Good day, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Bally's Corporation Second Quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be question and answer session. In order to ask a question during the session, please press the star key followed by the 1 on your telephone. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. If you require any further assistance, please press star then 0. I'd now like to turn the call over to Bobby Lavan, Chief Financial Officer for Bally's. Please go ahead, sir.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today's call. The earnings release and presentation accompanying this call are available in the investor relations section of our website. With me on today's call are Lee Fenton, Chief Executive Officer, George Papanier, President, Retail, Robeson Reeves, President, Interactive, Ameet Patel, Senior Vice President and Regional General Manager, and Joyen Vakil, Senior Vice President of Design and Development. Before we begin, we would like to remind everyone that comments made by management today will contain forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements include plans, expectations, estimates, and projections that involve significant risks and uncertainties. These risks are discussed in the company's earnings release and SEC filings. Actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in these forward-looking statements. In addition, during today's call, management will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures.
Reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures are included in the schedules contained in our earnings release. We do not provide reconciliation of forward-looking non-GAAP financial measures due to our inability to project special charges within certain expenses. Today's call is also being broadcast live on our investor site and will be available for replay shortly after the completion of this call. I'm handing it over to Lee.
Thank you, Bobby, and hello, everyone. We now have three quarters under our belt since the combination of Bally's and Gamesys, and we've made considerable progress over the past 10 months. We've rolled out the Bally's brand across our property portfolio and the Sinclair RSNs. We brought Bally's iCasino to life in New Jersey. We have developed our foundational OSB product and begun its deployment. We've won the bid to develop the first downtown casino in Chicago, and we brought together the company as one Bally's with a single purpose and a set of DNA that we will embed further as we progress. While we're now a more unified company, we recognize we're going into some global turbulence, and I believe the significant cash flow generation of our casinos and resorts and international interactive segments continue to be one of our critical success factors.
Since we reported the Second Quarter, we've had a number of puts and takes on our business. In casinos and resorts, Lincoln continued to outperform expectations, post removal of mask mandate and the return of smoking. However, the turnaround of Atlantic City will take longer than we'd hoped for, with AC having negative $3 million of EBITDA versus our expectations of a positive $4 million. AC is not where we want it to be. Now, most of the renovation program is complete. We've moved to restructure our cost base there for the go forward, and from August, we've taken out costs which should generate $10 million of annualized savings at the property. We are heartened by improvements on handle and drop and getting some recent bad luck behind us on hold. The earnings trend there will get better. The rest of the portfolio performance was in line with expectations.
Our EBITDA margin ex- AC is slightly ahead of expectations at 39%. In international interactive, we found a bottom in the U.K. in June, +2% year-over-year on a constant currency basis, despite us lowering marketing spend by around 30% and reducing bonusing to deliver margin enhancement. July performance was more positive still and saw our highest monthly actives for 2022 so far. The comparisons get easier through the Third and into the Fourth Quarter, and we're making good progress with more dynamic jackpot strategies and enhanced customer journeys powered by machine learning. As we all know, the U.K. White Paper was delayed once more, and we await a new government in September, but we expect that to arrive with the consultation period beginning soon thereafter.
A mixture of currency weakness that impacted the customer experience and lower than expected FTDs led to a flat quarter in Asia. FTDs were down as we moved a large affiliate promotion back into Q3, so expect some improvement then. Also in the second half, we see growth from our recently launched sportsbook with the benefit of the World Cup at the end of the year and increased uptake from our Refer a Friend program that has increasing traction in the region. We will continue to harvest Spain and our wind down of the rest of Europe. North America interactive is still in ramp-up mode. Despite having an early version of the product and without the full feature set we have in the U.K., New Jersey had almost $3 million of NGR in our B2C iCasino in June, with contribution margin in the mid-30s%.
We expect New Jersey B2C to continue to grow and be profitable for the rest of the year. We are targeting 6%-8% market share in 2023 after the implementation of omni-channel rewards by the end of this year, along with improvements in payment processing and marketing tools. With a CPA sub $250 before marketing tech stack improvements, New Jersey is the model we will apply to the rest of our North American rollout. Each state will be different, and our focus is on creating a blueprint for each state of a similar type before we invest in that rollout. iCasino states are our priority, and we will focus our resources in live markets, including Pennsylvania and Ontario, as well as those states we believe that will regulate iGaming in the next 2 years.
Our foundational sports product is now live in Arizona and New York and will be greatly enhanced by the integration of much higher volume of sports and events over the coming months. Our player funnel continues to evolve, leveraging our unique asset collection. Our model is to focus on minimizing and optimizing customer acquisition costs and building a loyalty loop for continuous engagement, lowering churn, and driving the customer experience. Over the next year, we'll continue to integrate with our casino database, providing a unified wallet and omnichannel rewards, and develop owned proprietary technologies that provide customers unique, engaging experiences everywhere. Our partnership with Sinclair today provides strong awareness for the Bally's brand, but to this point, we've not taken full advantage of the Sinclair relationship more broadly, despite adding around 100,000 players to our free-to-play offering promoted from Bally Sports.
We are working together with Sinclair to design and build a watch and bet product that will further evolve our strategy and keep our cost of acquisition down. Our focus is on the continued development of our product and the market blueprints rather than an aggressive rollout strategy. Now, I wanted us to take a few minutes to cover the exciting developments in Chicago. Technology isn't going to be everything to online gaming. We also need flagship properties that establish our brand presence and provide a true omnichannel experience. Let me turn it over to George to introduce the Bally's Chicago team and discuss the road ahead for that development. George?
Well, thank you, Lee, and thank you all for joining us on this call this morning. In May, we were selected as the winner to build a unique casino property in downtown Chicago. Demand for gaming in Chicago is in excess of supply, with many players leaving the city and the state of Illinois to game. Despite being the third-largest city in the U.S. with 55 million visitors to the city and 85 million passengers through the airport annually, the city of Chicago has little direct benefit from gaming. That dynamic will now change with our $1.7 billion project. Bally's Chicago will have community ownership, locally focused jobs, and investments that will improve the infrastructure of the city for generations to come. We will open a temporary facility in June 2023 at the Medinah Temple in the heart of Chicago.
The site and location of that project is unique and will help develop the customer list in support of Bally's Interactive and ultimately the opening of the permanent facility. We expect to invest $70 million to open the temporary facility, and the property is projected to deliver at least $50 million of EBITDAR in the first year of opening, not counting any benefits to Bally's Interactive. The permanent facility is scheduled to open in June 2026. We expect to have 3,400 slot positions and 173 table games, generating $400 win per unit and $4,600 win per unit respectively. These forecasts are just 50% of the unit performance of our nearest competitor.
We expect at least $250 million of EBITDAR from the property in the first year, and that is being factored in the upsides from synergies between retail and digital. After acquiring the Bally's brand in 2020, the board of Bally's was very focused on building a team that would support our higher ambitions for flagship properties that would grow our brand and integrate a rapidly developing North American interactive business. Over the past year, we hired two seasoned executives to lead those efforts. With me today are Joyen Vakil, who has almost 30 years of casino development and design experience and was most recently with MGM for 20 years, leading their design and development office.
Also with me is Ameet Patel, who joins us from Penn National with more than 20 years of gaming experience and will be the executive overseeing Bally's Chicago temporary and permanent facilities. We continue to hire up for Bally's Chicago. Over the coming months, I'll be happy to introduce you to Joyen Vakil and Ameet Patel to discuss the project, and we will continue to keep the market abreast of developments on the property. Now I'm gonna turn it back to Bobby.
Thanks, George. Moving to the segment details. Casinos and resorts reported $99 million of EBITDAR in the quarter. This includes -$3 million of EBITDAR for Atlantic City. Excluding Atlantic City, EBITDAR margins were 39.2%, in line with our targets of high 30s. EBITDA for the quarter excludes $3 million of rent to GLPI associated with Tropicana Las Vegas. That rent will become part of reported triple net rent when we close on Tropicana at the end of September.
International Interactive had approximately $83 million of EBITDA at a staggering 35.2% margin. The U.K. was -6% year-over-year on a constant currency basis, and Asia was flat. As Lee discussed, marketing was off in the U.K. by 30% relative to budget as we focused on profitability and highly efficient spend. North America Interactive had $17 million of negative EBITDA. New Jersey had a little bit more than $6 million of revenues, slightly offset by negative revenue numbers in 1.0 states. We have removed free play to lower the drag those states have on the overall business. We have updated our 2022 financial forecast to reflect the adverse FX headwinds, the reset in Atlantic City, and actual results for the first half of the year.
At current FX rates, we expect revenues to be $2.2 billion-$2.3 billion and adjusted EBITDA to be $535 million-$550 million, including $60 million of North America Interactive EBITDA losses. We continue to focus on profitability and cutting costs, but some of the cost cuts will only occur with five months left in the year. We are lowering capital expenditures for the rest of the year from $270 million to $250 million to reflect a more cautious approach into the rest of the year. Rent expense will now be $52 million for the year, with the Tropicana Las Vegas scheduled to close on September thirtieth. We expect the Tropicana to generate approximately $6 million of EBITDAR in the Fourth Quarter that offsets incremental rent expenses.
On July 27, we closed our previously announced tender, repurchasing 4.7 million shares for a total of $103 million. Pro forma for the tender, common shares outstanding are 48 million, and we have incremental warrants, options, and other dilution of 13 million shares. 61 million is the shares outstanding number you should use. We ended the quarter with $3.4 billion of debt and $176 million of cash and no amounts drawn on our revolver. We have ample liquidity to fund all of our announced projects and continue to invest in the North America Interactive business. Our long-term commitment is to be sub-5x debt to EBITDA, which we expect to hit in mid-2024. At the end of June, we announced real estate sales to GLPI.
For now, we anticipate that sale to bring in $635 million of cash proceeds on a tax-free basis. Incremental rent on the $635 million is $48.5 million. We continue to evaluate potential consents that would allow for a sale of Lincoln as well. We expect either transaction closed at the end of the year, and our updated guidance reflects a 12/31/2022 closing date. In our investor relations web presentation on our website, we have updated our three-year cash forecast. Free cash flow, excluding the new rents from the sale of the Bally's Tiverton, which will be used to fund future growth, is $280 million in 2023.
With our share count of 61 million, we get to near $5 of cash earnings in 2023 and $6 in 2024, while maintaining significant cash on our balance sheet. We will continue to invest this free cash flow and cash on balance sheet to drive shareholder value. With that, let's open up the call to Q&A.
At this time, if you'd like to ask a question, please press the star and one on your touchtone phone. You may remove yourself from the queue at any time by pressing star two. Once again, that is star and one to ask a question. We'll take our first question from Jeffrey Stantial from Stifel.
Hey, good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking our questions. You know, starting out, you know, Bobby, you've talked in the past and given us some milestones on how to contemplate FX. You know, I was hoping maybe we could get an update there. I seem to recall, you know, an 8% yielding a certain impact, pretty de minimis to EBITDA. Just any way to benchmark, you know, how a declining pound and euro translates to, you know, EBITDA impact, just to make sure we stay anchored for further FX volatility from here.
Yeah. You know, FX is off 10%, and that's a $20 million hit when you factor in Asian currencies as well. The Asian business is denominated in USD, but we've seen significant indirect volatility from the consumer. You know, with current currency where it is, including Asian currencies, you should look at it as about a $20 million hit.
Okay, great. That's helpful. Thank you. On the brick-and-mortar business, you know, it sounds like excluding Atlantic City, things are going according to plan. Just curious, you know, at Q1, you talked about some softening lower end of the database in certain markets. You know, can we get an update there? Has that stayed relatively stable? Has it gotten worse, better? Just any thoughts around the consumer amidst, you know, the persistent inflation we're dealing with would be great.
Sure. I think the trends that we outlined in Q1, Jeff, have held really through Q2. That's exactly where we are. Strengthening in the higher end of the database. Some softness, but not huge in the lower income area and properties that we have there. It really is as is to Q1. We were bracing ourselves for Q2, making sure we had a very tight eye on cost, and we will continue to do that through the second half of the year, because we would anticipate some inflationary pressures. We didn't see any increase from what we'd already seen in Q1. Q2 has been as is.
Great. That's really helpful. Then if I might just squeeze in one more. Any thoughts on the plan project for Tropicana heading into deal close or stay tuned there?
For Trop, we've said that we will continue to operate the property. We obviously, I think it's well advertised that we intend to develop at some point in the future, but we will run the property on an as-is basis, at least for the next 12 months, until we have identified the plan and the partnerships that we want going forward.
Great. Very helpful. Thank you both.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Barry Jonas from Truist Securities.
Great, thanks for taking my questions. I actually had a few around the Chicago project. Maybe can you start about talking about next steps from here and any risks maybe that you see for getting the full project to completion, specifically touching on inflation, supply chain risks, and such. Thanks.
Sure. George, who do you want?
Sure. Hey, Lee. Yeah. Yeah, thanks, Lee. Listen. This is George. Hi, Barry. I'm gonna direct this question to Joyen Vakil, who I introduced earlier in the call. He's actually overseeing the development and construction of the project. I'm just gonna pass it over to Joyen Vakil.
Thank you, George. Good morning, Barry, and good morning, everyone. We have, during the development phase of the project, as we were going through the RFP process, we've taken into consideration as many of the common risk factors while budgeting the project. We feel very good about the schedule on the project. We are continuing as planned. We are meeting all of the dates that we had planned for on our schedule with potentially you know, finishing our drawings for submission for the temporary coming up in September and then leading on to the construction phase of the project. Same goes for the permanent facility. We are working in tandem.
We are identifying all of the site factors that we need to look at at this point in stage, and continuing to identify all of the long lead items that we need to work towards as well. We've taken you know as far as the budgets are concerned, we've taken into consideration some of the inflationary and escalation factors that we might have to look at as we go forward as well. We feel very good about where we are in the process, how we are tracking with the process. We've got really good relationships, and we are tracking very well with agency approvals as well. Same thing goes with community outreach programs as well.
Great. Could you maybe talk about your level of confidence around the EBITDA numbers you're forecasting for both the temporary and permanent facilities?
Sure. This is George again, Barry. I'm gonna pass this over to Ameet Patel, who will actually be overseeing the operations for both the temporary and the permanent facility.
Thanks, George. Good morning, Barry. Good to hear from you. As far as the temporary goes, I just wanted to add a couple of comments on what Joyen mentioned earlier. When you look at our risk factors going into the temporary facilities, there's really two things that we're keeping a laser-sharp focus on. One is the inflationary pressures and how are we making sure that our pricing models continue to allow us to deliver on the numbers that we've given out for our cost and completion of the project. Number two, we're keeping a very close eye on the supply chain as well. Some of the long lead items, we've taken surveys of our manufacturers right now, the key manufacturers who supply the slot machines and the parts to us. We are actually going ahead and purchasing slot machines as we speak.
We are ordering slot machines today. In the next 90 days, our thought process is we wanna stay ahead of the supply chain and make sure that we rather have these slot machines in our warehouse than be able to worry about them in the second or the first half of 2023. When it comes to the operating model, Barry, I think the numbers speak for themselves. We alluded earlier to the visitations that we have in the city of Chicago. Just remember, I'll start with the temporary facility first, that we out of all of the operations that are currently in Illinois and around Chicagoland, we will be the biggest beneficiary of the tourist market that is reviving at a very fast rate in the city of Chicago.
We are going to get the highest participation of the unrated play in the city of Chicago based on our here location and where the fundamentals of the tourists are in the city. We've looked at and talked to several key hotel operators in downtown Chicago. Chris Jewett, our Chief Development Officer, and myself have talked to these hotel operators, and they are seeing a very healthy sign of hotel increased visitation coming back to the city as we speak in the last 6 months. When you look at those fundamentals, you do the math with what our nearest competitors do, with Rivers numbers.
Right now, if you look at what we have in our host community agreement with the city, we have promised to the city that we will have 800 gaming positions at our temporary facility, which is the Medinah Temple. For those of you who've not been to the site, an absolutely gorgeous, stunning building right in the heart of the district in Chicago. It allows us to capitalize on the tourist market there. On top of that, when you look at the numbers that we have on win per unit that we've projected here, there is a significant upside that we have here. Just the number of positions that we've given to the city is 800 positions, and now we are easily going to exceed that expectation.
As a result, we should be able to deliver on the EBITDA and the revenue numbers that we're giving out for table games win per units and slots as well.
Great. Okay. Thank you. Really appreciate all that color.
Thanks, Barry.
Our next question comes from Chad Beynon from Macquarie.
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. First, I wanted to ask about Bally's Interactive, very impressive in terms of the margins and kinda holding an EBITDA there. With marketing off 30%, as you mentioned, what have you seen with the player? How have they responded to the reduction of marketing? Can you talk a little bit about, you know, number of users or kind of the ARPDAU, just kind of what you're seeing on the back of that. Thanks.
Sure. Thanks, Chad. Really, astounding results, really, in the fact that we took marketing down so heavily, but only reduced our FTD count by 9%, having taken marketing down circa 30%. Real efficiency in the spend. We did it for a couple of reasons. One was with some changing dynamics on the Google auction and people being forced to log in to Google to be age verified, and that was causing some inflationary pressure, which we decided that we didn't wanna chase until that had settled down. Making sure really that we were preparing for any further inflationary pressure that we might see in the consumer base. If you remember when we reported Q1, we said we felt we were seeing some softening in the U.K. consumer. That trend has not continued.
We now have a strengthening of the consumer base in the U.K. during Q2 and with what we've seen through July. We're very pleased with where we've got to in terms of those marketing efficiencies. There's also been some efficiencies on the bonusing side as well. We'll continue with that strategy for now until we get absolute confidence in the strength of the consumer for the rest of the year.
Thanks, Lee. Turning to the U.S., your 6%-8% market share goal with Bally's New Jersey by 2023. What's given you the confidence that you can get to that level just given that, you know, it's a pretty competitive market, you have some other competitors that are ramping. Beyond that, how should we think about, you know, some goals and timelines for other markets like Pennsylvania and Ontario? Thank you.
Sure. Thank you. Yeah, so, listen, it is an aggressive target. We're going for it. We think that we can get there from all of the trends that we're seeing in New Jersey today. We're probably circa, what, just below 3% market share today. So we think we can double during 2023 and actually take that market further. If you remember when Gamesys was working with Tropicana, I think we were like 6.5% share in the New Jersey market. We are seeing excellent trends in terms of the way that we can cross-sell to the casino database. We've made some real strides in terms of upgrading our product. The product in our New Jersey casino was still not on parity with U.K.
We're still migrating features that we have in the U.K. market over to New Jersey, as well as upgrading what we have on the omnichannel side and really tying in the rewards program. The trajectory up to now has been great. We've got a lot more product to bring and a lot more omni to develop over the next 12 months. That's really what's driving that in our confidence in the New Jersey market. In terms of what comes next, well, I said, you know, what we're focused on is the product, developing the blueprints on a state-by-state basis. You know, the new technology that we put together between Gamesys and Bet.Works to create our foundational OSB product, we're pleased with, but we need to do more, right? We need to go further.
We're doing a lot of content integrations over the next three months that will see the volume of sports and events increase massively on that product. There is feature development that we still want to do. Rather than go and spend marketing dollars against a product that we don't think will cut through, we're going to keep those marketing dollars back until we've really developed the product to the stage that we wanna get there. In terms of what comes next, as I mentioned, we'll be leaning into iGaming, right? Anywhere where we think iGaming is going to legislate over the next two years or where it already exists. We launched a web-only product in Ontario a couple of weeks ago, actually it's done quite well out the gate, and we expect Ontario will be the first place where we deploy our combined,
Sports and iGaming during the second half. As well as that, we'll of course be looking at Pennsylvania, where we're looking for a license around the property as well. Going into next year, I think our focus will be on the likes of an Indiana and an Illinois, where we think we can make progress.
That's great. Appreciate it. Thanks for all the color.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Carlo Santarelli from Deutsche Bank.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question. First, a housekeeping item. I was wondering if you could provide the, you know, the EBITDA breakdown for debt holders, the one using, you know, for covenant analysis purposes.
We don't have that, but Rhode Island LTM EBITDA is $644 million.
Perfect. Moving into, you know, the forecast that you have for 2023 and 2024, could you please provide a little bit more color of, you know, what's implied for Atlantic City into next year and for Tropicana Las Vegas? Because I see that you have, like, $6 million per quarter, but we analyze that, it's like $24 million, and the rent, it's almost $23 million. I was wondering, you know, how accretive that is gonna be into earnings for next year. You know, when is the Pennsylvania property opening, you know, according to your estimate?
Yeah. On Tropicana, the way we're viewing the property as is today is the rent associated with it is $22.5 million, and it will generate $20-25 million of EBITDAR, so earnings neutral. You know, we do factor in next year our JV with IGT, which generates today about $9 million of EBITDA, goes from 23% to 40%. Atlantic City, you know, we do believe we will get to $10-20 million in the next two years. Very seasonal property, so, you know, TBD on that. We have implemented $10 million of cost savings, and Holdco the past six months has been underperforming. You know, we do view international interactive as flat into 2023 as we sort of work through sort of some of the dynamics with the white paper.
Your assumptions are not aggressive. We just have a lot of projects in the $10 million-$20 million range that turn on in the next year. Pennsylvania will be a great project, you know, into sometime in 2023.
Great. Last question for me. You know, could you please comment a little bit more on your strategy towards, you know, the sale leaseback transaction of Lincoln? You know, it seems like based on the forecast that you know, that you have provided, that you know, you could do fine just with you know, selling Biloxi rather than going for the sale leaseback proceeds from Lincoln. You know, any commentary on you know, what potentially could be the uses of the incremental money for that and you know, what sort of what are the advantages for or what are you guys thinking about you know, the advantage for the company of that money and particularly with regards to your share repurchase strategy?
Yeah. The Lincoln Tiverton transaction was $1 billion. The Biloxi Tiverton transaction, $635 million. On that $1 billion transaction, the bid ask on how much pay down was too wide. Effectively, the Lincoln transaction was liquidity neutral to actually slightly worse. It's better for the company to leave Lincoln behind, you know, do Tiverton Biloxi unless we get to sort of, you know, a reasonable agreement with our lenders. You know, I do say Lincoln is a flagship property. The IGT JV is awesome. The 40,000 sq ft we're building, you know, we're getting sort of momentum of bringing back some of our Asian play from Wynn.
Maybe, you know, we do a sale leaseback on Lincoln a year or two years from now and to fund sort of the next growth phase of the company. From a, you know, share repurchase perspective, you know, we did do the tender for $103 million. We will continue to buy back shares, you know, consistently to help, you know, drive shareholder value.
Got it. Thank you so much for taking my questions.
Our next question comes from Dan Politzer from Wells Fargo.
Hey, good morning, everyone, and thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to hit on the regionals, and maybe this is a question for George. Across your properties, what are you seeing in terms of the promotional environment, you know, from larger competitors, smaller competitors, and across different markets? Thanks.
Sure, Dan. I think a good data point for you to look at is what Lee said a little earlier, is that we're you know margins are not only kinda stabilized, but they're improving. Net of AC, we're at 39%, I think it's 39.5% margin. If you get kinda a little granular to answer your question about kind of the regions that we operate in, if you look at Rhode Island, you know, we're seeing Encore really starting to focus or shift their focus kinda closer in on their market.
Really towards the density of the population around them. That only touches on the edges of our market, and so that really has no influence on our promotional activities. We focus primarily on the free play activity. We certainly have promotional activity as well, but we don't really see any impact on that market, and it continues to perform. If you look at another region, I would pick Evansville. It's somewhat of a protected market, so our cost structure there is pretty predictable. We're really comfortable about that, and we're maintaining margins there as well as revenue. Biloxi continues to drive profitability from our higher segments of our database.
I think that touches on what Lee spoke about a little earlier, which is really, you know, we're focused on the higher end of the customer, higher trip worth. It's driving more trips from that segment. Even when you look at the lower portions of our database, I'm not saying we're not as focused, but things like eliminating the buffets and so forth, you know, removes a lot of cost structure at really no detriment to the operations. That continues to improve there, actually. Kansas City is another market you wanna look at. You know, that's focused on just driving market share, and it's dropping that market share growth to the bottom line. I guess in a nutshell, we're really comfortable about our operating model at this time. Some other
The only markets that seem to be performing not as well would be the kinda lower demographic, by way of, household income markets. Vicksburg is a good example of that.
Got it. Just switching to interactive, can you maybe give any color on early New York progress, your appetite to go into additional states that might be launching next year? Just how you think about integrating the Sinclair media, you know, media components into the app to have a more competitive offering? Thanks.
Sure. Thanks, Dan. Mentioned a few of the states earlier. As I said, we're going to lean very heavily into iGaming states, either iGaming states that are live today or ones that we believe have a high chance of legislation over the next couple of years. You know, I mentioned one. You know, Indiana obviously is an interesting one for us, where we have both RSN coverage and we have casino coverage. From our point of view in terms of the product development and how that ties to any kind of spend, well, firstly, I've said the product isn't exactly where we want it to be today. Even the iGaming product in New Jersey, I said, you know, we've got lots of things that we can still migrate over across from the U.K., which I think will enhance that product.
Sports product, which is live now in Arizona and in New York, we haven't been heavily spending behind or pushing hard because we still have quite a few content integrations to do. You know, the likes of Sportradar, Genius Sports, IMG Arena, et cetera, they're all coming. That will bring a much higher volume of sports. We haven't been pushing that until we've got a much richer event lineup inside of that app. That said, in June, we did our fifth drop of that app, and that means that that's when it became foundational for us. We think we have a number of features which are important, but of course, we will continue to develop and drop further features into that app.
In terms of a roadmap for us, in terms of where next, you know, we will be adding sports to New Jersey over time. We will be adding sports into Ontario, and I said that will be our first combined app in the second half of the year, as well as then leaning in to Indiana to Pennsylvania to Illinois.
Got it. Thanks for the detail.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Jonathan Navarrete from Cowen.
Hey, good morning. Jonathan and for Lance, thank you for taking our question. The first one is, Bobby, you mentioned that international got like a $20 million FX headwind this quarter, correct? Could we expect the same-
For the year.
Oh, for the year.
On an EBITDA basis.
Okay. In terms of revenue then, what was the impact for the Second Quarter, and what can we expect for the next two?
You know, revenue for international interactive was on a floating basis, was minus 14% year-over-year, on a constant basis, minus 5%. You could say that there is a 9% FX hit, but there's an incremental issue with FX related to Asian currencies. We do operate in USD, but the player lives and thinks in Asian currency.
Ultimately, like, those consumers definitely pulled back. You know, our guidance assumes that currency is effectively a 10% headwind into 2022. That's how we're thinking about it. You know, there is some issues that are not directly FX-related or FX translation-related. They're more that the consumer is thinking and operating in a different manner.
Sure. That makes sense. In terms of for the next two quarters then, can we expect that the Second Quarter in international would be the lowest or like, you know, can we expect incremental improvement from here on in?
Second quarter is the low.
Second quarter is the lowest. Understood. Maybe a little bit of an update on New York Downstate casinos. I understand you're probably limited in what you can share, but just want to know, like, how are you guys thinking about the opportunity still, and if it could be shared in terms of like, what would an investment in a potential property kinda look like or amount to, if you will?
Still interested in it, still exploring it, looking at potential sites. Of course, we expect the RFP process to begin later this year or early next year. We are minded to participate in that, but it's very much in the development stage at the moment, so nothing further to say on that right now.
Oh, got it. My last one. With a new prime minister coming in into the U.K., what, if any, changes can we expect from the U.K. gambling regulation, or should it stay the course and nothing will change from your perspective?
Well, I mean, new prime minister, same party, right? I don't expect radical shifts from, you know, the former prime minister to whoever succeeds him. You know, a lot of work has already been completed, of course, with the relevant ministry, but, you know, we'll have to wait and see whether it's Sunak or Truss on September five, but we wouldn't expect any radical departures from the current trajectory. I think from our perspective and from everybody in the industry's perspective, we'd like to get it out there, we'd like to get the consultation done, we'd like to be on the other side so we know exactly what we're working with. Everyone's got stability.
I've said many, many times that, you know, whenever we've had regulatory shift in the U.K. over the following 18 months, we've been a net winner and I expect it to be the same here.
Got it. Thank you.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from David Katz from Jefferies.
Morning, thanks for taking my questions. Understanding the interactive strategy and performance and, you know, the land-based stability is clear, can you just talk a bit more broadly about the capital strategy, right? You know, where are we trying to get to in terms of owned versus leased? You know, what does the leverage look like? You know, if you can help us, with, you know, obviously there's some CapEx out there, but some repurchases, sort of how that, you expect that to progress over the next, you know, six months, one year, three years, et cetera.
Yeah. Thanks, David. I'll let Bobby pick that one up.
Yeah. You go into 2023, you know, rents is sort of $120 million on, you know, $400+ million of EBITDA when you factor in Tropicana, upside from Kansas City, IGT, Pennsylvania, Chicago. You know, we do believe that our land assets are a core asset and strategic asset of the company. You know, but at the end of the day, you know, if somebody's willing to pay me 14x for the real estate under Lincoln, then, you know, we would do that and we would go invest that in higher return projects. You know, our internal ROIC is 15%. You know, if there's projects to do, which Chicago is clearly that, we're still evaluating what return we can get in Las Vegas.
I'll also tell you the climate or the volatility in the market has really brought M&A back, which is something we've proven that, you know, we can buy assets for 5-6 times EBITDA. If we can use our balance sheet to fund 5-6 times EBITDA before sort of digital synergies, that's a very attractive opportunity. You know, as I said in the call, you know, we do focus on EBITDA from a leverage perspective, and we will be sub 5 times by mid-2024.
Okay. Thanks very much.
Thanks, David.
Our last question comes from Jordan Bender from JMP Securities.
Morning. Thanks for taking my question. Lee, to follow up on the White Paper comments, have you guys taken any preemptive actions kind of ahead of maybe a ruling there? Was any of the marketing reduction in the quarter maybe related to that as well?
Yeah, sure. Thanks, Jordan. We've been taking preemptive action on the White Paper for about the last 3 years, I think. We feel very well prepared for it. You know, we've been gradually reducing slot stakes actually across the business for quite some time now, and we're just moving at the moment to, you know, a max stake of GBP 25 across the business in the U.K. We've been altering our jackpot strategy, which I mentioned earlier, which means more payouts to more players, but at lower levels. That also works into, you know, kind of reinvestment strategies, which I think are gonna be important once we get into different sets of thresholds for different players, which will come in during the evolution of the White Paper. Because I think that.
You know, remember the white paper is gonna be a consultation, I think, and, you know, that will give us a framework, but the details will get filled in over time. I think that, yeah, we've had more than enough time to prepare for what this might mean for us in the U.K. market, and we've actually made a lot of progress against that.
You reiterated the $60 million loss for North America Interactive for the year. I was wondering, you previously guided to about $125 million for the year. I was wondering if that still is in place.
For revenue? Yeah, we're not focused on revenues. I mean, at the end of the day, we can go buy revenues, but we're just not gonna do that.
Yeah.
Okay. Thanks for the comments.
Maybe to elaborate on that. Our focus is very much on the further development of that product, right? We are continuing to invest in that. We believe the revenues will come to us over time, but that's not our focus for this year. It's more about the quality of that product and getting into the right markets in the right depth.
Awesome. Thanks, Lee. Thanks, Bobby.
Thank you.
No more questions at this time. Once again, if you'd like to ask a question, that's star and one.
Thank you, operator, and thanks, everyone. You know, we'll be on the road next few months, and hopefully we see some of you at G2E. Thank you.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's conference. You may now disconnect.