Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Aristocrat Management Roundtable Conference Call. All participants are in a listen-only mode. There will be a presentation, followed by a question and answer session. If you wish to ask a question, you will need to press the star key, followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. I would now like to hand the conference over to Mr. James Coghill, General Manager of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone, and thanks once again for joining us at another roundtable for a discussion with the Aristocrat senior management team. I'd like to begin by acknowledging the Gadigal clan of the Eora people, the traditional owners of the land on which we meet here in Sydney, and I pay my respects to elders, past and present. Our CEO and Managing Director, Trevor Croker, is joining us today from Las Vegas, and with me here in Sydney is our CFO, Sally Denby.
As you're all aware, our management roundtables are held to give you an opportunity to hear from us and ask any questions before we close out the current financial period. You'll have the opportunity to ask questions directly on the teleconference, or you're welcome to type a question into the webcast and we'll pick that up and ask it. On the teleconference, could I please ask you to limit yourself to two questions and then rejoin the queue? Before we open up to questions, I'll hand over to Trevor.
Thanks, James, and thanks everyone for joining our call this morning and for your continued interest in Aristocrat. I'd like to share some details about our three businesses and the operating backdrop before opening the Q&A. The second half of the year has played out much as we expected, and I refer you back to the three divisional comments underpinning our group guidance provided during our 2023 half year results.
Turning to our three operating businesses before we move to Q&A. Aristocrat Gaming continues to be underpinned by a supportive environment across North America. As various industry reports have indicated, operating conditions remain favorable across North America, with strong shipments in the June quarter and supportive capital commitments from our customers. As we sit here today, the consumer environment remains resilient, although we are mindful of the cost of living pressures that could impact this.
We've continued to manage the challenges of our supply chain into the current financial year, and we expect these to largely abate into the fiscal 2024. The team has managed these challenges well, and we've established new capabilities to build out our resilience. North American Gaming also continues to benefit from consistently strong and market-leading game performance. Across our games, we were performing at 1.31x floor in August, and 2.57x floor for our premium lease games.
This consistent leadership position is underpinned by the breadth of our portfolio, with clear gaps to our second and third competitors. As you no doubt have seen, earlier this month, we launched the much anticipated NFL Super Bowl Jackpots, a significant milestone for the gaming business after more than two years of planning and development.
Bowl Jackpots is initially being distributed through casino locations across eight states. This is a carefully managed rollout, and we plan to scale up distribution over time, as well as to bring another five additional NFL-themed games to casino floors. While the NFL has been the most anticipated new game in the U.S., per Eilers, it's important to appreciate that it's part of a broad portfolio that has built up over many years.
NFL will complement the depth and diversity that Aristocrat can offer to customers and players, and we're really excited to showcase this innovation at G2E this year. NFL Super Bowl Jackpots will be one of around 90 new games at G2E. Turning briefly to our ANZ operations, we showcased some of our innovations at the Australian Gaming Expo last month, with great responses from our customers. Games from seven of our 13 global studios were represented, and 40% of the games on show were new titles, highlighting our commitment and investment in this market.
We are also increasing our strategic focus to drive long-term performance and manage volatility. AGE visitor numbers were up 20% on 2022, and comfortably ahead of pre-COVID levels, an encouraging sign for recovering confidence in a market facing into a range of regulatory challenges. We're happy that some of you are able to join us at AGE for a product presentation, as well as a discussion on our ESG and responsible gaming initiatives, which underpins what we do here at Aristocrat. We shared more on our Australian-first cashless technology trial in New South Wales, and showcased our digital wallet and FlexiPlay, two important responsible gameplay innovations.
Aristocrat's gaming vision is to be a vibrant, sustainable business operating within robust industries, and our responsible gameplay agenda sits at the heart of this vision. We look forward to sharing more on this topic at our ESG presentation in Sydney, planned for the fifth of December this year. Let me now turn to Pixel United, where the operating environment has been subdued. The overall games market has continued to consolidate without any further overall deterioration in growth rates evident at this time.
While we are yet to see strong growth return, there have been some recent signs of sequential growth month-over-month. The sharper reductions in growth experienced through the fiscal 2022 and the first half of 2023, relating to Ukraine disruptions and moderating post-COVID demand, appear to have abated. Pixel United has retained its market-leading position in slots, supported by its world-class slot content and live ops capability. Our slots portfolio has outperformed the market in recent months, and we feel we are well positioned to continue to take share in this genre.
Pixel United has also retained its number one position in the squad RPG genre with RAID: Shadow Legends. Following its relaunch earlier this year, Merge Gardens continues to scale and grow. Pixel United is focused on areas within its control to efficiently manage its cost base and UA spending, and demonstrate discipline with execution in its organic growth strategy. It's also constantly innovating its marketing practices, growing our global brands, and enhancing the efficiency of our player engagement. Our animated short series, RAID: Call of the Arbiter, which premiered on YouTube in May, has received around 20 million views.
Overall, we are seeing the benefit of having a strong and diversified portfolio across the market, where high growth rates delivered in recent years have moderated. Moving now to Anaxi, our online RMG business. You will recall we signed deals with BetMGM, Caesars, FanDuel, and Penn Entertainment earlier this year, representing roughly 55% of the legal iGaming market, and the focus has been to start scaling these early relationships.
We are now live in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Michigan, and expect to announce more deals over the course of the next financial year and launch in other states. Earlier this month, we're excited to announce that Buffalo is launching in New Jersey, which brings one of our most iconic slot machine titles to iGaming. Buffalo joins a portfolio of around 10 online games, including well-known land-based titles like Timber Wolf, Wicked Winnings 2, Wild Lepre'Coins, and Miss Kitty.
According to Eilers in July, our games have consistently ranked at No. 2, No. 1 or No. 2 the past months, with performance steady around 3x house. We see this as early validation of our thesis that strong land-based titles should perform well online. We're also excited by the proposed acquisition of NeoGames, and how this could impact our online RMG offering. The first shareholder vote was received strong support in July, and the regulatory process continues to run its course, and we still expect the deal to close sometime in financial year 2024.
NeoGames will add significant capabilities and breadth to our portfolio, including a state-of-the-art player account management platform, iLottery, and online sports betting, enabling us to offer a complete online RMG solution to our customers, both commercial and tribal. We see significant revenue growth opportunities from combining NeoGames platforms with our content and relationships. Before I conclude, I'd like to make a brief comment on investment and capital management.
The business invests in organic growth through committed investment in D&D, UA and CapEx. Financial year 2023 has been an important period of investing to set up our third growth pillar, and we are fortunate that the overall operational strength of our overall portfolio has allowed us to commit to ongoing D&D investment to build for the future. We've also continued to execute on our upsized AUD 1.5 billion on-market share buyback program, with approximately half of this amount bought back to date. The buyback program will continue to be executed on an opportunistic basis, noting we have until May 2024 to complete the current program.
So to wrap up, we're pleased to be approaching the year-end close with our portfolio of scaled world-class assets, reflecting both our ongoing commitment to innovation, as well as high quality execution from our capable and passionate teams. Anaxi, with the proposed addition of NeoGames, adds further diversification to the group, and another important channel through which we can leverage our leading world-class content over time. This commitment and dedication from all of our people gives us confidence in how we're positioned for the future. With that, we're happy to take some questions. Thank you.
Thank you. If you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. If you wish to cancel your request, please press star two. A reminder to please limit yourself to two questions per person. If you wish to ask further questions, please rejoin the queue. If you're on a speakerphone, please pick up the handset to ask your question. Your first question comes from Matt Ryan from Barrenjoey. Please go ahead.
Oh, thank you. Hi, Trevor. I just had a question on U.S. outright sales demand. I think in your prepared remarks, you're sort of talking about a pretty strong June quarter. Obviously, you're having conversations at the moment with customers ahead of G2E. Just wanna get a sense of how much you thought that strength over the last three to six months was perhaps one-off in nature, or I guess the tail end of some bigger CapEx budgets that were put in place, or whether you think things could be sustained at these levels?
Yeah, thanks, Matt. The full title market has been stronger over the last couple of periods, and it's good to see from our perspective. I feel that where they sit, where the market sits at the moment is about normal. The market has come back to a more normal size, if you like, for the outright sales and including new openings. So from our perspective, I don't think it's any pull forward, and the conversations with our customers continue to commit capital to gaming investment. Again, looking for performance as a way to prioritize that as well. So I don't think that it's a sudden correction coming through. I feel confident that there's still momentum, and certainly going into G2E, we're excited about the opportunity with our customers.
Thank you. And the release schedule with Anaxi, obviously, Buffalo is a pretty big title. There's a number of other pretty big titles that aren't out yet. What's your sort of thoughts on how much you wanna phase things, how much you wanna learn about the market or learn about performance before you release, I guess, some of those high-performing titles from the land-based segment outside of Buffalo?
Yeah, thanks for that question again. Look, it, as you know, we're new into this segment. We've changed some of our approaches as we've entered the segment, i.e., you know, looking at multi-denomination, et cetera. What we've found is that this has been productive in the way that our games are being accepted by operators. We're obviously keen to see how Buffalo goes. We have high expectations, and I think that's fair. And we continue to build out the rest of the portfolio, taking each learning from the games as they're released, and then building it into the next rounds of games to be released. So it's a learning experience, Matt, to be honest with you, and feel confident that the team are applying the logic and the data to make the changes that are required for that specific online slots games.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Adrian Lemme from Citi. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning, Trevor and Sally. I had a question. Thanks for your earlier comments on the upcoming NFL title. Excuse me. If I look at, like, the history of these highly anticipated games, particularly branded or licensed games, they seem to do very well initially and kind of fade away a bit. So yeah, is there anything you can point to in the NFL concept that gives you confidence that it's gonna have sustained success, please?
Yeah, thanks, Adrian. First of all, you're right around, you know, potentially themed games can have spikes and may not retain on the floor. I think we are launching Buffalo, not Buffalo, NFL Jack, Super Bowl Jackpots is the first game. We've got another five games coming through between Class II and Class III in this year of product releases. The difference between NFL, in my opinion, and other licenses, is that it's actually a live license. And when I say that, every week there's a different outcome. There's a team playing.
The fact that we've built in 32 selectable games into the game, it has different configurations, be it video, stepper, then, you know, the King Max cabinet that's been released on is fantastic hardware. So it actually is a live story that evolves every weekend for this period of time. And then, you know, you go into the draft period, and then another suite of games will come out for next year. So I actually feel that it's a lot more contemporary than, say, a movie series or, you know, a Netflix series, et cetera, where there's something live happening all the time. You know, people are changing teams, drafts going on, et cetera, and I think that's gonna bring longevity and interest to the title over many years.
Thank you. Thank you. That makes a lot of sense. Is the thinking that if this is successful, that you could take these learnings and, and try to get other sports licenses? Thanks.
Yeah, look, it's a logical approach, Adrian. I think we're a couple of weeks into getting this one right. We're gonna continue to monitor it and look at it, but you know, the power of the NFL brand is very strong. It's definitely the sports brand in North America, and you could argue one of the sports brands in the world. So, certainly we feel that it's the right partner, and they're a- they've been a good partner with building out the portfolio. We'll continue to monitor it, absolutely, but we've got good momentum early days, and we're keen to keep building out the current portfolio with NFL.
Great. Many thanks, Trevor.
Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Rohan Sundram, from MST Financial. Please go ahead.
Hi, Trevor. Thanks for your comments earlier around capital management. I was just curious, now that you're in the process of bedding down NeoGames, can you just give us a bit of a refresh on how you're thinking about capital management, in terms of what is the outlook from here, in terms of potential further acquisitions versus debt pay down, or the preference to maintain liquidity? Thanks.
Yeah, thanks, Rohan. I might leave this one for Sally, who's on the line as well.
All right. Thanks, Trevor. I think, Rohan, we remain focused on our capital allocation with the organic investments around UA, D&D, and CapEx with regards to the operating gaming portfolio in the U.S. Then I think as we've always said, you know, looking at returns to shareholders via dividends and buybacks, and then obviously continuing to expand our and look at our inorganic opportunities. We've put out there a target leverage that we'd like to get to over the medium term, and I think as we've said before, even with Neo, we're not gonna get to that. But we are working towards that, and we'll remain opportunistic in some of the things that we look at from an inorganic perspective. Primary focus is on organic and returns to shareholders.
Thanks, Sally.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Justin Barratt from CLSA. Please go ahead.
Hi, guys. Thanks very much for your time today. I just wanted to follow up, Rohan, in relation to capital management and the buyback. With the current buyback sort of due to complete by May 2024, I just wanted to try and understand how we should think about that. I mean, there's still a fair amount of the buyback currently to complete in that timeframe. Should we be confident that it will complete by May 2024, or it might need to be readjusted in any way, shape, or form? Yeah, Sally, do you want to provide some context?
Yep. So I think that we continue to be opportunistic and tactical in our market execution around the buyback. And as Trevor said earlier, we're committed to the execution of the AUD 1.5 billion upsized. We're about 50% of the way through, we'll continue that focus to drive that forward. And I think as we just said before, from a capital management perspective, we see buyback as, as part of how we continue to allocate our capital. So we are obviously still targeting towards executing on that upsized buyback, in the timeframe that we committed to.
Fantastic. Thanks very much for that. And then, Trevor, appreciate your comments around the global mobile gaming market, and that we haven't seen a, I guess, a real rebound in that market to this point, but there are some positive signs emerging there. I was just wondering if you could talk to that a little bit more and give, I guess, your view as to why we haven't seen that recovery to this point. Is it a function of the macroeconomic backdrop at all, or yeah, any kind of commentary or further commentary there would be great.
Yeah. Thanks, Justin. Look, I think, you know, mobile gaming went through explosive growth through the COVID period and came off that explosive growth and has moderated. On top of that, we had the changes with IDFA, which changed the economics and the ability to performance market and target user acquisition. So there's been a little bit of resettling through the industry.
And what I would say to you is strong performing brands have continued to perform and hold share, and that's where our portfolio of slots games has continued to take share and become and still maintains its number one slot position and similarly, RAID. I think what we're going to see moving forward is we will start to see more moderate growth in the digital business going forward. That's going to build as consumer confidence builds, but I do believe there is growth in that sector going forward.
Fantastic. Thanks very much.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Sriharsh Singh from Bank of America Securities. Please go ahead.
Hi there. I've got two questions. One, can you talk about your user acquisition experience with RAID: Call of the Arbiter miniseries? You had 20 million views for the miniseries, and I was wondering if you could, in your analysis, attribute some form of new user acquisition or increase in average player spend to the animated series.
Yeah. Thank you for the question. It's a really active debate. We continue to monitor the traffic that comes as a consequence of Call of the Arbiter. It definitely has raised awareness of the brand in channels outside of our traditional marketing, particularly because of the creative environment and the detail. We haven't been able to draw a direct numerical conclusion, but we have seen commentary and feedback from RAID players and from people that are new to RAID, embracing the new approach to marketing, but also, you know, the experience where some of those games and some of the characters are actually. Sorry, some of those characters are now being built into the game as well. It continues to be a marketing channel that we're looking to explore, and we'll look to evaluate before making further investments.
Understood. Thank you. My second question is, IGT has announced a potential sale or strategic alternatives for its Global Gaming and PlayDigital segment. Any thoughts around the competitive dynamic with respect to that in your land-based gaming segment? Any thoughts on that announcement? Thank you.
No, we continue to focus on what we're doing, and there's a little bit of movement around from obviously that announcement. We continue focusing on making sure that we support our customers, that we've got better solutions for our customers. We make the best product, invest in hardware, and then have strong long-term partnerships. I think it's an interesting outcome. You know, whether they're the way they look today or they're a different business in the future, we'll compete with them like we would compete with anybody, and our objective is to continue to take share, and then to use M&A to accelerate our growth in the future. So, we're focused on what we need to do, keep making a great portfolio of games and executing it.
That's great. Thank you.
Thanks.
Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Kai Erman from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Thanks, Trevor and Sally. Just one question from me, a follow-up from Justin's question on PXU. Just in regards, especially with the context of the guidance provided in May, current observations from Sensor Tower data for Android and iOS show revenues that are tracking mostly in line with the first half of 2023. Has there been anything else happening there in terms of a shift to Plarium or some other factors that could be impacting margins at play there within PXU?
So you won't be seeing any of the Plarium Play data. So at the half, we announced that around 31% of Plarium, of RAID, sorry, of Plarium. Sorry, 31% of RAID's bookings were going through Plarium Play, so that's something that won't be picked up in Sensor Tower. The other thing is we have taken control and made some decisions in the second half around our cost base and our investment, and they've been deliberate and purposeful approaches to managing to the guidance that we provided at the end of the half around moderate decline, and we continue to hold to that.
Okay, perfect. Thanks, Trevor.
Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Paul Mason at E&P. Please go ahead.
I've got, two, please. So the first one, I was just wondering if you could give some color on sort of the, you know, the outlook for new releases within Pixel United. I think, earlier in the year, for example, you guys had talked about Nova Legends, sort of maybe going into marketing later in the year. But yeah, it maybe just some comments on that game and any other games that might be coming out or, and, and sort of the future cadence you're expecting to release new games.
Yeah, thanks, Paul. We continue to have, you know, 10-15 games in our pipeline at any point in time. Some of them make it through to soft launch, and some of them make it through to worldwide launch. But we continue to look at having a pipeline of 10-15 games at any one point in time. We've previously guided to three to five games over the next two years releases, and some of those games are in soft launch, some of them are tracking okay, some of them are gonna need more work before we release.
We're not really getting into titles specifically on we are, but I feel confident that the team has a pipeline of games coming through, and you'll start to see, you know, if you like, we've been able to scale Merge Gardens, particularly in the second half, off the back of a rebranding and, you know, feeling confident around where that's going in the merge segment. And then we've got some other genre products that will be coming out over the next 12 months or so.
Okay, and just the second one for me is just on the Australian business. In the first half, you guys flagged that there was sort of a bit of a shift in business model that you were targeting more recurring revenue. If we could just get a bit of an update on sort of what you've done and so far heading down that path, whether that's accelerated or looks like the first half. Thanks.
It continues to be part of our overall strategy. The business model's really around, again, providing opportunities for our customers. Some customers like the recurring revenue type business model, some people don't. Our objective is to continue to offer products and solutions that customers can pick up and take. We have seen, you know, as I said in my opening comments, we have seen good interest from the AGE, that has come through, and we continue to launch high-performing games across a diverse portfolio of segments. I won't guide to what it looks like for the second half, but it remains a key part of our strategy, and it's about customers and working with our customers as to acceptance of that.
Thank you.
Thanks, Paul.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Andre Fromyhr from UBS. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning. My first question is just to follow up on the NFL product. I understand it's, you know, early days so far, but could you give any hints as to how it's indexing at the moment and whether or not you think that's, you know, bringing in incremental players as opposed to just, you know, stealing share from other games?
Yeah, thanks, Andre. Look, it's still very early, and we've only got a small sample of games out there across eight states, and I think it's a little bit hard with such a small sample to quote a number. I feel confident around the performance of the game and what I can see on the way that it's being positioned by our teams, the pipeline that we have behind it to support it, and the gameplay and the anecdotal feedback that we're getting.
If you ask a question about what's it doing to the floor, our observations and feedback to date suggest that it is bringing a new player to slot machines on the casino floor, and it's a new, younger, male player. This is anecdotal feedback, but it's consistent with what we're hearing from a number of different operators and also what we're observing ourselves. So we do feel that we're actually bringing a new, younger consumer to the gaming, to the slots business that are already on the gaming casino, whether they're a sports player or they're playing other products on the floor. So we believe it is bringing some new players to the sector.
Great. And then my second question, I guess, is a follow-up on the, you know, use of capital. And I'll take the comments that focuses on the organic growth opportunities, but how would you describe your criteria around inorganic opportunities at the moment? For example, if, you know, once NeoGames is closed, is that it within Anaxi, or are you also looking across Pixel and land-based potential inorganic opportunities?
Yeah, we look at all opportunities, but we have a disciplined approach to M&A. You know, the first question we ask ourselves is: How does this advance our strategy, or how does this close a gap within our strategy? And that doesn't limit us to any one vertical. It actually gives us the opportunity to look at each of the business units independently around what that provides.
So we take a disciplined approach to what we're looking for and what we're looking at, and then we run through, you know, the logical approach to, you know, is it the right thing strategically? You know, can we run it? Is it financially accretive, and how does culture fit? And we stay very disciplined around what we're trying to achieve with any M&A. There still remains M&A in the marketplace, to be honest with you. Some expectations remain above what we believe is appropriate, and we'll continue to be patient and disciplined.
Okay, thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from David Fabris from Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Hi, Trevor. Look, I appreciate the comments you've made on RAID with Plarium Play with 31% coming through, I guess, direct to consumer. I guess I'm interested to understand your position with direct to consumer on social casinos. I mean, a lot of your peers are looking to paid UA being best in practice and are working pretty hard to improve penetration there. Can you talk to the strategy that Aristocrat are doing with that, please?
Yeah. Thank you, David. Appreciate it. Yes, our position in off-platform for social casino is not the same as our competitors. If we go back to when we bought Product Madness, that was actually a deliberate strategy to become a mobile native solution, and we've continued to build that out and been able to scale and become differentiated from that perspective. We have looked at off-platform options and continue to pursue off-platform options going forward, and the market is now becoming more open to off-platform solutions. So we're gonna continue to expand on those and look at that both with our existing portfolio and also with future portfolio.
Good. I mean, let me try to dig into that. Is there a concern around a drop-off in DAUs if you try and switch them over, or a concern from the reaction of the platform providers in that cautious approach?
No, what we've found, we have tried and we have tried this, previously. What we've found is that different genres respond differently to the off-platform experience. So PC for strategy games, RPG games, et cetera, generally have a higher engagement and are more acceptable. We don't see the same thing for casual games, and we don't see the same thing for social casino. We see it as far, far more of a mobile solution, and so we're continuing to look at alternatives and ways to work with an off-platform option for those other genres.
Got it. And just one last question. Look, I may have missed comments at the start, but with the upcoming G2E, are you able to talk about any new hardware that you're bringing on deck? I guess I'm thinking about, you know, you always talk about entering adjacencies and scaling into adjacencies. I'm wondering if there's a heightened focus on any segments, you know, in particular, I guess, stepper, for example. I don't think there's been a product release there for a while, so just interested to hear what's happening from a hardware front across the adjacencies.
Yeah, I'll just start with the most obvious, new hardware, which is the King Max cabinet with NFL on. So that is a brand-new 65-inch portrait screen. It's new to gaming, and it's unique, so has the width form factor of additional slot machine, but has the diagonal or the height of a 65-inch screen. So that's the first one. We are bringing out the updated stepper cabinet with a NFL game as well.
So there will be that product offering, and we continue to upgrade our bar top content, not so much hardware, but update our bar top content and also look at VLT offerings. So as you know, we've entered HHR and New York Lotteries in the last year. We continue to exercise new expansions in Illinois, and we're very happy with the portfolio of games that are now released into the Illinois market and the performance we're getting from there.
Good. Appreciate it. Thank you very much.
Thanks, David.
Thank you. Once again, if you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. Your next question comes from Don Carducci from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi, Trevor. Just one quickie for me. Can you comment on some of the new verticals that you're gonna look at for next year, like the COAM market, and what makes it attractive, or maybe any progress, or when you expect to see some of that deliver?
Yeah, thanks, Don. The COAM market is, it's about a 40,000-42,000 install base. We see it as another opportunity. It's a different type of game to what we have traditionally made. It's. There's an element of skill required as part of the regulations. So as we've done with other adjacencies, we've gone and looked at the market, looked at the opportunity, and see an opportunity to take our content with the new game mechanics on our existing hardware into that market. So I think the simple answer there is we continue to look at COAM. We are continuing to penetrate VLTs, you know, particularly Oregon and OSL.
So we continue to focus on entering the VLT market, which is a segment that we've been targeting now for some time, while continuing to focus on other adjacencies like, you know, Washington State, et cetera. I think we've got, we're still doing. We've got some work to do in those areas, Don, to be honest with you, but I know that, you know, every share point we take in that is an incremental share point to our business. So the team's focused on executing now. Thanks, Don.
There are no further phone questions at this time. I'll now hand back to Mr. Coghill for webcast questions.
Thank you. We've got a few that have come through here, and the first one just relates to where we are listed, and I'll read the question directly, Trevor. Noting the attitude of the Australian government, is there any prospect of Aristocrat seeking a dual listing on the Nasdaq?
Yeah. Thanks, James. It's a continuous, continuous, it's a regular conversation that we have with the board around what our listing is and where is appropriate listing for our organization. We still believe that being Australian listed with access for shareholders to a U.S. revenue-generating, profit-generating company is a great opportunity, particularly with our growth profile in, into the North American markets. All our debt is in U.S. denomination, so while our revenues are here, so is our debt, and we still remain comfortable that our listing in Australia gives us access to a, a good and solid market, and we are within the top 20 in the ASX, which gives us prominence from an investment point of view and an index point of view.
Okay, thanks. And then there's another one here on dividends. So the question directly is: When will dividends become competitive? That's probably a reference point to some of the larger, more mature Australian corporates who pay high yields, but I'll throw that one to Sally.
Hi. Thanks, James. Our dividend policy is at the discretion of the board, and the decisions are taken at each result, period. We do continue to look at total shareholder return going forward, and the buybacks and the dividends together are helping to ensure that we can increase the TSR.
Okay, thanks. And we have one here, just on events last week. Trevor, this is for you. Are you seeing any impact from the cyber attacks that occurred at Caesars and MGM last week?
Not at this point in time. It's still a little bit early. Obviously, they have had some of their floors down, but we haven't seen anything at this point in time. But we don't expect it to be material. We have a very broad. We've got 60-plus thousand installed units across the U.S., and we've got a pretty broad distribution.
An operational one. This is. I think you partly responded to this. I think it was Matt Ryan's question earlier, but could you please comment on the trend you are seeing from casinos for on-floor gaming CapEx? Is this now back above pre-COVID levels?
CapEx investment is above COVID levels, pre-COVID levels. I think what happened through COVID is operators saw the value of investing in their gaming floor as an important strategy, perhaps over other alternatives that they could have been investing in. CapEx is above where it was in pre-COVID, and we're seeing the churn sort of back to slightly above that level now. And so, as I said, to Matt's question, we feel that there's a robust pipeline, good interest from our operators around competitive and high-performing products.
Not that many more here. Here's one on NeoGames. Could you make any comments on how regulatory approvals are progressing, and when we can expect NeoGames to close?
Regulatory approvals into a couple of buckets. You've got the government regulatory approvals, antitrust, et cetera, all progressing as we would expect. We are really now just managing gaming regulatory approvals, and we are confident at the process and the pace at which they're being processed. We're confident that in financial year 2024, the deal will close.
Okay. And then we've got a question on Anaxi here, and it's around the, the framework, the framework over which we can monetize titles like Buffalo. How is this different to the offline business model? In other words, how, how long will it take to monetize a title like Buffalo online compared to land-based?
Well, now that Buffalo is a recurring revenue online, a recurring revenue, it's recurring revenue both in the online world and the retail world. And so it's really just a case of scale now for Buffalo in the iGaming world. The ability to monetize is consistent. The economic model is slightly different, but, it is a recurring revenue model, just like it is in the land-based world.
Great. We've got an ESG question about the amount of CapEx that we allocate towards ESG issues and initiatives. We don't disclose what that number is, Trevor, but perhaps you can just make a comment more broadly on how we prioritize ESG. You know, there are some special allocations that we have made more recently to achieve some of our objectives there.
Yeah. Thanks, James. Our key priorities in ESG are responsible gameplay, decarbonization, governance, and DEI, and we continue to support each one of those as our key priorities. From a responsible gameplay point of view, we were the first to bring a cashless trial to New South Wales, and we obviously invested behind that, and continue to invest around evolving our responsible gameplay solutions, not just in cashless trials in New South Wales, but FlexiPlay and other game components, plus other product components.
So we do invest money behind our responsible gaming. Decarbonization, we will be coming to the market with our update in December, where we will have set our science-based targets. We've done a lot of work over the last year understanding what those science-based targets look like, and we'll be coming to you and sharing that information. That obviously requires some investment when you look at the amount of detail and the complexity of the work that needs to be done to prepare for that. From a governance point of view, we are investing behind things like cybersecurity, privacy, anti-modern slavery.
These programs that are important fundamentals to the governance of the organization and continue to support our reputation, our ability to operate. And then at a DEI level, our focus is to continue to build out our DEI program as our commitments with the 40, 40, 20, and to look at how are we increasing our diversity across the group, and that includes investing in graduate programs, minority programs, as other ways to improve our DEI as part of our total ESG proposition. We are deliberately spending money to support our ESG agenda, and we look forward to talking to you about that in a lot more detail when we meet on the fifth of December in Sydney.
That's great. Thanks. Well, there's only one question left here, and I'm not seeing any more on the teleconference. So if any analysts have got any more questions for the teleconference, please go ahead and lodge them. But one last question here, Trevor. Just on Asian markets, there's always a lot of talk about Macau recovering. Could you just comment on which other markets are recovering in Asia?
Yeah. Thanks, James. First of all, yeah, we are seeing and you're all seeing it, too. Macau is recovering and coming back. It's not back to where it was, but it is coming back. We've also seen strong growth in the last 12-18 months in the Philippines, Singapore, particularly as the Philippines market continues to expand, and we're getting good penetration and growth there.
And the same with Singapore, good opportunity and strong performance out of those markets. So if you think about those two mature markets, we've seen strong growth over the last 18 months and continue to see that go forward. And we're now, you know, waiting, not waiting, we're interested to see how Macau responds, particularly as Golden Week comes up and the next sort of holiday season from Macau point of view.
Okay, that's great. We've got no more questions on the webcast, so I'll hand that back to the operator.
There are no further phone questions at this time. I'll now hand back to Mr. Croker for closing remarks.
Great, thank you. Well, thanks again for making some time to join our roundtable this morning, and also for the number of questions. We certainly appreciate the engagement with you and the opportunity to speak with you. We will look forward to seeing you at G2E next month. And then our year-end results in November, and as I mentioned earlier, our ESG presentation in December. If you've got any further questions, please reach out to our investor relations team, and thank you for your ongoing interest in Aristocrat. Have a great day.
Thank you. That does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.