NYSE:LVS Las Vegas Sands Q1 2026 Earnings Report $49.65 +0.03 (+0.07%) As of 01:56 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Las Vegas Sands EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.91Consensus EPS $0.76Beat/MissBeat by +$0.15One Year Ago EPS$0.59Las Vegas Sands Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$3.59 billionExpected Revenue$3.32 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$266.94 millionYoY Revenue Growth+25.30%Las Vegas Sands Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date4/22/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, April 22, 2026Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsLas Vegas Sands' Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Wednesday, July 22, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled at 4:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Las Vegas Sands Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 22, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Marina Bay Sands delivered exceptional results with EBITDA up >30% to $788 million, record rolling volume (~$18B), and management plans the luxury IR2 project targeting >20% returns to add high-end capacity and smooth VIP volatility. Positive Sentiment: Sands China improved with Q1 EBITDA of $633 million, mass-market share at 25.7% and sequential market-share gains across segments, and management reiterated a goal to reach $700 million quarterly EBITDA over time as product and service upgrades roll out. Negative Sentiment: Company flagged near-term margin pressure from higher operating expenses and targeted hiring to lift service levels, plus increased maintenance and redevelopment CapEx (Venetian refresh starting Q3 2026, full refresh by end‑2027), which will weigh on margins before long‑term benefits materialize. Positive Sentiment: Capital returns accelerated: the company repurchased $740 million of LVS stock this quarter, paid a $0.30 dividend, and has reduced share count ~14.3% over ten quarters, signaling continued buybacks that management expects to be accretive. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallLas Vegas Sands Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Las Vegas Sands First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants have been placed on a listen-only mode. We will open the floor for your questions and comments following the presentation. It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Mr. Daniel Briggs, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations at Las Vegas Sands. Sir, the floor is yours. Daniel BriggsSVP of Investor Relations at Las Vegas Sands00:00:20Thank you. Joining the call today are Patrick Dumont, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Wilfred Wong, Executive Vice Chairman of Sands China, and Grant Chum, CEO and President of Sands China and EVP of Asia Operations. Today's conference call will contain forward-looking statements. We will be making those statements under the safe harbor provision of federal securities laws. The language on forward-looking statements included in our press release also applies to our comments made on the call today. The company's actual results may differ materially from the results reflected in those forward-looking statements. Daniel BriggsSVP of Investor Relations at Las Vegas Sands00:00:54In addition, we will discuss non-GAAP measures. Reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measure are included in our press release. We have posted an earnings presentation on our website. We will refer to that presentation during the call. Finally, for the Q&A session, we ask those with interest to please pose one question and one follow-up, so we might allow everyone with interest the opportunity to participate. This presentation is being recorded. I'll now turn the call over to Patrick. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:01:23Thanks, Dan. Good afternoon. Thank you for joining the call. As we look to the future, we couldn't be more enthusiastic about the opportunities for our company. Our strategic priorities remain clear, and consistent with the goals of investing with discipline and creating meaningful shareholder returns. Turning to our current quarter results, we once again delivered outstanding financial results at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, with EBITDA increasing over 30% to reach $788 million. Singapore is an ideal market for high-value tourism spending, and our focus on creating unique and memorable entertainment and hospitality experiences for our guests has been a tremendous success. The company's fundamental operating strategy relies on three critical pillars, our people, our product, and our service. When we get these three pillars optimized, we can create outstanding financial and operating performance. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:02:14We are seeing that at Marina Bay Sands today, and we couldn't be more enthusiastic about our additional opportunities for growth in Singapore as we continue to enhance the customer experience for our guests in the years ahead. Turning to Macao, we delivered $633 million in EBITDA for the quarter, an increase of over 18%. Mass market revenue share reached 25.7% for this quarter, our strongest performance since the first quarter of 2024. As in Singapore, the operating pillars of people, product, and service underpin our strategy to deliver growth in Macao. We believe we will deliver growth over time in Macao as we implement specific strategies to improve both our products and our service levels. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:02:56We have a goal of reaching $700 million in quarterly EBITDA and beyond over time as we fully implement our investment in operating strategies and as the Macao market continues to grow. Today, the growth in the Macao market is primarily driven by the premium segment. The competition in that segment remains intense, and luxurious suite product coupled with outstanding service levels are critical to success. We have the suite product to effectively compete in the premium segment at both Londoner and Grand Suites at the Four Seasons. We are singularly focused today on matching that suite and room product with the service levels that the most discerning, and valuable customers in Macao increasingly demand. We are making progress. We have meaningfully increased our gaming revenues, gaming volumes, and premium customer patronage since implementing the recent changes to our reinvestment programs. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:03:46Implementing meaningful improvements in the service pillar of our strategy in Macao will be critical to realizing additional growth and securing our long-term success. We believe we have outstanding opportunities for growth in every segment as we implement our strategies. Accordingly, we will be making targeted investments in training, and hiring of additional customer-focused team members throughout the portfolio. Creating and delivering unique and memorable hospitality experiences is the centerpiece of our strategy, and improving service levels in Macao is critical to the achievement of our long-term financial and operating objectives. In addition, we plan to introduce refreshed, and luxurious room and suite products throughout the portfolio as we further execute the products pillar of our strategy. We are focused on the highest return projects to increase cash flow over the next three years. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:04:35We will begin with The Venetian, where work is already in progress, with refreshed room products beginning to come into service in the third quarter of 2026. Additional luxurious suite product and a total product refresh is targeted to be completed by the end of 2027. The meaningful patron growth we have seen in The Londoner and Grand Suites at the Four Seasons provide support for these assessments. It's important to note that the work we envision will not create significant disruption throughout the portfolio. The scale of our portfolio will allow us to serve customers in other properties and elsewhere in each resort while work is in progress. Nothing we are doing as we invest in the portfolio over the next several years, will hinder our ability to use our scale advantages to outperform the non-premium segment should spending in that segment accelerate in the future. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:05:25We are confident in our strategy in Macao, and we look forward to updating you on our progress as we execute our plans. Let's move forward to provide some additional detail on our current quarter financial performance. Macao EBITDA was $633 million. If we had held as expected in our rolling program, our EBITDA would have been lower by $15 million. When adjusted for higher than expected hold in the rolling segment, our EBITDA margin for the Macao portfolio of properties would have been 29.6% or down 200 basis points compared to the first quarter of 2025. Our principal focus in 2026 is to deliver revenue and cash flow growth across the portfolio. Our investments in improving service offerings will naturally increase expenses, which will continue to negatively impact margins as we implement our strategy. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:06:11We do expect margins to improve over time as we grow revenue in the lower end of the premium segment and in the non-premium segment, where the scale of our hotel inventory gives us natural advantages as we improve our service levels and further refine our reinvestment strategies. Margin for the quarter at the Venetian was 33.5%, while margin at The Londoner was 29.6%. We expect growth in EBITDA as revenues grow. We will use our scale and product advantages together with service level improvements, and targeted incentives to effectively compete in every market segment. In Singapore, Marina Bay Sands EBITDA for the quarter was $788 million, at a margin of 53%. If we had held as expected in our rolling program, our EBITDA would have been higher by $6 million. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:06:56The outstanding financial and operating results at MBS reflect the impact of high-quality investment in market-leading product, world-class service, and the growth in high-value tourism. Turning to our program to return capital to shareholders, we repurchased $740 million of LVS stock during the quarter. We also paid our recurring quarterly dividend of $0.30 per share. We have now purchased 14.3% of the company's outstanding shares over the last 10 quarters, and we believe additional repurchases of LVS equity through our share repurchase program will be meaningfully accretive to the company and its shareholders over the long term. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:07:30While we did not purchase any shares of SCL during the quarter, we do continue to see value in both the LVS and SCL names. The company's ownership of SCL remained at 74.8% as of March 31, 2026. We look forward to continuing to utilize the company's share repurchase program to increase returns to shareholders. Thanks again for joining the call today and for your interest in the company. Now let's take some questions. Operator00:07:54Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, the floor is now open for questions. If you would like to enter the queue to ask a question, please press star, one on your telephone keypad now. If listening on speakerphone today, please pick up your handset to provide optimum sound quality. Also, we ask that each participant limit themselves to one question and one follow-up. Please hold a moment while we poll for questions. The first question today is coming from Dan Politzer from J.P. Morgan. Dan, your line is live. Dan PolitzerAnalyst at J.P. Morgan00:08:24Good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for taking my questions. Singapore, it's gone from strength to strength to strength. I think you had $18 billion of rolling chips in the quarter. I guess, how do you think about what's driving this? It's just kind of astronomical levels here. To what extent are you seeing any benefit from some of the things kind of evolving the geopolitical landscape that may be hitting other regions and possibly benefiting Singapore? Thanks. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:08:52There's a couple things about the Marina Bay Sands growth story, which is really a story about investment. The more we invest in high quality asset, the better service levels we have, the more we're going to differentiate the product that we have, and the more high value visitation we're going to get. Look, I think the VIP segment is just a very competitive segment across Asia. The fact that we're able to see success here with these very high-value patrons is really just an example of the execution there at the property. I will tell you that our main driver of profitability at Marina Bay Sands is mass win in slots. VIP is a very volatile segment, and it can be concentrated at times. It's high-value customers, and they can vary from quarter to quarter. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:09:38What I will tell you is that with the introduction of IR2, we will have more product to address this market and scale with it. The one thing to note is that we had an outstanding quarter, team did a phenomenal job, but these quarters can be highly concentrated and can vary. Dan PolitzerAnalyst at J.P. Morgan00:09:57Thanks. Just turning to Macao, you mentioned the goal to get back to that $700 million in quarterly EBITDA level. Obviously, it's going to require a little bit more investment. In terms of the market growth that you have to get there, at what level do you have to see the overall market or mass grow? Is that something you can kind of get to, or achieve independent of the market really accelerating here? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:10:22Look, I think we're heading in the right direction in Macao. I think you see the growth this quarter, and you see that our focus on service, improving our product, we have some work to do there across the portfolio, as we mentioned, is starting to show some progress. In our mind, that's a milestone that is achievable. Obviously, it's going to require some growth in the overall market. More importantly, it's going to require us to continue on the execution of hospitality and service that we're showing. Grant, do you have anything else to add? Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:10:50First of all, the market continues to grow. We had 14% growth year-over-year this quarter. It's notable that we achieved significant revenue outperformance against each segment. We gained share in every single segment, both on a year-over-year basis as well as sequentially. We achieved the EBITDA growth as well as sequential margin improvement at the same time as we optimized our reinvestment levels. Dan PolitzerAnalyst at J.P. Morgan00:11:22Got it. Thanks so much. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:11:25Thank you. Operator00:11:26Thank you. The next question will be from Brandt Montour from Barclays. Brandt, your line is live. Brandt MontourAnalyst at Barclays00:11:31Hi, everybody. Thanks for taking my questions. Over in Singapore, you have a slide that you show us the theoretical rolling hold, and I know that that's just sort of a pure statistical output from betting mix, but you kind of do show it kind of curling over and sort of reverting back lower. I just want to make sure, are you guys seeing a change in betting behavior or any type of reversion away from side bets, the sort of long odds bets that you've talked about? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:12:14Yeah. I appreciate the question. The VIP business is very volatile. There's an interesting occurrence in the way patrons play now, which is some customers who are high-end VIP customers on rolling programs play traditional bets, and they bet in a much more traditional, conservative way. Then we have other patrons who really enjoy the volatility and the side bets that we present. When you have, like up on page 12, if you look at the third quarter of 2025, where we hit the peak of 4.2 with $9.1 billion in rolling volume, we had patrons in the building who really loved those side bets, and so it drove the theoretical higher. In the case of this quarter, with $18 billion of rolling volume, it was a barbell. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:13:07We had people in the building who were betting the traditional bets in a very conservative manner and rolling a lot of volume. On the other side, we had some people who were really playing the side bets. The way we got to 3.6% was a more traditional VIP hold mixed with people who were taking advantage of the side bets and having a more, let's call it modern, approach to the game. What you ended up with is 3.6%. It was not like an average play. It really was a barbell. Brandt MontourAnalyst at Barclays00:13:40Okay. That's really helpful. Thanks for that. Then a second question would be on Macao. The base mass is not where most of the growth appears to be coming in the broader industry right now, and I'm just curious if you guys are starting to see any green shoots in that customer, just given we've seen a little bit of better stock market and maybe some other green shoots in the macro. Just anything that you guys check or are watching from the KPIs, and things that you watch on the macro level that gives you any sort of confidence or incremental confidence in that segment. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:14:20Thanks for the question. The market growth is driven by premium segments, both in rolling and non-rolling segments. We can point to a couple of indicators to show that the base mass and the mass growth is actually solid. If you look at, not so much the base mass tables, but the slot and EPG segment, we are seeing strong growth, as a whole, in the market. Sands China outperformed the market in that segment by a significant margin this quarter. Our slot and EPG segment grew by 31% year-over-year, and 10% sequentially. Especially driven by our more mass-oriented properties in Parisian and Sands, where you can see the slot EPG number has grown tremendously. The second indicator is our retail business. We actually hit a quarterly all-time high in tenant sales in this first quarter, which is an exceptional performance. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:15:26Tenant sales grew by 37%. Yes, it was driven by the jewelry and watch sector, but the spending was very broad across all of our malls, and we also saw significant growth in the fashion segment as well. From the slot segment, from the retail mall, you can see that consumption is solid, but clearly for the GGR, the premium segments is still driving the majority of the growth. Brandt MontourAnalyst at Barclays00:16:01Excellent. Thanks, everyone. Operator00:16:04Thank you. The next question will be from Robin Farley from UBS. Robin, your line is live. Robin FarleyAnalyst at UBS00:16:12Great, thanks. Just circling back, Patrick, you were making comments about Singapore, and you talked about both VIP and mass, and then you said something like IR2 will give us more product to address that. Were you suggesting that IR2 would be focusing on one or the other of those markets, or did you just mean that broadly, product to address the Singapore market? Sorry, just want clarification on that. Then I do have a follow-up. Thanks. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:16:40Yeah, no problem. Thanks for asking to follow up on IR2. In our mind, this will be the most luxurious and most highly amenitied hotel in the world. Our intention is to set a new standard for luxury hospitality, which will naturally attract very high-end patrons, some of whom are gaming patrons on rolling programs. My comment around the volatility and concentrated nature of the VIP play that we see in Marina Bay Sands, in our mind, can be smoothed a little bit by having more inventory to bring in more of these very high-value patrons. While IR2 will not be focused solely on VIP patrons, it's really going to be for all the high-value tourists that we have coming into our building. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:17:38It's really going to set a new standard, and those types of customers tend to gravitate to those types of hospitality and amenities environments. It will also have an unbelievable entertainment component, which we believe will also appeal to the highest value tourists that we have, the highest value patrons we have coming into the building. We hope that that gives us additional inventory and strength at the highest levels of patron rating. Robin FarleyAnalyst at UBS00:18:06All right, great. Helpful. Thank you. Just a follow-up on Singapore in general, I don't know if you have any thoughts about how we should think about the two properties and what combined EBITDA might look like, or incremental EBITDA from IR2. I know it's early, but big picture. Thanks. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:18:29I think for us, we're really looking to get our targeted return on invested capital across the total investment. We've always said that we kind of targeted 20% return. That's kind of where we're trying to get to, and if you look at the productivity that we're seeing out of our highest-end products within Marina Bay Sands, that we believe that this is achievable, and that's why we're investing in the project. The market is very unique. The tourists that are coming into the market, the structural tailwinds that are supporting growth in Singapore, the value that Singapore has demonstrated as the tourism destination, the fact that we're going to have an arena now that we control, that will have some of the best presentation technology in the world. We're very excited about the opportunity there. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:19:14We think it will enhance not only the experience you would have at IR2, but the type of guests we have coming across the portfolio because of what it will bring in terms of additional amenities. For us, we're looking at a total project return in excess of the 20% we talked about. Robin FarleyAnalyst at UBS00:19:32Okay, great. Thank you. Operator00:19:35Thank you. The next question will be from Stephen Grambling, from Morgan Stanley. Stephen, your line is live. Stephen GramblingAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:19:44Hi, thank you. This is maybe digging into some of the questions on Marina Bay Sands. Can you maybe just talk about how the customer concentration may have evolved over time? Are you actually getting more customers, and is the comment about having IR2 being able to attract the highest-end customer, meaning that you're hitting some kind of threshold where you just don't have enough space for some of these customers? Or is it just that you're getting more play out of each individual, and you haven't seen any kind of upper bound on that? Thank you. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:20:21We went from 132 suites to 770, and we need more capacity. We wish we could have IR2 tomorrow. I think for us, there was a sea change in the way that we presented our products there. You hear us talk about the quality of the design. Our design excellence initiatives and our design team has done outstanding work. The service levels there are extraordinary. Our hospitality team has really stepped up. Our culinary efforts have really improved over time. Our nightlife is really accelerating. With the strength in our retail business there, we really have so many amenities that just drive the highest value tourist from the region to Singapore and to our property. We are able to use a lot more capacity when it becomes available. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:21:19I think for us, we're looking at IR2 as a way to really increase the high-end suites that we have, add amenities across the portfolio that we don't have today in terms of entertainment, additional ballrooms, additional culinary, additional sights to be seen. For us, this is something that we hope will have a multiplier effect on what we have on offer there. We need more capacity. Yes, when we made the change, we started bringing in much higher value tourists into Singapore and to our building, but there's more of them. For us, we're looking forward to the opportunity to grow, to take advantage of what we see as the market opportunity. Stephen GramblingAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:22:04That's helpful. Maybe one follow-up, but just on Macao, I think you mentioned some of the investments going on there. Can you just remind us of some of the timing of some of the renovations and work that you're doing, and how you're thinking about where to invest based on what you're seeing in the market now? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:22:23A couple of things I'll highlight, and then I'll turn over to Grant. I think for us, we have a very strong fundamental view for the long-term success of Macao. Our company has been built, from Sheldon's original vision, that investment and scale creates a competitive advantage. What you see in Macao today is even though the market is hyper-competitive in certain segments, that we continue to perform in those segments with high-quality product, and the right service levels, and the right marketing. For us, we're going to look to invest in our portfolio, since we do have scale, we do have rooms, we do have amenities, we do have retail, we do have entertainment to invest in a way that will give us the maximum opportunity to take advantage of what we see as growth in segments that we're getting the benefit of today. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:23:12I think the next couple of years, you'll see us invest in certain areas that we think we've under-invested in over the last five years, and in an attempt to reposition some of our assets to better address the market today and make us more competitive. Grant, would you like to add anything? Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:23:29Sure. We can see exceptional results from our new product throughout the last three to four quarters. Part of our market share gain is a function not just of our reinvestment strategies, but also the ramp-up of Londoner Grand. You can see that very clearly in our results. Of course, Four Seasons with the Grand Suites product is also very competitive. Looking forward, we have said, I think in Patrick's opening remarks, we're starting the renovation of the Venetian. This is our flagship property, and we are very excited by the upcoming transformation of the Venetian. This will deliver new inventory progressively starting in the second half of this year. The standard suites will start coming back and then progressively work our way towards the high-end suites and the villas into 2027, and then the entire project should finish by the end of 2027 or early 2028. Stephen GramblingAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:24:44All very helpful. Thank you. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:24:47Thank you. Operator00:24:49Thank you. The next question will be from Lizzie Dove from Goldman Sachs. Lizzie, your line is live. Lizzie DoveSenior Gaming, Lodging, and Leisure Analyst at Goldman Sachs00:24:55Hi. Thanks for taking the question. It looks like the buyback stepped up a little bit this quarter. I'm just curious, especially as you see this continued inflection of Singapore, you've been going from strength to strength. Is this an appropriate kind of quarterly run rate, or how do you think about capital returns more broadly longer term? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:25:16I think we said for a long time we see significant value in both LVS and SCL equity, and we're going to continue repurchasing shares. We thought this quarter represented a significant opportunity where levels were, so we were a little more aggressive than maybe you've seen prior quarters. Our goal is to continue to repurchase shares in a meaningful way. We think it's an important part of our return of capital strategy, and it's something that really creates long-term value for our shareholders over time. You see the share count reduction over the last couple of years. It's very meaningful, and we're going to continue to look in that direction as we think about return on capital. Lizzie DoveSenior Gaming, Lodging, and Leisure Analyst at Goldman Sachs00:25:55Got it. Thanks. Just as we think about Macao for the rest of the year, we're only a couple of months away from comp starting to get a little bit tougher. Obviously, you're making progress on the margin side with that sequential uptick, but just how do you think about your ability to keep improving on that, especially as the comps get a little tougher going forward? Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:26:18Thanks for the question. First of all, the revenue growth is an important factor. Over time, we expect higher revenues will drive margin improvement. Outside of that, we are investing heavily, as Patrick referenced, in improving our service offerings across our operating capacity, across our sales force distribution, and also importantly, into our hospitality and gaming service levels. Those initiatives are having an impact on the cost structure and will continue to impact the margin in the near term. At the same time, we are driving revenue growth, we're achieving revenue share gains, and over time, we intend to grow margin as the revenue levels continue to increase. In terms of the reinvestment levels, we have been able to spend less on reinvestment relative to revenue on a sequential basis. We see, at least in our strategy and our ability to optimize stabilization in the reinvestment levels. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:27:41The market continues to be very competitive, so we have to continue to monitor the dynamics very carefully. For this quarter, we were able to achieve both revenue growth and sequential stabilization, and improvement in our reinvestment strategy. Lizzie DoveSenior Gaming, Lodging, and Leisure Analyst at Goldman Sachs00:28:03Thank you. Operator00:28:07Thank you. The next question will be from Chad Beynon from Macquarie. Chad, your line is live. Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:28:13Hi. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. Two questions on Macao. One, just wanted to ask about how the entertainment calendar looks, maybe through the rest of the year at Cotai Arena and then at some of the smaller venues. My second question is more around just the sentiment with the base mass customer. Really good growth in the first quarter, as we've talked about a couple of times, and particular growth in the Chinese stock market and just overall, what we're able to see consumer sentiment indicators. Are you getting any different sense from your customers since the tensions in the Middle East has started? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:29:06Hey, Chad, you got a lot going on there. Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:29:08Yep. Sorry. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:29:09Hey, Chad. We'll answer all these questions. You don't have to ask nine questions in one. Let's just break them into little segments, and we'll get through them all, I promise. Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:29:16All right, guys. Thank you. First on the entertainment calendar, and I'll stop there. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:29:19First on the entertainment. I just want to say, first off, I appreciate all the questions. Thank you. One thing about the entertainment calendar, we've been investing in entertainment assets for years in Macao, and we feel that entertainment is a great way to drive inbound tourism into Macao from both China and actually from the surrounding region. We're very happy to have some uptick in tourism from outside of Macao coming in, and we think over time, entertainment is an important component of that. We also feel like entertainment is a great way to show off the quality of our assets and the quality of the experiences that you can have at our portfolio of properties. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:30:01We've been really focused on not only investing in our entertainment assets, so you saw renovation of the arena that allowed us to have the NBA games, but also other things that we're doing around the portfolio to enhance the customer experience with our entertainment assets, including programming. I did want to address that just in terms of the physical asset side, and now I'd ask Grant to comment on the calendar. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:30:24The calendar was strong in first quarter for us, which helped our performance. We did 11-12 shows during the quarter. If you look at the pacing of the calendar, like Patrick said, we will continue to use entertainment content as a driver for the resort visitation, and it helps us across every segment of the patron value chain. We do see that the big tour acts have slowed down in the Asian tour stops this year versus the prior immediate two years. However, we have the ability to bring content of different size, different spectatorship, because we have access to both the Venetian Arena, which is the bigger arena, as well as the mid-size Londoner Arena. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:31:27We're able to bring a more diverse range of acts and content because we do have the scale on the performance venues, which is an attraction for different artists and promoters, because being able to access high-quality venues at different times of the year is not always easy. We do have an advantage in a number of acts, and artists in the region where we can offer them best in class and different range of performance venues all the way from the Venetian Arena to the Londoner Arena, and then also to our performance theaters. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:32:11In regards to the mass gaming, I think you've seen 30% growth year-over-year in the overall market. I think for us, that just speaks to the attractiveness of the assets in the market, liquidity, accessibility, and just the overall growth and demand, which I think has been super helpful for us. Grant, I don't know if there's anything else you want to bring up as far as the mass. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:32:38I think that's it. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:32:39Okay, and then you were going to ask us about Middle East disruption, was that your next one? Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:32:45Yeah. Just if you think that the Chinese customer can power through in the same way that we're seeing a U.S. customer, given where oil prices are and how that all factors into sentiment. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:33:00The way to think about this is the number of options available to the outbound Chinese visitor. If you look at the options available today versus three months ago, six months ago, the reality is destinations that are closer to home are going to gain share in general as a result of the current environment for all sorts of reasons that you're familiar with. The net effect from a demand standpoint is, I think a positive one for both Macao and Singapore because these destinations are going to be more desirable and more preferred during the current geopolitical, and also the cost of air travel. All of those factors put together in this environment right now, the short-haul destinations, especially ones of this appeal in Macao and Singapore, are going to be more popular with the Chinese market. Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:34:19Thank you both. Very helpful. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:34:22Thanks. Operator00:34:23Thank you. The next question will be from George Choi from Citigroup. George, your line is live. George ChoiAnalyst at Citigroup00:34:30Thank you very much for taking my question. Just a quick one from me. Based on the numbers that you are seeing right now, how do you compare the popularity of side bets amongst your Macao players versus Singapore? Will you guys introduce more new side bet options in Macao? Thank you very much. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:34:50You are normally the first one to notice our new side bets. We have introduced some new side wager options in Macao over the past week. In terms of your question about popularity, it remains true that the take-up of side bet, especially as a percentage of total wagers, is much higher still in Marina Bay Sands than in Macao. That said, the take-up of side wagers in Macao is increasing. The propensity to wager on these side wagers, we do see a progressive trend upwards. I think the introduction of these new side wagers that we'll be implementing now, and in the next few months will further enhance that propensity. George ChoiAnalyst at Citigroup00:35:51Thank you very much for your comment. Operator00:35:56Thank you. The next question will be from Joe Stauff from Susquehanna. Joe, your line is live. Joe StauffAnalyst at Susquehanna00:36:02Thank you. For MBS, I wanted to follow up maybe on the rolling chip volume. Just an absolutely huge number in the quarter. I'm wondering, the volatility associated with this, is it visitations and what those visitations will do in terms of volume? What is easier for you to program, I guess, between the two? The follow-up is, was there a particular reason, maybe in the first quarter, that drove higher visitation from this clientele versus say other quarters? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:36:42The VIP segment is volatile, it can be concentrated, and it depends on who shows up when. It is about visitation, and it's about bringing in the highest value patrons we have who want to be on a rolling program into the building. The great news is, we have longstanding relationships with historical customers. We have new customers coming into the building, and they love our service, they love the hotel suites they get, they love the food, the entertainment, they love going to the retail. It's really a total experience proposition. Then they show up, and they play. For us, it's about having the right amenities to satisfy these very discerning customers and just getting them into the building. Joe StauffAnalyst at Susquehanna00:37:35Got it. Thank you. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:37:39Thanks, Joe. Operator00:37:41Thank you. The next question will be from Trey Bowers from Wells Fargo. Trey, your line is live. Trey BowersAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:37:47Hey, guys. Thanks for the question. I guess just one on CapEx. The maintenance CapEx and the SCL level CapEx in the slide deck moved up for the next couple of years. Is that maybe just, one, you guys are doing so well, so why not reinvest a little more aggressively? Then two, is it a pull-forward concession? Just curious on those two numbers. Is it also some of the things you guys referenced around Venetian rehab? Thanks. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:38:18One of the industry greats a long time ago said that depreciation is real in our business, and we have to spend money to maintain our positioning and to grow. We are doing a full portfolio review to make sure that we're deploying capital in the most efficient way, in the highest return projects to generate capital growth. This increase in CapEx is based on our expectations that if we invest more, we will grow more. Trey BowersAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:38:50Perfect. Thank you. One other question. The promotional activity in Macao looks like it ticked down a little bit sequentially. Could we kind of assume that you guys really ramped it in Q4? It's higher year-over-year again in Q1, but it's getting better. As we look forward, is just kind of the stickiness you guys are seeing from early promotional activity demanding less of it as we go forward, and should that be one of the factors that's helping out this drive towards that 700 number? Thanks a lot, guys. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:39:22We've been able to optimize some of our programs, having started to change our reinvestment programming and approach since the middle of 2025. This is a natural progression. As we change our programs, we assess what worked, what was less effective, and great credit to the team, we're able to achieve good optimization in this quarter while continuing to gain market share and grow revenue. We are also able to optimize the reinvestment level, because we'd be more successful in leveraging our product advantage. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:40:04We've been able to ramp up Londoner Grand especially, and that has helped us tremendously, especially in the core premium mass, mid-tier segments in growing the customer base there. That speaks to the CapEx and the upgrading of product referenced by Patrick, that as we review the portfolio, there are going to be other significant opportunities for us to invest for growth. At the same time it's growing, it also allows us to be more targeted and disciplined in reinvestment as these products come online. Trey BowersAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:40:51Great. Thanks for the time, guys. Operator00:40:56Thank you. The next question will be from Steven Wieczynski from Stifel. Steve, your line is live. Steven WieczynskiAnalyst at Stifel00:41:02Yeah. Hey, guys. Patrick, sorry, I'm going to ask another question about the getting to $700 million a quarter in Macao. Obviously there's a lot of promotional activity taking place right now in the market. I guess the question is, to get to $700 million eventually in EBITDA, does that assume your competitors pull back so-called aggressively on promotions? Saying that differently, does that assume more of a normalized promotional environment from, I guess, not only yourselves, but also your competitors as well? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:41:34No, actually, we're sort of thinking about that in the context of current conditions. It's more about if you look at the growth that we experienced in Q1, it's a very competitive market, but I think the market is growing, and I think we're also helping to grow the market with the high-quality assets that we have. For us, when we think about $700 million, it's about continuing to invest, having the right marketing programs, utilizing our assets more efficiently. It'd be helpful if the market grows a little bit. The additional growth in the market and expansion of GGR market-wide is helpful, but we think that it's in the context of the current conditions. Steven WieczynskiAnalyst at Stifel00:42:11Okay, got you. Kind of sticking with that, Patrick, look, I know you guys don't give guidance, but based on what you just said there, is it fair to think that this sort of run rate of, let's call it, $600 million a quarter in Macao is probably the right way to think about the market for the foreseeable future until that base mass business really does return? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:42:33Yeah, I think the one thing I just want to be careful about is there is seasonality in our business. I know you know that. Second quarter is typically our softest and just sequential comparisons between Q1 and Q2, given that we have Chinese New Year in Q1, are always tough and sometimes not that helpful. Just directionally, we'd like to believe that we're in a really solid place, as we continue to grow our business and make the right moves in terms of marketing, in terms of utilizing our assets. That's kind of how we think about it. Steven WieczynskiAnalyst at Stifel00:43:06Okay, got you. Thanks so much. Appreciate it. Operator00:43:10Thank you. The next question will be from David Katz from Jefferies. David, your line is live. David KatzAnalyst at Jefferies00:43:16Hi. Afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. I appreciate it. Can we just talk about the Venetian a little bit and again, I know you don't give guidance, but the degree to which we should be factoring in some disruption as you go through that room renovation? Any qualitative perspective would be helpful. Thank you. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:43:44Thank you for the question. No, we don't expect meaningful disruption impact. We'll be balancing the out of inventory with the business needs, and we are able to redistribute the demand throughout the rest of the portfolio. At the same time, new rooms will continuously be coming back to the active inventory starting from third quarter. Even as total number of keys will be reduced modestly during this period, we are going to be benefiting from brand-new suites coming online over the coming quarters, especially when the multi-bay suites come back online towards the back end of 2027. David KatzAnalyst at Jefferies00:44:31Understood. As my follow-up, I know we've touched on this just a bit, but maintenance CapEx, we usually think about in the context of non-discretionary versus projects that can be decided upon and moved around. I understand every company's perspective on it is different. Just noticing in the deck, should we think about that $500 number as something that is non-discretionary, and how did that come about? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:45:04First off, we believe that it is necessary to maintain our business. It's split between Marina Bay Sands and Sands China. We just want to be realistic about what we believe we need to spend going forward to ensure our buildings are kept in the best possible condition to maximize our cash flow. We don't view this as optional. We view this as something that's a responsible move to take care of our buildings into the future. David KatzAnalyst at Jefferies00:45:30Appreciate it. Thank you. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:45:34Thanks, David. Operator00:45:36Thank you. The next question will be from John DeCree from CBRE. John, your line is live. John DeCreeAnalyst at CBRE00:45:43Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. I know we've covered the topic of OpEx in Macao a little bit, but maybe just to round it out, if you could provide a little cover, maybe coming at it from a modeling angle. Are we expecting kind of the investment in service we've talked about to kind of grow in line with revenue? Are these going to be kind of fixed costs, people coming online, more staff, and will happen regardless of which way revenue goes? Or is it kind of something that you'll kind of time throughout the year as revenue increases at different paces, you'll add service levels? Just trying to get a sense of how much fixed costs are maybe coming in this year versus variable, depending on revenue. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:46:30These are hires that are designed to increase and enhance the service levels of our buildings. Ideally, as we grow revenue, because we're bringing in higher-value patrons, we get some scale or some operating leverage across these fixed costs. They're primarily payroll. We're adding people in certain areas to service certain patron tiers to enhance their experience, and make sure that we're at the highest standards for service. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:47:01This hiring in our mind is actually beneficial because while we have to hire and train these people, and add them to our team so that we can accomplish our goals in providing leading hospitality in the market, combined with the investments and the renovations that we're doing, this will put us in a better position to grow. Because you need the people and you need the physical product in order to provide the patron experience that allows you to differentiate, and draw the highest value customers into your buildings. This is an investment in the future. John DeCreeAnalyst at CBRE00:47:33Got it. Thanks. Thanks a bunch. Maybe just a quick follow-up on that. Do the new hires, and I apologize, it's a little granular, but kind of on a rolling basis going forward or have they already been hired? I guess, when should we think about the lion's share of the additional staff coming online? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:47:51A significant number are actually in the OpEx now. We have people joining our staff, and so some of that's actually in the margin today, some of the additional payroll associated with the service enhancement. It will continue to be added over the next couple of quarters. John DeCreeAnalyst at CBRE00:48:11Understood. Thank you so much. Operator00:48:14Thank you. That concludes today's Q&A session, and it also concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines at this time and have a wonderful day. We thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDaniel BriggsSVP of Investor RelationsPatrick DumontChairman and CEOAnalystsBrandt MontourAnalyst at BarclaysChad BeynonAnalyst at MacquarieDan PolitzerAnalyst at J.P. MorganDavid KatzAnalyst at JefferiesGeorge ChoiAnalyst at CitigroupGrant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands ChinaJoe StauffAnalyst at SusquehannaJohn DeCreeAnalyst at CBRELizzie DoveSenior Gaming, Lodging, and Leisure Analyst at Goldman SachsRobin FarleyAnalyst at UBSStephen GramblingAnalyst at Morgan StanleySteven WieczynskiAnalyst at StifelTrey BowersAnalyst at Wells FargoPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Las Vegas Sands Earnings HeadlinesLas Vegas Sands Bets On Growth Amid Margin PressureMay 19 at 10:30 PM | tipranks.comLas Vegas Sands Shareholders Back Board, Pay and AuditorMay 18 at 5:10 PM | tipranks.com$30 stock to buy before Starlink goes public (WATCH NOW!)In the next 3 minutes… James Altucher – legendary investor and venture capitalist… And someone who’s known for playing his cards “close to the vest”… Is going to give you the name and ticker symbol of a company he believes will skyrocket thanks to the coming Starlink IPO…May 21 at 1:00 AM | Paradigm Press (Ad)Texas Casinos: Why Las Vegas Sands Is Betting Big on DallasMay 18 at 12:35 PM | msn.comLas Vegas Sands Corp. stock rises Friday, outperforms marketMay 15, 2026 | marketwatch.comA Look At Las Vegas Sands (LVS) Valuation After Recent Share Price WeaknessMay 15, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Las Vegas Sands Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Las Vegas Sands? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Las Vegas Sands and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Las Vegas SandsLas Vegas Sands (NYSE:LVS) (NYSE: LVS) is a global developer and operator of integrated resorts, focused on large-scale properties that combine casino gaming with hotels, convention and exhibition facilities, retail, dining, and entertainment. The company’s operations center on developing and managing full-service resort complexes that serve both leisure and business travelers, with emphasis on convention and trade-show business in addition to gaming revenue streams. The company’s portfolio has included prominent properties in North America and Asia, most notably The Venetian Resort in Las Vegas and Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, along with a significant presence in Macau through multiple integrated resorts. Its properties are designed to offer a mix of luxury accommodations, meeting and convention space, retail shopping, restaurants and entertainment venues alongside casino operations, positioning the firm to capture demand from tourism, international conventions and high-end retail and hospitality services. Founded and long led by founder Sheldon G. Adelson, Las Vegas Sands grew from U.S. beginnings into a major international operator of integrated resorts; Adelson guided the company’s global expansion until his death in 2021. The company is headquartered in Paradise, Nevada, and remains focused on development, property management and the operation of large, mixed-use resort destinations that integrate hospitality, gaming and conventions.View Las Vegas Sands ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles NVIDIA Price Pullback? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Las Vegas Sands First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants have been placed on a listen-only mode. We will open the floor for your questions and comments following the presentation. It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Mr. Daniel Briggs, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations at Las Vegas Sands. Sir, the floor is yours. Daniel BriggsSVP of Investor Relations at Las Vegas Sands00:00:20Thank you. Joining the call today are Patrick Dumont, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Wilfred Wong, Executive Vice Chairman of Sands China, and Grant Chum, CEO and President of Sands China and EVP of Asia Operations. Today's conference call will contain forward-looking statements. We will be making those statements under the safe harbor provision of federal securities laws. The language on forward-looking statements included in our press release also applies to our comments made on the call today. The company's actual results may differ materially from the results reflected in those forward-looking statements. Daniel BriggsSVP of Investor Relations at Las Vegas Sands00:00:54In addition, we will discuss non-GAAP measures. Reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measure are included in our press release. We have posted an earnings presentation on our website. We will refer to that presentation during the call. Finally, for the Q&A session, we ask those with interest to please pose one question and one follow-up, so we might allow everyone with interest the opportunity to participate. This presentation is being recorded. I'll now turn the call over to Patrick. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:01:23Thanks, Dan. Good afternoon. Thank you for joining the call. As we look to the future, we couldn't be more enthusiastic about the opportunities for our company. Our strategic priorities remain clear, and consistent with the goals of investing with discipline and creating meaningful shareholder returns. Turning to our current quarter results, we once again delivered outstanding financial results at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, with EBITDA increasing over 30% to reach $788 million. Singapore is an ideal market for high-value tourism spending, and our focus on creating unique and memorable entertainment and hospitality experiences for our guests has been a tremendous success. The company's fundamental operating strategy relies on three critical pillars, our people, our product, and our service. When we get these three pillars optimized, we can create outstanding financial and operating performance. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:02:14We are seeing that at Marina Bay Sands today, and we couldn't be more enthusiastic about our additional opportunities for growth in Singapore as we continue to enhance the customer experience for our guests in the years ahead. Turning to Macao, we delivered $633 million in EBITDA for the quarter, an increase of over 18%. Mass market revenue share reached 25.7% for this quarter, our strongest performance since the first quarter of 2024. As in Singapore, the operating pillars of people, product, and service underpin our strategy to deliver growth in Macao. We believe we will deliver growth over time in Macao as we implement specific strategies to improve both our products and our service levels. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:02:56We have a goal of reaching $700 million in quarterly EBITDA and beyond over time as we fully implement our investment in operating strategies and as the Macao market continues to grow. Today, the growth in the Macao market is primarily driven by the premium segment. The competition in that segment remains intense, and luxurious suite product coupled with outstanding service levels are critical to success. We have the suite product to effectively compete in the premium segment at both Londoner and Grand Suites at the Four Seasons. We are singularly focused today on matching that suite and room product with the service levels that the most discerning, and valuable customers in Macao increasingly demand. We are making progress. We have meaningfully increased our gaming revenues, gaming volumes, and premium customer patronage since implementing the recent changes to our reinvestment programs. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:03:46Implementing meaningful improvements in the service pillar of our strategy in Macao will be critical to realizing additional growth and securing our long-term success. We believe we have outstanding opportunities for growth in every segment as we implement our strategies. Accordingly, we will be making targeted investments in training, and hiring of additional customer-focused team members throughout the portfolio. Creating and delivering unique and memorable hospitality experiences is the centerpiece of our strategy, and improving service levels in Macao is critical to the achievement of our long-term financial and operating objectives. In addition, we plan to introduce refreshed, and luxurious room and suite products throughout the portfolio as we further execute the products pillar of our strategy. We are focused on the highest return projects to increase cash flow over the next three years. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:04:35We will begin with The Venetian, where work is already in progress, with refreshed room products beginning to come into service in the third quarter of 2026. Additional luxurious suite product and a total product refresh is targeted to be completed by the end of 2027. The meaningful patron growth we have seen in The Londoner and Grand Suites at the Four Seasons provide support for these assessments. It's important to note that the work we envision will not create significant disruption throughout the portfolio. The scale of our portfolio will allow us to serve customers in other properties and elsewhere in each resort while work is in progress. Nothing we are doing as we invest in the portfolio over the next several years, will hinder our ability to use our scale advantages to outperform the non-premium segment should spending in that segment accelerate in the future. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:05:25We are confident in our strategy in Macao, and we look forward to updating you on our progress as we execute our plans. Let's move forward to provide some additional detail on our current quarter financial performance. Macao EBITDA was $633 million. If we had held as expected in our rolling program, our EBITDA would have been lower by $15 million. When adjusted for higher than expected hold in the rolling segment, our EBITDA margin for the Macao portfolio of properties would have been 29.6% or down 200 basis points compared to the first quarter of 2025. Our principal focus in 2026 is to deliver revenue and cash flow growth across the portfolio. Our investments in improving service offerings will naturally increase expenses, which will continue to negatively impact margins as we implement our strategy. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:06:11We do expect margins to improve over time as we grow revenue in the lower end of the premium segment and in the non-premium segment, where the scale of our hotel inventory gives us natural advantages as we improve our service levels and further refine our reinvestment strategies. Margin for the quarter at the Venetian was 33.5%, while margin at The Londoner was 29.6%. We expect growth in EBITDA as revenues grow. We will use our scale and product advantages together with service level improvements, and targeted incentives to effectively compete in every market segment. In Singapore, Marina Bay Sands EBITDA for the quarter was $788 million, at a margin of 53%. If we had held as expected in our rolling program, our EBITDA would have been higher by $6 million. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:06:56The outstanding financial and operating results at MBS reflect the impact of high-quality investment in market-leading product, world-class service, and the growth in high-value tourism. Turning to our program to return capital to shareholders, we repurchased $740 million of LVS stock during the quarter. We also paid our recurring quarterly dividend of $0.30 per share. We have now purchased 14.3% of the company's outstanding shares over the last 10 quarters, and we believe additional repurchases of LVS equity through our share repurchase program will be meaningfully accretive to the company and its shareholders over the long term. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:07:30While we did not purchase any shares of SCL during the quarter, we do continue to see value in both the LVS and SCL names. The company's ownership of SCL remained at 74.8% as of March 31, 2026. We look forward to continuing to utilize the company's share repurchase program to increase returns to shareholders. Thanks again for joining the call today and for your interest in the company. Now let's take some questions. Operator00:07:54Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, the floor is now open for questions. If you would like to enter the queue to ask a question, please press star, one on your telephone keypad now. If listening on speakerphone today, please pick up your handset to provide optimum sound quality. Also, we ask that each participant limit themselves to one question and one follow-up. Please hold a moment while we poll for questions. The first question today is coming from Dan Politzer from J.P. Morgan. Dan, your line is live. Dan PolitzerAnalyst at J.P. Morgan00:08:24Good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for taking my questions. Singapore, it's gone from strength to strength to strength. I think you had $18 billion of rolling chips in the quarter. I guess, how do you think about what's driving this? It's just kind of astronomical levels here. To what extent are you seeing any benefit from some of the things kind of evolving the geopolitical landscape that may be hitting other regions and possibly benefiting Singapore? Thanks. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:08:52There's a couple things about the Marina Bay Sands growth story, which is really a story about investment. The more we invest in high quality asset, the better service levels we have, the more we're going to differentiate the product that we have, and the more high value visitation we're going to get. Look, I think the VIP segment is just a very competitive segment across Asia. The fact that we're able to see success here with these very high-value patrons is really just an example of the execution there at the property. I will tell you that our main driver of profitability at Marina Bay Sands is mass win in slots. VIP is a very volatile segment, and it can be concentrated at times. It's high-value customers, and they can vary from quarter to quarter. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:09:38What I will tell you is that with the introduction of IR2, we will have more product to address this market and scale with it. The one thing to note is that we had an outstanding quarter, team did a phenomenal job, but these quarters can be highly concentrated and can vary. Dan PolitzerAnalyst at J.P. Morgan00:09:57Thanks. Just turning to Macao, you mentioned the goal to get back to that $700 million in quarterly EBITDA level. Obviously, it's going to require a little bit more investment. In terms of the market growth that you have to get there, at what level do you have to see the overall market or mass grow? Is that something you can kind of get to, or achieve independent of the market really accelerating here? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:10:22Look, I think we're heading in the right direction in Macao. I think you see the growth this quarter, and you see that our focus on service, improving our product, we have some work to do there across the portfolio, as we mentioned, is starting to show some progress. In our mind, that's a milestone that is achievable. Obviously, it's going to require some growth in the overall market. More importantly, it's going to require us to continue on the execution of hospitality and service that we're showing. Grant, do you have anything else to add? Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:10:50First of all, the market continues to grow. We had 14% growth year-over-year this quarter. It's notable that we achieved significant revenue outperformance against each segment. We gained share in every single segment, both on a year-over-year basis as well as sequentially. We achieved the EBITDA growth as well as sequential margin improvement at the same time as we optimized our reinvestment levels. Dan PolitzerAnalyst at J.P. Morgan00:11:22Got it. Thanks so much. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:11:25Thank you. Operator00:11:26Thank you. The next question will be from Brandt Montour from Barclays. Brandt, your line is live. Brandt MontourAnalyst at Barclays00:11:31Hi, everybody. Thanks for taking my questions. Over in Singapore, you have a slide that you show us the theoretical rolling hold, and I know that that's just sort of a pure statistical output from betting mix, but you kind of do show it kind of curling over and sort of reverting back lower. I just want to make sure, are you guys seeing a change in betting behavior or any type of reversion away from side bets, the sort of long odds bets that you've talked about? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:12:14Yeah. I appreciate the question. The VIP business is very volatile. There's an interesting occurrence in the way patrons play now, which is some customers who are high-end VIP customers on rolling programs play traditional bets, and they bet in a much more traditional, conservative way. Then we have other patrons who really enjoy the volatility and the side bets that we present. When you have, like up on page 12, if you look at the third quarter of 2025, where we hit the peak of 4.2 with $9.1 billion in rolling volume, we had patrons in the building who really loved those side bets, and so it drove the theoretical higher. In the case of this quarter, with $18 billion of rolling volume, it was a barbell. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:13:07We had people in the building who were betting the traditional bets in a very conservative manner and rolling a lot of volume. On the other side, we had some people who were really playing the side bets. The way we got to 3.6% was a more traditional VIP hold mixed with people who were taking advantage of the side bets and having a more, let's call it modern, approach to the game. What you ended up with is 3.6%. It was not like an average play. It really was a barbell. Brandt MontourAnalyst at Barclays00:13:40Okay. That's really helpful. Thanks for that. Then a second question would be on Macao. The base mass is not where most of the growth appears to be coming in the broader industry right now, and I'm just curious if you guys are starting to see any green shoots in that customer, just given we've seen a little bit of better stock market and maybe some other green shoots in the macro. Just anything that you guys check or are watching from the KPIs, and things that you watch on the macro level that gives you any sort of confidence or incremental confidence in that segment. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:14:20Thanks for the question. The market growth is driven by premium segments, both in rolling and non-rolling segments. We can point to a couple of indicators to show that the base mass and the mass growth is actually solid. If you look at, not so much the base mass tables, but the slot and EPG segment, we are seeing strong growth, as a whole, in the market. Sands China outperformed the market in that segment by a significant margin this quarter. Our slot and EPG segment grew by 31% year-over-year, and 10% sequentially. Especially driven by our more mass-oriented properties in Parisian and Sands, where you can see the slot EPG number has grown tremendously. The second indicator is our retail business. We actually hit a quarterly all-time high in tenant sales in this first quarter, which is an exceptional performance. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:15:26Tenant sales grew by 37%. Yes, it was driven by the jewelry and watch sector, but the spending was very broad across all of our malls, and we also saw significant growth in the fashion segment as well. From the slot segment, from the retail mall, you can see that consumption is solid, but clearly for the GGR, the premium segments is still driving the majority of the growth. Brandt MontourAnalyst at Barclays00:16:01Excellent. Thanks, everyone. Operator00:16:04Thank you. The next question will be from Robin Farley from UBS. Robin, your line is live. Robin FarleyAnalyst at UBS00:16:12Great, thanks. Just circling back, Patrick, you were making comments about Singapore, and you talked about both VIP and mass, and then you said something like IR2 will give us more product to address that. Were you suggesting that IR2 would be focusing on one or the other of those markets, or did you just mean that broadly, product to address the Singapore market? Sorry, just want clarification on that. Then I do have a follow-up. Thanks. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:16:40Yeah, no problem. Thanks for asking to follow up on IR2. In our mind, this will be the most luxurious and most highly amenitied hotel in the world. Our intention is to set a new standard for luxury hospitality, which will naturally attract very high-end patrons, some of whom are gaming patrons on rolling programs. My comment around the volatility and concentrated nature of the VIP play that we see in Marina Bay Sands, in our mind, can be smoothed a little bit by having more inventory to bring in more of these very high-value patrons. While IR2 will not be focused solely on VIP patrons, it's really going to be for all the high-value tourists that we have coming into our building. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:17:38It's really going to set a new standard, and those types of customers tend to gravitate to those types of hospitality and amenities environments. It will also have an unbelievable entertainment component, which we believe will also appeal to the highest value tourists that we have, the highest value patrons we have coming into the building. We hope that that gives us additional inventory and strength at the highest levels of patron rating. Robin FarleyAnalyst at UBS00:18:06All right, great. Helpful. Thank you. Just a follow-up on Singapore in general, I don't know if you have any thoughts about how we should think about the two properties and what combined EBITDA might look like, or incremental EBITDA from IR2. I know it's early, but big picture. Thanks. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:18:29I think for us, we're really looking to get our targeted return on invested capital across the total investment. We've always said that we kind of targeted 20% return. That's kind of where we're trying to get to, and if you look at the productivity that we're seeing out of our highest-end products within Marina Bay Sands, that we believe that this is achievable, and that's why we're investing in the project. The market is very unique. The tourists that are coming into the market, the structural tailwinds that are supporting growth in Singapore, the value that Singapore has demonstrated as the tourism destination, the fact that we're going to have an arena now that we control, that will have some of the best presentation technology in the world. We're very excited about the opportunity there. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:19:14We think it will enhance not only the experience you would have at IR2, but the type of guests we have coming across the portfolio because of what it will bring in terms of additional amenities. For us, we're looking at a total project return in excess of the 20% we talked about. Robin FarleyAnalyst at UBS00:19:32Okay, great. Thank you. Operator00:19:35Thank you. The next question will be from Stephen Grambling, from Morgan Stanley. Stephen, your line is live. Stephen GramblingAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:19:44Hi, thank you. This is maybe digging into some of the questions on Marina Bay Sands. Can you maybe just talk about how the customer concentration may have evolved over time? Are you actually getting more customers, and is the comment about having IR2 being able to attract the highest-end customer, meaning that you're hitting some kind of threshold where you just don't have enough space for some of these customers? Or is it just that you're getting more play out of each individual, and you haven't seen any kind of upper bound on that? Thank you. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:20:21We went from 132 suites to 770, and we need more capacity. We wish we could have IR2 tomorrow. I think for us, there was a sea change in the way that we presented our products there. You hear us talk about the quality of the design. Our design excellence initiatives and our design team has done outstanding work. The service levels there are extraordinary. Our hospitality team has really stepped up. Our culinary efforts have really improved over time. Our nightlife is really accelerating. With the strength in our retail business there, we really have so many amenities that just drive the highest value tourist from the region to Singapore and to our property. We are able to use a lot more capacity when it becomes available. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:21:19I think for us, we're looking at IR2 as a way to really increase the high-end suites that we have, add amenities across the portfolio that we don't have today in terms of entertainment, additional ballrooms, additional culinary, additional sights to be seen. For us, this is something that we hope will have a multiplier effect on what we have on offer there. We need more capacity. Yes, when we made the change, we started bringing in much higher value tourists into Singapore and to our building, but there's more of them. For us, we're looking forward to the opportunity to grow, to take advantage of what we see as the market opportunity. Stephen GramblingAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:22:04That's helpful. Maybe one follow-up, but just on Macao, I think you mentioned some of the investments going on there. Can you just remind us of some of the timing of some of the renovations and work that you're doing, and how you're thinking about where to invest based on what you're seeing in the market now? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:22:23A couple of things I'll highlight, and then I'll turn over to Grant. I think for us, we have a very strong fundamental view for the long-term success of Macao. Our company has been built, from Sheldon's original vision, that investment and scale creates a competitive advantage. What you see in Macao today is even though the market is hyper-competitive in certain segments, that we continue to perform in those segments with high-quality product, and the right service levels, and the right marketing. For us, we're going to look to invest in our portfolio, since we do have scale, we do have rooms, we do have amenities, we do have retail, we do have entertainment to invest in a way that will give us the maximum opportunity to take advantage of what we see as growth in segments that we're getting the benefit of today. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:23:12I think the next couple of years, you'll see us invest in certain areas that we think we've under-invested in over the last five years, and in an attempt to reposition some of our assets to better address the market today and make us more competitive. Grant, would you like to add anything? Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:23:29Sure. We can see exceptional results from our new product throughout the last three to four quarters. Part of our market share gain is a function not just of our reinvestment strategies, but also the ramp-up of Londoner Grand. You can see that very clearly in our results. Of course, Four Seasons with the Grand Suites product is also very competitive. Looking forward, we have said, I think in Patrick's opening remarks, we're starting the renovation of the Venetian. This is our flagship property, and we are very excited by the upcoming transformation of the Venetian. This will deliver new inventory progressively starting in the second half of this year. The standard suites will start coming back and then progressively work our way towards the high-end suites and the villas into 2027, and then the entire project should finish by the end of 2027 or early 2028. Stephen GramblingAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:24:44All very helpful. Thank you. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:24:47Thank you. Operator00:24:49Thank you. The next question will be from Lizzie Dove from Goldman Sachs. Lizzie, your line is live. Lizzie DoveSenior Gaming, Lodging, and Leisure Analyst at Goldman Sachs00:24:55Hi. Thanks for taking the question. It looks like the buyback stepped up a little bit this quarter. I'm just curious, especially as you see this continued inflection of Singapore, you've been going from strength to strength. Is this an appropriate kind of quarterly run rate, or how do you think about capital returns more broadly longer term? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:25:16I think we said for a long time we see significant value in both LVS and SCL equity, and we're going to continue repurchasing shares. We thought this quarter represented a significant opportunity where levels were, so we were a little more aggressive than maybe you've seen prior quarters. Our goal is to continue to repurchase shares in a meaningful way. We think it's an important part of our return of capital strategy, and it's something that really creates long-term value for our shareholders over time. You see the share count reduction over the last couple of years. It's very meaningful, and we're going to continue to look in that direction as we think about return on capital. Lizzie DoveSenior Gaming, Lodging, and Leisure Analyst at Goldman Sachs00:25:55Got it. Thanks. Just as we think about Macao for the rest of the year, we're only a couple of months away from comp starting to get a little bit tougher. Obviously, you're making progress on the margin side with that sequential uptick, but just how do you think about your ability to keep improving on that, especially as the comps get a little tougher going forward? Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:26:18Thanks for the question. First of all, the revenue growth is an important factor. Over time, we expect higher revenues will drive margin improvement. Outside of that, we are investing heavily, as Patrick referenced, in improving our service offerings across our operating capacity, across our sales force distribution, and also importantly, into our hospitality and gaming service levels. Those initiatives are having an impact on the cost structure and will continue to impact the margin in the near term. At the same time, we are driving revenue growth, we're achieving revenue share gains, and over time, we intend to grow margin as the revenue levels continue to increase. In terms of the reinvestment levels, we have been able to spend less on reinvestment relative to revenue on a sequential basis. We see, at least in our strategy and our ability to optimize stabilization in the reinvestment levels. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:27:41The market continues to be very competitive, so we have to continue to monitor the dynamics very carefully. For this quarter, we were able to achieve both revenue growth and sequential stabilization, and improvement in our reinvestment strategy. Lizzie DoveSenior Gaming, Lodging, and Leisure Analyst at Goldman Sachs00:28:03Thank you. Operator00:28:07Thank you. The next question will be from Chad Beynon from Macquarie. Chad, your line is live. Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:28:13Hi. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. Two questions on Macao. One, just wanted to ask about how the entertainment calendar looks, maybe through the rest of the year at Cotai Arena and then at some of the smaller venues. My second question is more around just the sentiment with the base mass customer. Really good growth in the first quarter, as we've talked about a couple of times, and particular growth in the Chinese stock market and just overall, what we're able to see consumer sentiment indicators. Are you getting any different sense from your customers since the tensions in the Middle East has started? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:29:06Hey, Chad, you got a lot going on there. Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:29:08Yep. Sorry. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:29:09Hey, Chad. We'll answer all these questions. You don't have to ask nine questions in one. Let's just break them into little segments, and we'll get through them all, I promise. Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:29:16All right, guys. Thank you. First on the entertainment calendar, and I'll stop there. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:29:19First on the entertainment. I just want to say, first off, I appreciate all the questions. Thank you. One thing about the entertainment calendar, we've been investing in entertainment assets for years in Macao, and we feel that entertainment is a great way to drive inbound tourism into Macao from both China and actually from the surrounding region. We're very happy to have some uptick in tourism from outside of Macao coming in, and we think over time, entertainment is an important component of that. We also feel like entertainment is a great way to show off the quality of our assets and the quality of the experiences that you can have at our portfolio of properties. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:30:01We've been really focused on not only investing in our entertainment assets, so you saw renovation of the arena that allowed us to have the NBA games, but also other things that we're doing around the portfolio to enhance the customer experience with our entertainment assets, including programming. I did want to address that just in terms of the physical asset side, and now I'd ask Grant to comment on the calendar. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:30:24The calendar was strong in first quarter for us, which helped our performance. We did 11-12 shows during the quarter. If you look at the pacing of the calendar, like Patrick said, we will continue to use entertainment content as a driver for the resort visitation, and it helps us across every segment of the patron value chain. We do see that the big tour acts have slowed down in the Asian tour stops this year versus the prior immediate two years. However, we have the ability to bring content of different size, different spectatorship, because we have access to both the Venetian Arena, which is the bigger arena, as well as the mid-size Londoner Arena. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:31:27We're able to bring a more diverse range of acts and content because we do have the scale on the performance venues, which is an attraction for different artists and promoters, because being able to access high-quality venues at different times of the year is not always easy. We do have an advantage in a number of acts, and artists in the region where we can offer them best in class and different range of performance venues all the way from the Venetian Arena to the Londoner Arena, and then also to our performance theaters. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:32:11In regards to the mass gaming, I think you've seen 30% growth year-over-year in the overall market. I think for us, that just speaks to the attractiveness of the assets in the market, liquidity, accessibility, and just the overall growth and demand, which I think has been super helpful for us. Grant, I don't know if there's anything else you want to bring up as far as the mass. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:32:38I think that's it. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:32:39Okay, and then you were going to ask us about Middle East disruption, was that your next one? Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:32:45Yeah. Just if you think that the Chinese customer can power through in the same way that we're seeing a U.S. customer, given where oil prices are and how that all factors into sentiment. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:33:00The way to think about this is the number of options available to the outbound Chinese visitor. If you look at the options available today versus three months ago, six months ago, the reality is destinations that are closer to home are going to gain share in general as a result of the current environment for all sorts of reasons that you're familiar with. The net effect from a demand standpoint is, I think a positive one for both Macao and Singapore because these destinations are going to be more desirable and more preferred during the current geopolitical, and also the cost of air travel. All of those factors put together in this environment right now, the short-haul destinations, especially ones of this appeal in Macao and Singapore, are going to be more popular with the Chinese market. Chad BeynonAnalyst at Macquarie00:34:19Thank you both. Very helpful. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:34:22Thanks. Operator00:34:23Thank you. The next question will be from George Choi from Citigroup. George, your line is live. George ChoiAnalyst at Citigroup00:34:30Thank you very much for taking my question. Just a quick one from me. Based on the numbers that you are seeing right now, how do you compare the popularity of side bets amongst your Macao players versus Singapore? Will you guys introduce more new side bet options in Macao? Thank you very much. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:34:50You are normally the first one to notice our new side bets. We have introduced some new side wager options in Macao over the past week. In terms of your question about popularity, it remains true that the take-up of side bet, especially as a percentage of total wagers, is much higher still in Marina Bay Sands than in Macao. That said, the take-up of side wagers in Macao is increasing. The propensity to wager on these side wagers, we do see a progressive trend upwards. I think the introduction of these new side wagers that we'll be implementing now, and in the next few months will further enhance that propensity. George ChoiAnalyst at Citigroup00:35:51Thank you very much for your comment. Operator00:35:56Thank you. The next question will be from Joe Stauff from Susquehanna. Joe, your line is live. Joe StauffAnalyst at Susquehanna00:36:02Thank you. For MBS, I wanted to follow up maybe on the rolling chip volume. Just an absolutely huge number in the quarter. I'm wondering, the volatility associated with this, is it visitations and what those visitations will do in terms of volume? What is easier for you to program, I guess, between the two? The follow-up is, was there a particular reason, maybe in the first quarter, that drove higher visitation from this clientele versus say other quarters? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:36:42The VIP segment is volatile, it can be concentrated, and it depends on who shows up when. It is about visitation, and it's about bringing in the highest value patrons we have who want to be on a rolling program into the building. The great news is, we have longstanding relationships with historical customers. We have new customers coming into the building, and they love our service, they love the hotel suites they get, they love the food, the entertainment, they love going to the retail. It's really a total experience proposition. Then they show up, and they play. For us, it's about having the right amenities to satisfy these very discerning customers and just getting them into the building. Joe StauffAnalyst at Susquehanna00:37:35Got it. Thank you. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:37:39Thanks, Joe. Operator00:37:41Thank you. The next question will be from Trey Bowers from Wells Fargo. Trey, your line is live. Trey BowersAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:37:47Hey, guys. Thanks for the question. I guess just one on CapEx. The maintenance CapEx and the SCL level CapEx in the slide deck moved up for the next couple of years. Is that maybe just, one, you guys are doing so well, so why not reinvest a little more aggressively? Then two, is it a pull-forward concession? Just curious on those two numbers. Is it also some of the things you guys referenced around Venetian rehab? Thanks. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:38:18One of the industry greats a long time ago said that depreciation is real in our business, and we have to spend money to maintain our positioning and to grow. We are doing a full portfolio review to make sure that we're deploying capital in the most efficient way, in the highest return projects to generate capital growth. This increase in CapEx is based on our expectations that if we invest more, we will grow more. Trey BowersAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:38:50Perfect. Thank you. One other question. The promotional activity in Macao looks like it ticked down a little bit sequentially. Could we kind of assume that you guys really ramped it in Q4? It's higher year-over-year again in Q1, but it's getting better. As we look forward, is just kind of the stickiness you guys are seeing from early promotional activity demanding less of it as we go forward, and should that be one of the factors that's helping out this drive towards that 700 number? Thanks a lot, guys. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:39:22We've been able to optimize some of our programs, having started to change our reinvestment programming and approach since the middle of 2025. This is a natural progression. As we change our programs, we assess what worked, what was less effective, and great credit to the team, we're able to achieve good optimization in this quarter while continuing to gain market share and grow revenue. We are also able to optimize the reinvestment level, because we'd be more successful in leveraging our product advantage. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:40:04We've been able to ramp up Londoner Grand especially, and that has helped us tremendously, especially in the core premium mass, mid-tier segments in growing the customer base there. That speaks to the CapEx and the upgrading of product referenced by Patrick, that as we review the portfolio, there are going to be other significant opportunities for us to invest for growth. At the same time it's growing, it also allows us to be more targeted and disciplined in reinvestment as these products come online. Trey BowersAnalyst at Wells Fargo00:40:51Great. Thanks for the time, guys. Operator00:40:56Thank you. The next question will be from Steven Wieczynski from Stifel. Steve, your line is live. Steven WieczynskiAnalyst at Stifel00:41:02Yeah. Hey, guys. Patrick, sorry, I'm going to ask another question about the getting to $700 million a quarter in Macao. Obviously there's a lot of promotional activity taking place right now in the market. I guess the question is, to get to $700 million eventually in EBITDA, does that assume your competitors pull back so-called aggressively on promotions? Saying that differently, does that assume more of a normalized promotional environment from, I guess, not only yourselves, but also your competitors as well? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:41:34No, actually, we're sort of thinking about that in the context of current conditions. It's more about if you look at the growth that we experienced in Q1, it's a very competitive market, but I think the market is growing, and I think we're also helping to grow the market with the high-quality assets that we have. For us, when we think about $700 million, it's about continuing to invest, having the right marketing programs, utilizing our assets more efficiently. It'd be helpful if the market grows a little bit. The additional growth in the market and expansion of GGR market-wide is helpful, but we think that it's in the context of the current conditions. Steven WieczynskiAnalyst at Stifel00:42:11Okay, got you. Kind of sticking with that, Patrick, look, I know you guys don't give guidance, but based on what you just said there, is it fair to think that this sort of run rate of, let's call it, $600 million a quarter in Macao is probably the right way to think about the market for the foreseeable future until that base mass business really does return? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:42:33Yeah, I think the one thing I just want to be careful about is there is seasonality in our business. I know you know that. Second quarter is typically our softest and just sequential comparisons between Q1 and Q2, given that we have Chinese New Year in Q1, are always tough and sometimes not that helpful. Just directionally, we'd like to believe that we're in a really solid place, as we continue to grow our business and make the right moves in terms of marketing, in terms of utilizing our assets. That's kind of how we think about it. Steven WieczynskiAnalyst at Stifel00:43:06Okay, got you. Thanks so much. Appreciate it. Operator00:43:10Thank you. The next question will be from David Katz from Jefferies. David, your line is live. David KatzAnalyst at Jefferies00:43:16Hi. Afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. I appreciate it. Can we just talk about the Venetian a little bit and again, I know you don't give guidance, but the degree to which we should be factoring in some disruption as you go through that room renovation? Any qualitative perspective would be helpful. Thank you. Grant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands China00:43:44Thank you for the question. No, we don't expect meaningful disruption impact. We'll be balancing the out of inventory with the business needs, and we are able to redistribute the demand throughout the rest of the portfolio. At the same time, new rooms will continuously be coming back to the active inventory starting from third quarter. Even as total number of keys will be reduced modestly during this period, we are going to be benefiting from brand-new suites coming online over the coming quarters, especially when the multi-bay suites come back online towards the back end of 2027. David KatzAnalyst at Jefferies00:44:31Understood. As my follow-up, I know we've touched on this just a bit, but maintenance CapEx, we usually think about in the context of non-discretionary versus projects that can be decided upon and moved around. I understand every company's perspective on it is different. Just noticing in the deck, should we think about that $500 number as something that is non-discretionary, and how did that come about? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:45:04First off, we believe that it is necessary to maintain our business. It's split between Marina Bay Sands and Sands China. We just want to be realistic about what we believe we need to spend going forward to ensure our buildings are kept in the best possible condition to maximize our cash flow. We don't view this as optional. We view this as something that's a responsible move to take care of our buildings into the future. David KatzAnalyst at Jefferies00:45:30Appreciate it. Thank you. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:45:34Thanks, David. Operator00:45:36Thank you. The next question will be from John DeCree from CBRE. John, your line is live. John DeCreeAnalyst at CBRE00:45:43Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. I know we've covered the topic of OpEx in Macao a little bit, but maybe just to round it out, if you could provide a little cover, maybe coming at it from a modeling angle. Are we expecting kind of the investment in service we've talked about to kind of grow in line with revenue? Are these going to be kind of fixed costs, people coming online, more staff, and will happen regardless of which way revenue goes? Or is it kind of something that you'll kind of time throughout the year as revenue increases at different paces, you'll add service levels? Just trying to get a sense of how much fixed costs are maybe coming in this year versus variable, depending on revenue. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:46:30These are hires that are designed to increase and enhance the service levels of our buildings. Ideally, as we grow revenue, because we're bringing in higher-value patrons, we get some scale or some operating leverage across these fixed costs. They're primarily payroll. We're adding people in certain areas to service certain patron tiers to enhance their experience, and make sure that we're at the highest standards for service. Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:47:01This hiring in our mind is actually beneficial because while we have to hire and train these people, and add them to our team so that we can accomplish our goals in providing leading hospitality in the market, combined with the investments and the renovations that we're doing, this will put us in a better position to grow. Because you need the people and you need the physical product in order to provide the patron experience that allows you to differentiate, and draw the highest value customers into your buildings. This is an investment in the future. John DeCreeAnalyst at CBRE00:47:33Got it. Thanks. Thanks a bunch. Maybe just a quick follow-up on that. Do the new hires, and I apologize, it's a little granular, but kind of on a rolling basis going forward or have they already been hired? I guess, when should we think about the lion's share of the additional staff coming online? Patrick DumontChairman and CEO at Las Vegas Sands00:47:51A significant number are actually in the OpEx now. We have people joining our staff, and so some of that's actually in the margin today, some of the additional payroll associated with the service enhancement. It will continue to be added over the next couple of quarters. John DeCreeAnalyst at CBRE00:48:11Understood. Thank you so much. Operator00:48:14Thank you. That concludes today's Q&A session, and it also concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines at this time and have a wonderful day. We thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDaniel BriggsSVP of Investor RelationsPatrick DumontChairman and CEOAnalystsBrandt MontourAnalyst at BarclaysChad BeynonAnalyst at MacquarieDan PolitzerAnalyst at J.P. MorganDavid KatzAnalyst at JefferiesGeorge ChoiAnalyst at CitigroupGrant ChumCEO, President, and Executive Director at Sands ChinaJoe StauffAnalyst at SusquehannaJohn DeCreeAnalyst at CBRELizzie DoveSenior Gaming, Lodging, and Leisure Analyst at Goldman SachsRobin FarleyAnalyst at UBSStephen GramblingAnalyst at Morgan StanleySteven WieczynskiAnalyst at StifelTrey BowersAnalyst at Wells FargoPowered by