserve cash, EVRI terminated its stock repurchase and implemented a mandatory sell-to-cover policy for equity tax withholding.
- Games “green shoots”: new cabinets/themes saw early recognition (e.g., Eilers top indexing), but installed base declined (-595 units Q/Q) and unit shipments were light; management expects H2 improvement as content pipelines and cabinet deployments accelerate.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record FinTech throughput: 39M transactions and $12.4B total value processed; same-store trends improved after January weather headwinds, with April/early May tracking mid-to-high single-digit growth.
- Early traction for new Games content/cabinets: Eilers recognition for Dynasty Sol and Dynamite Pop; momentum building for Player Classic Signature and premium launches (Dynasty Sol Sync, Dynasty Dynamic, Player Classic Reserve).
- Digital/iGaming growth: digital revenue ended the quarter a little over $7.3M, up ~12–13% y/y; EVRI went live in the UK and is expanding in Europe/LatAm with partners.
Quotes
- “We are extremely excited about the opportunity to bring together the best of both of our businesses… close the merger in late 2024 or early 2025.”
- “We expect to see performance improvements… which should positively impact both for sale and lease units.”
- “Same-store volumes began to improve late in the first quarter and remain steady… we expect consolidated hardware sales will recover over the balance of the year.”
What Went Wrong
- Games headwinds: installed base declined by 595 units Q/Q; unit sales were 1,021 at ASP $20,827; early performance of Dynasty Vue was weaker than anticipated until more content arrives.
- FinTech hardware softness: lower ticket redemption kiosk sales in certain foreign jurisdictions and loyalty equipment tied to timing of software sales/acceptance weighed on segment revenue.
- Elevated OpEx/R&D and merger-related costs: $15.7M in merger costs in Q1, contributing to lower GAAP operating income/net income; Adjusted EBITDA declined y/y to $80.3M.
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good morning, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Everi Holdings 2024 First Quarter and year-end earnings conference call. During today's presentation, all parties will be in a listen-only mode. Following the prepared remarks, the call will open for a question-and-answer session. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. Now let me turn the call over to Jennifer Hills, Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Jennifer Hills (VP and Head of Investor Relations)
Thank you, operator. Let me begin with a reminder that our safe harbor disclaimer, which covers today's call and webcast, contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed on today's call. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, those contained in our earnings release today and in our SEC filings, which are posted in the investor section of our corporate website at everi.com. Because of the potential risks, you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. We do not intend and assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements, which are made only as of today, May 8, 2024. We will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, such as adjusted EBITDA, free cash flow, and net cash position.
A description of each of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP measure can be found in our earnings release and related 8-K today, as well as in the investor section of our website. This call is being webcast and recorded. A link to the webcast and a replay of today's call can be found in the investor section of our website. On our call today are Randy Taylor, Chief Executive Officer, Mark Labay, Chief Financial Officer, Kate Lowenhar-Fisher, General Counsel, Dean Ehrlich, Games Business Leader, and Darren Simmons, FinTech Business Leader. Now I will turn the call over to Randy.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Thank you, Jennifer. Good morning, and thank you all for joining us today. First, I would like to provide a few more details, where possible, regarding our plan to merge Everi with IGT's Global Gaming and PlayDigital businesses, which was announced on February 29th this year. While we continue to make progress on our proposed merger, we have no specific update regarding antitrust or regulatory matters at this time. As we have messaged in the past, we still anticipate closing the merger in late 2024 or early 2025. We are extremely excited about the opportunity to bring together the best of both of our businesses. While Everi has experienced tremendous success and growth over the past few years, we recognize the ability to accelerate our revenue growth by combining our complementary products and more rapidly enter new jurisdictions.
Over the past several years, we significantly increased our investment in research and development and expanded the number of studios to diversify and increase game content. We have also been successful in expanding our product lines by leveraging our game content into new channels. Combining these businesses will provide greater resources and give us more opportunities for success over a product lifecycle. Additionally, we believe IGT's established global distribution network in both land-based and digital will enable Everi content to enter new global jurisdictions more quickly with less risks. We believe this combination with our game segment will provide more stable, long-term growth opportunities for the combined business. On the FinTech side, we will be able to combine our FinTech with IGT's gaming systems business.
Upon closing, we will be able to work more closely with IGT's system to provide products and services that reduce friction for casino operators and their customers. As they do today, IGT's casino management systems will continue to interface with FinTech products from multiple providers. We will also continue to work with all gaming system providers to improve the expansion of cashless solutions to our casino customers by providing a positive, seamless transaction for their patrons. Additionally, combined, we believe we will be able to offer a complete suite of products from games to systems, financial access, RegTech, and loyalty. The structure of the merger provides for shared equity ownership with modest pro forma net leverage at closing of between 3.2-3.4 times, and the ability to generate strong free cash flow.
We believe this sets the combined company up well for the future. The estimated $75 million in cash synergies, an estimated $10 million in capital savings, are driven by leveraging efficiencies that can be gained primarily through procurement productivity, streamlining the assembly processes, and real estate optimization. They are not based on rationalizing existing product lines in the games business, which is where we believe previous supplier mergers have failed to deliver planned synergies. Additionally, revenue growth opportunities will come from leveraging global networks and a combined product offering. As part of the merger agreement, there's also an opportunity for a special dividend to be paid to Everi shareholders as of a record date prior to the close of the transaction. This dividend is essentially the free cash flow generated from the signing of the transaction, less our merger-related expenses and other adjustments per the agreement.
The final amount of this dividend will be impacted by the time it takes to close and the transaction-related expenses we incur. Therefore, it is difficult to determine the amount of the special dividend, if any, at this point in the process. Turning to the business performance in the first quarter, while the transition to our new family cabinets and game content has been slower and more challenging than expected, we're starting to see the green shoots appear... In the last four months of 2023, we had 34 new games approved, and an additional 18 have been approved year to date. We are in the early stages of installing this new content, but several of the new titles are starting to be recognized in industry surveys.
In the April Eilers report, the for sale DynastySol ranked number 3 in top indexing cabinets in the portrait slant category, and the two versions of Dynamite Pop on this cabinet both reached the top 20 indexing games in the core low-denomination video reel category. Our player classic signature cabinet that was introduced in 2022 has performed well, and this performance is expected to continue with the recent introduction of several new game themes that have yet to be captured by Eilers survey results. The launch of a lower profile Dynasty Vue cabinet last spring was initially hampered by limited content at launch. There are currently 15 titles that have been approved, and we expect to have introduced all of these titles into our install base by the end of Q2.
We expect to see performance improvements on the Vue due to these new titles, which should positively impact both for sale and lease units. The premium Dynasty Sol sync was launched late in the first quarter with The Mask, and our newest theme, Smokin' Hot Stuff Link, has just been approved. We expect installation of this new theme to begin this month. Additionally, four new families of titles are scheduled to be released for this cabinet by year-end. The Dynasty Dynamic Premium cabinet was launched at the end of the third quarter with Hot Stuff Spin Frenzy, and our newest theme, based on our proven proprietary brand, The Vault, is being rolled out now. There are also two more families, Cash Machine Inferno and Zoltar, Master of Mysteries, planned for later this year.
Finally, the Player Classic Reserve was launched at the end of last year's third quarter with great success. This premium cabinet launched with jackpot wheel games, Casper and Hot Stuff in the Class III WAP category. This quarter, we plan to launch the first content fully developed by our Australian studio. The first two themes to be deployed are Thunder and Lightning and Mighty King. We believe these investments in new cabinets and new content will drive improvements in the second half of the year. Although these improvements are taking longer than anticipated, we remain confident in our overall strategy. In terms of new product segments, we are in the final stages of the approval process necessary to enter Illinois with VLTs.
This has been a multi-year investment that opens a 50,000-unit opportunity to us, and we expect to have sold our first units in the second half of 2024. Meanwhile, our core Fintech cash access services business continues to be a steady grower as we again processed more transactions and delivered more dollars to our customers' operations during the quarter than we have in any previous quarter. Consistent with many of the operators' reports, our financial access services were negatively impacted by some bad weather in January, but we saw improvement in February, and as we exited the quarter, we returned to low- to mid-single-digit same-store growth. April has been a little stronger, and we expect this trend to continue over the remainder of the year. While we experienced some challenges in the first quarter, I believe the building blocks for our return to growth are present.
I remain excited about the opportunities ahead and expect our growth initiatives to show improvement primarily in the second half of 2024. I want to end my remarks by acknowledging the strong team we have built here at Everi. It is based on a culture of innovation and focused on the needs of our customers and the experiences of their patrons. I want to thank all our employees for their dedication and for making Everi a top workplace, as once again recognized by the Top Workplaces USA for the third year in a row. Now, let me turn the call over to Mark.
Mark Labay (CFO)
Thanks, Randy. Let me begin by adding a little more color on our first quarter and our outlook for the remainder of the year. During the first quarter, as we expected, our games business continued to experience headwinds as we are transitioning to the new family of cabinets and introducing new content to support these cabinets. Revenue for both gaming operations and gaming equipment and systems declined year-over-year and was relatively flat at the fourth quarter. We experienced declines in both our installed base and our quarterly unit sales. While our installed base declined by 595 units from year-end, approximately half of this decline was a result of strategic decisions to not use capital to replace the cabinets in lower performing locations, where recovery of the capital would not have met our internal return hurdles.
The remainder of the decline is attributable to the additional churn in our older cabinets. To address this, we now have 3 new cabinets with a deep pipeline of themes rolling out. The Player Classic Reserve and Dynasty Dynamic, which were rolled out late in the third quarter, are performing to our expectations. As of March thirty-first, we've installed a combined total of 661 units in over 75 locations. The Dynasty Sol Sync, our newest premium video cabinet, was just launched in the first quarter and is in the early stages of being placed on casino floors. Near term, new cabinet installations will mostly replace existing cabinets, but as these cabinets and games gain traction, we expect to add incremental placements.
Daily win per unit of $34.51 was down slightly from the fourth quarter, but we expect daily win per unit to improve as we roll out new cabinets and new content. In the first quarter, recurring revenues of $5.6 million from Video King operations and increased revenue from our digital segment offset about half the decline in revenues from the installed base. First quarter gaming equipment and system sales were essentially flat with the fourth quarter. Gaming unit sales were below our expectations for the quarter, as we sold 1,021 units at an average selling price of $20,827. With limited initial content available, the early performance of the Dynasty Vue as not been as strong as we anticipated. However, with additional themes being rolled out, now we expect performance of the cabinet to improve.
We introduced the Dynasty Sol in the fourth quarter and are still in the early stages of the rollout. Its acceptance is building momentum with our customers, and from launch through the end of the first quarter, we have sold 525 units. As Randy mentioned, Dynamite Pop on the Dynasty Sol is off to a strong start and is recognized in the April Eilers Games Report as a top-performing new game. Moving on to FinTech. Revenue declined 1% year-over-year, as revenue growth in financial access services and software and other was offset by declines in hardware sales. Financial access services revenues grew 2.1% from the prior year first quarter, as we processed a record 39 million transactions and delivered a record $12.4 billion of funding to customers' operations.
While we did see some weakness in financial access in January due to weather issues, which is consistent with what operators have been disclosing, the trends improved as we exited the quarter and has held steady thus far into the second quarter. Software and other revenues grew from increased kiosk maintenance revenue, compliance revenue, and Central Credit and other revenue, but was partially offset by a decline in new software sales from loyalty. The decline in loyalty revenue was a timing issue related to our customers' readiness to accept installation. We did experience some hardware sale declines in certain foreign jurisdictions related to our ticket redemption kiosks in the first quarter of 2024. Loyalty kiosk sales also declined, reflecting a decline in new installations of loyalty software. As we have discussed previously, loyalty sales can be lumpy.
They typically tend to be larger initial unit sales and are generally tied to the timing of new financial access contracts or contract renewals. While the timing of revenue recognition can be delayed due to the operator's readiness for acceptance of the loyalty software and equipment, they are generally not lost, just deferred to later quarters. For the quarter, consolidated gross margin expanded by approximately 80 basis points to 80.9%, primarily due to revenue mix shift to higher margin gaming operations and financial access services revenue from lower margin gaming equipment and hardware sales. Moving on to operating expenses. We incurred $15.7 million in one-time professional fees, employee retention awards, and other costs related to the planned merger with IGT's Global Gaming and PlayDigital businesses. These costs have been excluded from adjusted EBITDA, but skew our reported operating expense trends from a GAAP basis.
The decline in adjusted EBITDA for the quarter to $80.3 million from $92.5 million in the prior year quarter, is reflective of the lower revenues and higher operating and R&D expenses. The decline in adjusted EBITDA for games to $46.6 million from $53.7 million in the prior year first quarter, was a result of both lower revenues and higher expenses, while the decline in adjusted EBITDA for Fintech to $33.7 million from $38.8 million was primarily due to higher expenses. Net interest expense in the first quarter was $18.8 million, an increase from $18 million in the prior year. As a reminder, we have $400 million of outstanding unsecured notes at a fixed rate of 5% and approximately $581 million of term loans that has a variable rate of interest.
At the end of the quarter, our weighted average borrowing rate was approximately 6.7%. Also included in interest expense is the cash usage fee on our ATM vault cash arrangements. Our expense for the vault cash was $4.8 million, compared to $4.3 million in the prior year first quarter. We ended the quarter with total net leverage at 2.6x trailing adjusted EBITDA, which remains at the low end of our 2.5x-3x target range. Free cash flow generated in the quarter was $14 million, compared with $40 million a year ago. The decline was primarily the result of an increase of $13 million in cash paid for capital expenditures and the $12 million decline in adjusted EBITDA.
We believe the increased investment in capital expenditures is important to refresh our installed base, and we expect this spending to return the installed base to growth and improve daily win per unit over time. Moving on to our outlook. Our current expectations are that we will return to revenue growth in the back half of the year, assuming that our new cabinets and content resonate as expected with casino patrons. Daily win per unit rebounds and unit sales improve. We expect FinTech revenues to return to growth over the remainder of the year, driven by increasing financial access volumes, improved software and other revenue, and a return to growth in our hardware sales. Turning to expenses, we expect higher operating expenses due to our investment in people and products, as well as the costs incurred related to the proposed merger.
With $6 million in term loan repaid in the first quarter, we do not have any significant debt repayments due for the remainder of the year. With $400 million of our debt fixed at 5%, our net interest expense will depend primarily on what happens to interest rates this year. We expect our effective tax rate to be in the 22%-25% range for the year, and our full-year cash taxes to be between $15 million and $20 million. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to decline from the prior year, primarily reflecting the near-term headwinds that are impacting the game segment. But we expect to see improvement in the second half of the year as new cabinets and content hit casino floors and gain traction with customers, and we begin to provide product in new categories like VLT and international gaming.
Capital expenditures are expected to be flat to up slightly from $145.1 million in 2023, as we primarily invest in replacing older cabinets and building out our installed base. Free cash flow is expected to be down from the prior year, but will remain strong. With that, I will now conclude our prepared remarks and turn the call over to the operator for questions.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue, and you may press star two if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Jeffrey Stantial with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hi, this is Aidan Youngs on for Jeff Stantial. Thanks for taking our question. So starting off on the FinTech business, it looks like operating expenses, excluding adjusted EBITDA add backs, were up fairly meaningfully quarter on quarter, both nominally and as a percentage of revenues. Could you have some color on what's driving that? And how should we think about the right R&D and OpEx levels heading into the remainder of 2024? Thanks.
Mark Labay (CFO)
Yeah, thanks, Aidan. Look, I think we're as we look at operating expenses in R&D, we've always kind of talked that, that labor and headcount is probably our largest expense category. It's still a very tight labor market in terms of how we're operating today. Typically, there's annual reviews, other impacts that impact our current payroll, where we are. We feel like we're at a pretty good level, though. You know, Q1 levels for kind of what you're looking at from an R&D and OpEx expense from a headcount and investment level are at the right levels going forward. So in terms of modeling, I'd be thinking kind of consistent along those lines. I think in terms of percentage of revenues, obviously, having a little bit of a decline in the revenues is impacting some of the percentage metrics.
But again, we believe we're invested properly for the long-term growth of the business right now where we are. As revenue begins to rebound, it's particularly in the second half of the year, we think that will kind of close that gap and kind of get back to those normalized levels that we talked about.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Yeah, and I would add, you know, I think we're very comfortable on the FinTech side. Again, that's still a business that we believe you have to invest for improved products. It makes us... It provides better products for our customers and continues to help us, you know, grow that business. And as Mark said, as the revenue comes back up, then I think we'll come back in line.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Great. Thank you. It looks like slot shipments were down 34% year-on-year. You know, recognizing there's a number of moving parts here, just curious to get your views on to what extent you think the announcement of the merger may be impacting sales. Are your sales reps seeing any confusion from customers on the deal and long-term strategy? Any thoughts here would be great. Thank you.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Yeah. Yeah, that's a difficult one, right? Hard to say. I would say, look, we think we're, as we said in the remarks, we should, we expect to grow again in next quarter sequentially. Whether or not there's a real impact right now because of the deal, it's just really hard for us to quantify that. But we just brought our new Sol cabinet that came out late in the quarter. It's doing what we expected to do. We think with some of the new themes on Vue, that should hopefully help that. Our mechanical products are again hitting very well on the Eilers report, so it's just hard to say.
I can't tell you that there's not some, you know, some thought process out there, but, I'm not going to point right now, this early in the stage that, you know, it's immediately being impacted just by the deal.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Great. Thanks for the call. I'll pass it on.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Barry Jonas with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hey, guys. Thanks, thanks for all the helpful remarks. Maybe I just wanted to dive more... Can you maybe give more color on what gives you the confidence that you think new cabinet momentum will show up in the financials in the second half of the year, which starts pretty soon? Thanks.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Sure, Barry. It's, you know, it's hard to say specifically, but, you know, we're investing in the capital, so we're getting games out there. We know that we're getting lift off of new games in comparison to the games that are being replaced. So in the install base, you know, there is some churn, and it's first going to be to replace the older units. So that's gonna move in the right direction. We think that's pretty straightforward. The question is, how long does it hold? And does it really go to a higher win per day than maybe what we're modeling? So I would say, you know, we're seeing interest in the slots with the new the two themes that have hit well in the Eilers reports, right? That's something new for us.
So look, there's green shoots here, Barry, that would point to the fact that, you know, we should improve in the second half of the year. It's a difficult one to say how much, but, you know, so far, you know, the new themes are working well. And we're seeing, you know, we're, as we're replacing games, we're getting a lift. It's just that we have a big install base, and so that takes a little time. It's a, it's a bigger, you know, a bigger ship to turn. But we're still very comfortable that, you know, we're gonna, we're gonna improve in the back half of the year.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
... Great, great. And then just as a follow-up, you know, look, we know you need to run the businesses independently until the deal closes, but is there any early integration work or maybe ways for the two companies to work together, between now and the deal close? Thanks.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Yeah, Barry, I would say, look, that's kind of a topic we're really not gonna cover, you know, that you're very limited on what you can do. So I would say, I'm gonna stay away from that one, because, you know, as we said, we're not gonna give an update there, so I would say, I'll leave it at that, Barry. Unfortunately, not much I can give you.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Understood. Thank you.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
You bet.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of David Katz with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hi, good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions, for all the, the detail. I'm just curious, as you sort of progress toward closing on the transaction, what kind of, you know, feedback are you getting sort of in the field, in terms of, you know, opportunities that may be going slower or faster, you know, as a result of just the pending deal out there?
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Hey, hey, hey, David, how you doing? I'm struggling a little bit with how to answer your question. I mean, I would say the feedback that we've got from customers is positive on the deal. You know, but you know, whether or not I can say, is there anything that you know, we're doing in the interim, again, as I remarked to Barry, there's not a lot that you can really do at this stage in the game until you get through a couple of the processes that we've talked about between antitrust and regulatory. We did have a CAB, our you know, a the...
We bring our customers in, a customer evaluation of the products, and I think, again, they were favorable to the transaction, right? They still want to see how it goes. We've been very clear to our customers that both product lines will continue to be supported. And so I think that's really what they want to know, and I think they've been supportive of that. But there's not, I guess, anything else I can really point to, David, that says where we are in this process. And until we are farther along and have other information, we're just, as you said, we're kind of operating as independent units with understanding that down the road we expect to come together.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Understood. And Randy, your prepared remarks, you talked about some of the technology opportunities that are coming together, which is, you know, clearly an exciting part of all this. You know, notwithstanding the, you know, time to meld those two enterprises together, you know, presume that, you know, that there may also be some incremental R&D, you know, to that end, have you started to look at, you know, what the cost of melding those together might be at this stage, or is that just way too early to get any insight on?
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
It's again, it's, yeah, David, it's just, it's just way too early. You know, I think, I think the good thing is, as we've talked on our remarks before, is that we don't expect to, you know, change R&D, right? R&D is what's gonna drive this company and the, and the success of this company combined. So it's, it's definitely not gonna be in the, in the neighborhood of, of pulling back in my estimation right now. But, you know, specifically, where and, and in, in that area, David, again, it's just too early to talk about anything of that nature or, or, you know, how we're gonna look at that going forward.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay, fair enough. Thank you very much.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Appreciate it, David. Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Chad Beynonn with Macquarie. Please proceed with your question.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Morning. Thanks for taking my question. Wanted to ask about the iGaming or digital side of things. The market here in the U.S. continues to grow quite significantly, and I know that's been an area of focus for your content here. And then you've also talked about expanding into the U.K., Europe, and Latin American markets. So can you just kind of give us an update in terms of how that business, that line item is progressing and then opportunities for 2024? Thanks.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Yeah, Chad, I'll take that one. Look, I think digital continues to be an important part of our business and a great avenue for growth. Again, what we really appreciate about the gaming business is the ability to take proven content that we've developed and take it into new channels and really expand what we're doing there. And as you mentioned, the North American, U.S. market growing has created opportunities, and our ability to get into new markets like U.K. is also something we're really excited about. Still very early stages of that international piece, but we are live actually in the U.K. now and looking to continue to expand what we do in U.K. and in Europe with some partners that we have here in the coming quarters. So great opportunity.
I think, in terms of, of growth, you know, we, we ended the quarter probably just a little over $7.3 million of revenue. So nice year-over-year growth, probably about 12%-13% growth on, on a year-over-year basis in terms of, of, of, performance there. So it's, again, progressing nicely and continuing to grow along the path of our expectations.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Thanks, Mark. And then on the FinTech side, you mentioned hardware, you know, coming in a little bit light this quarter. That's always been lumpy and kind of harder to predict. Is there general seasonality in that business? And I know you have a few, you know, big improvements and kind of products that are out in the market. Can you just kind of help us with, you know, the outlook for that for the rest of the year on the hardware side?
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
... Yeah, Chad, to your point, it is lumpy. I would say, you know, we have signed contracts. We have, you know, product that we do believe will get placed this year, so, we're very confident that that will, you know, ramp throughout the rest of the year. The only, you know, the unknown is, you know, customers, when they're ready for it, and are they gonna take it at that point in time? So, you know, we had some that got pushed this quarter and pushed out, but again, these are signed contracts, which are generally kind of tied to a cash access contract. And so, it's just when they want to install them and when they're ready for it.
So we're still very comfortable that, you know, hardware should ramp throughout the rest of the year. But in Q1, just a little bit lower than we had anticipated, obviously, compared to prior year.
Mark Labay (CFO)
Thank you very much. Appreciate it.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Thanks, Chad.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of John Davis with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hey, good morning, guys. This is Madison on for JD. I just wanted to touch on the comments around the decision to not replace some cabinets in lower performing areas. Is this something that's just gonna be isolated to 1Q, or is this an ongoing process where you guys are looking at other areas where there could be some bleed over into 2Q or the second half?
Mark Labay (CFO)
I'll take that one, Madison. Look, I think, we're always in the gaming operations team as laser focused on making sure they make smart choices with respect to, you know, generating revenue and driving revenue. And if we have low volume locations that are looking either for increased placement fees or new placement fees, in addition to swapping out equipment, you know, we wanna make sure we get a reasonable rate of return and hit that hurdle for us internally to make sure it makes sense. And if it doesn't make sense, you know, just to not never get your money back or barely make any money over a 4- or 5-year period of time, we're not gonna spend that money. So we're always evaluating that.
I think there were some larger concentrations of units in the first quarter, and we talked about, of our declines, over 300 of them are probably those kind of decisions to not replace capital where we had the opportunity to. I expect over the coming quarters, you'll see a couple more little instances like that, maybe not to the level that you saw here, but you know, we are making those choices to maximize our yield and the install base.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Yeah, Madison, I would point out that those were really kind of related to two customers, so I, I don't want you to look at it as this is somehow throughout our install base, but there were a couple of customers that, you know, just they have lower performing units, and then there were some other issues tied to it, and we decided that, you know, from a yield, it made sense, not to, you know, to go after those. So don't want it to look like it's throughout our install base, but it was just primarily two customers.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay, got it. And then just a quick follow-up here on the FinTech side. You know, appreciate the color you gave on some of the hardware components. But as we think about kind of volumes progressing through the year, year or yields for that matter, you know, how are you guys thinking about cash to the casino floor and, you know, whether it be 2Q or the second half, and just any color in terms of what you're expecting from a yield perspective? Thanks, guys.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Sure, Madison. Look, I'll... What I'd say is, I think Mark covered it a little bit in the, in his remarks, that, you know, January was softer than we expected, but, you know, it really kind of recovered in, you know, February and March. And I would say, so far, April and early May have been, you know, really, pleasantly not surprising, but, you know, higher than we kind of expected. So it, it seems to be right now that, you know, we would expect the cash access, you know, volumes to kind of stay at that, you know, mid to low single digit growth and maybe even a little bit better, but we'll have to wait and see.
But I would say, look, we're still expecting growth on cash access, and I think we're kind of budgeting for that level, but right now, I'd say we're seeing probably a little bit stronger than that.
Mark Labay (CFO)
Yeah, and I would just add, look, even with the little bit of headwinds of weather in January that we saw, we still ended the quarter positive on a same store basis. So, so it seems like the patron, the consumer, is still very willing to spend in the gaming environment, and we're seeing some, as Randy mentioned, some really good strength, probably above the kind of what were our expectation levels into April and into May, probably closer to, you know, just mid to-
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
High
Mark Labay (CFO)
... high mid single digits in April and into May. So, you know, April last year, May wasn't bad impacted or what the comp wasn't so horribly bad either. So it feels like it's still holding up very steady for us in this space.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. Yeah, that's a very helpful color. I appreciate it, guys.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
You bet.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Our next question comes from the line of David Bain with B. Riley. Please proceed with your question.
Great. Thank you. Hi, Randy. Hi, Mark. Quick question on the termination of the repurchase program. Does that signal, like, confidence of a deal close and, you know, you keep the money for dividend purposes? Or is that more-
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Well, no, I think it doesn't signal the confidence of the deal close. I still think our confidence hasn't changed. We still believe that we'll close at the end of the year or early next year. But what we wanted to point out was that we're not gonna be, you know, we have a special dividend, if it's payable, depending on our operations and merger-related expenses and so forth. And so we just want to make sure that, you know, shareholders understand that, you know, we're not gonna be out purchasing shares because we think that takes away from the dividend.
And then we also wanted to note the sell to cover, where we've changed our approach to not withholding shares for tax purposes, which would require us to pay the cash into the US government. So that would be a use of our cash during this time period, versus just saying people should sell them on the open market, and we'll still pay their taxes, but that would, again, help our overall potential for a dividend. So we're trying to manage cash as well, to make sure that, you know, if possible, that there could be a dividend. So that was kind of both then, kind of two aspects to it, David.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Very good. That's perfect. And then, as a follow-up, I know you spoke about some customers and their reaction to the deal generally. Have you specifically spoken to any systems customers or operators, and maybe they've opined at the, with regard to the potential of, you know, the cashless friction removal, from the combination? Is that something that, like, as David Cass was pointing out, that could actually be more accelerated than you originally anticipated amongst the IGT base, systems base?
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Yeah, look, you know, I would expect. We haven't. I would say we haven't really talked specifically to customers. I think there may be customers that are kind of thinking about what they're gonna do-
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
On the system side.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
The system side, in other words, you know, if they're thinking about what they're gonna use from a cashless and, maybe they have the IGT system, I think they are probably thinking about, you know, does that change, you know, how they wanna go forward? But, and that maybe that gives us more opportunity. You know what I'm saying, David? But I don't think I would say we've had any, you know, real discussions there, because, again, we're, you know, we're in this period of, they've gotta operate, we have to operate.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Awesome. Thanks, Randy.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Okay.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of George Sutton with Craig-Hallum. Please proceed with your question.
George Sutton (Stock Analyst)
Thank you. I have a mathematical question for Mark. You mentioned the daily win per unit numbers are expected to improve in the back half of the year, as a result of new content. Help us understand the percentage of your units that would be impacted by the new content. That sounded to me to be an unusually or an unusual way to grow quickly the daily win per unit.
Mark Labay (CFO)
Well, remember, in the install base, the entire base of units, we're continually making content for all of our cabinets in there. It's not just about brand-new cabinets that are out there as well. So we're always swapping out content and trying to, you know, move the needle in terms of performance and improvement, and that's, you know, how you grow over time as well. But obviously, the new cabinets and the new content is something new to patrons, and that drives generally a little more increased level of, you know, lift on the devices as we make those swaps out on cabinets, as well as the content on them.
So, you know, what we've been seeing in the install base is generally anywhere from, you know, $10 to $15, $20 a day of daily win improvement on the swap outs we've been doing. Clearly, we've been focused on the highest value units first in the install base, and we'll continue that over the course of time, swapping out lower-yielding or older equipment, legacy-type cabinets that may be a little more tired with the new, freshest content in there. So that's where we expect to see the biggest bang for the buck in terms of movement in the daily win.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Thanks. Uh-
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
It's a two-pronged, you know...
Dean Ehrlich (Games Business Leader)
Yeah.
David Bain (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Sorry, Randy.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Go ahead. I didn't have much more to add. It's just a... Go ahead.
George Sutton (Stock Analyst)
Well, I need to know what the two-pronged approach is.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Now that I said it, you have to, but I would say, look, you're focused on, you know, replacing themes where some of the themes have gotten older, and that's a little bit easier lift, but then you have to start replacing the cabinets. So I think, you know, Mark's point is the cabinets plus new themes are probably the biggest lift, but also just putting new themes on older cabinets is a lift, so it's a combo.
George Sutton (Stock Analyst)
Gotcha. Dr. Ehrlich has been surprisingly quiet on this call, and there was a reference to the early performance of the Dynasty Vue not meeting your expectations, but an expectation that that improves with new content. I just wondered if he could address sort of what might have been missing there, what may be coming that we should be enthusiastic about.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
I'll hit the latter part of it, of the stuff that we should be enthusiastic about, because we have a huge lineup coming out of product that, we feel hits the tried-and-true mechanics, the players are very familiar with, and just the pure bandwidth on our emphasis on, developing on some of the new hardware that we've been talking about for a while. So what's happening here is that it's really starting to come to fruition as the products start getting deployed. It's just taken a little bit longer than, obviously, any of us would have liked. So, I am excited about a lot of different products that are coming out through the next up and coming few months. So hard to name.
George Sutton (Stock Analyst)
If I had to give you one, we got Smoking Hot Stuff Link, that Randy touched upon, that hits our premium segment. Very excited to see how that's going to do, and just the continued success of Dynamite Pop that we've, you know, all talked about. So, obviously, look forward to seeing a couple of more themes resonate at that same particular level, and see where this goes.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Hey, George, I'd add that, you know, look, on the Vue specific, right? We, we launched in, in throughout 2023 with about six titles. We now added nine more titles, so we have a total of 15 titles. So that's really what I'm focused on, with those, with those additional nine titles, where, again, we placed Vue out in our install base, and we obviously have it for sale. It's also, you know, it's also our, our, our cabinet that we'll be using for the VLTs. So, you know, we're still excited about that, but I'm focused on, hey, will those nine new themes really, you know, provide a lift, versus where we came out?
George Sutton (Stock Analyst)
Understood. Thanks, guys.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. This concludes our question and answer session. I'd now like to turn the call back over to Mr. Taylor for his closing remarks.
Randy L Taylor (CEO)
Sure. Thank you for joining us today. We appreciate your continued interest in Everi, and we look forward to providing an update on our business outlook, on our second quarter call in August. Again, thanks for joining us.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.