Welcome to the Bally's Corporation third quarter 2021 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. In order to ask a question during the session, please press the star key followed by the number one on your telephone. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. If you require further assistance, please press star then zero. I'd now like to turn the call over to Bobby Lavan, Senior Vice President, Finance & Investor Relations 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 that accompany this call are available in the investor relations section of our website at www.ballys.com. With me on today's call are Lee Fenton, Chief Executive Officer, George Papanier, President, Retail, Robeson Reeves, President, Interactive, and Steve Capp, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, we'd 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, 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 schedules contained in our earnings release.
We do not provide a 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. Now I'll hand it over to Lee.
Thanks, Bobby. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I join you today from our Shreveport casino in the great state of Louisiana and could not be happier to be here. Welcome to all our investors and other stakeholders. I'm excited to start our journey together to build an outstanding global gaming entertainment company. Bally's has closed the acquisition of Gamesys on October 1, and I've spent time with some of you discussing the strategic priorities and direction of our business. Today's call will give you some further insight into our evolving roadmap and expectations going forward. The past 2 years have seen large steps forward in the strategic direction of Bally's. We want to simplify the story to focus on our key competitive moats.
Namely, we have strong cash flow, fully owned technology, high awareness of the Bally's brand and market presence that gives us access to millions of customers. Just one year ago, we were named Twin River and had a $750 million market cap. Since then, we've changed our name to Bally's, closed on multiple retail casinos, struck a strategic deal with Sinclair to rename all its regional sports networks to Bally Sports, acquired a sports betting engine and done a transformative deal with Gamesys to give us access to iGaming and deep experience in digital, both in product and in management talent. Our market cap is now more than $3 billion, and yet we think we're just beginning. Starting with the upcoming fourth quarter and into 2022, we will operate and report the business through three segments.
Retail, comprising our current 14 casinos in 10 states. We will be providing more information early next year on our new build in Pennsylvania, plans for our acquisition of Tropicana Las Vegas, and our proposed build in Chicago. Our second segment will be International Interactive. This includes our market-leading iGaming operations in the U.K. and Asia, as well as smaller markets in Europe and the rest of world. Our third segment will be North America Interactive. This segment will combine the collection of digital assets acquired over the past two years, including Bet.Works, as well as the Gamesys technology to provide a unique data-driven product in OSB and iCasino into the high-growth North American market that includes the U.S. and Canada. This segment also includes market access into 5 states in addition to our existing retail casino footprint.
The strategic rationale to bring Bally's and Gamesys together was to leverage Gamesys' proven technology and know-how to turbocharge Bally's omni-channel gambling platform in North America while continuing to grow interactive revenues internationally. The Retail casinos are a scaled casino footprint with meaningful cash flow generation and market access, brand awareness and player databases. International Interactive will continue to grow while providing the business scalability on technology resources as well as strong earnings flow through. North America Interactive is in the early stages of what I believe will be tremendous growth. With the free cash flow generated by Retail Casinos and International Interactive, we will have ample cash at hand to invest into that opportunity. There are lots of moving parts, so let me start to try and simplify the story.
Retail Casinos, excluding Atlantic City, run rates at approximately $450 million of adjusted EBITDA, which excludes rent. Rent expense currently stands at $46 million per year. International Interactive, annualizing for this quarter, is doing approximately $330 million of adjusted EBITDA. Corporate expense is $40 million and will see some upward pressure from market factors, including insurance and growth hiring. Our new debt stack is $3.445 billion with cash interest expense of $165 million, which is an average cost of capital sub 5%. Maintenance CapEx for the new entity is $80 million. When you add all of that up before investments in North America Interactive, growth CapEx at retail casinos or share buybacks, we have north of $400 million of pre-tax free cash flow to invest to drive shareholder value.
Assuming a 25% tax rate and 68 million shares, which includes common shares outstanding and full dilution of warrants, options and other contingent consideration, we're around $5 per share of free cash flow. We will continue to evaluate investments that drive shareholder value. At Gamesys, we built a strong track record of creating shareholder value, and that's exactly what we intend to do here. We are committed to taking our $5 per share of free cash flow and investing in growth of the properties, buying back stock, and most importantly, investing in North America Interactive. We ran Gamesys with strict CAC and LTV metrics. Although it's early days, our initial analysis indicates we'll be in a competitive position, investing near 20% of our pre-tax free cash flow into the North America Interactive segment in the near term.
Be certain that spending will be success-based and grounded in strict metrics. If the ROI is there, we will spend more. Looking to results for the third quarter, I will discuss the results of Bally's Corporation and Gamesys separately. Bally's Corporation had a record revenue with $315 million of sales and $78 million of adjusted EBITDA. Retail casinos have $302 million of revenue and $106 million of EBITDA, excluding rent. The quarter was negatively impacted by approximately $6 million EBITDA because of natural disasters that included two hurricanes and wildfires in Nevada. Excluding Atlantic City, which I will touch on later, revenues of $260 million were up 3% from the comparable period in 2019.
Adjusted EBITDA, excluding rent, adding back the $6 million natural disaster impact was $109 million compared to $79 million in 2019. This equates to a 42% property EBITDA margin and 31% in 2019. In a normalized post-COVID environment, we expect EBITDA margins to normalize at mid- to high-30s%. A few notes on the properties in the quarter. Demand at Lincoln for table games has justified opening the hotel, which we did on October 1. We will continue to take a conservative approach to bringing back amenities. Atlantic City reported a positive $3 million of EBITDA, better than the previous quarters, but still below expectations. We expect Atlantic City to have full-year losses of approximately $12 million.
I've reviewed the CapEx program and believe in the long-term potential, but it will be 2023 before we have a full year positive EBITDA from the property. The journey we're on with Bally's AC is very comparable to our investment in Tiverton. It took us over 12 months to get it right, but ultimately our $100 million-plus investment at Tiverton has been a runaway success. Additionally, the AC property will be heavily in focus in 2022 to support our iCasino launch that I will discuss shortly. Our program to rebrand the retail estate accelerated in the quarter. We expect all properties to have been rebranded by the end of the year. I'm sitting at Bally's Shreveport that was Eldorado when I walked in the door just a few days ago. This banner changing investment and will be a tailwind for the entire group into 2022.
Net-net, the retail casinos delivered a record quarter with adjusted EBITDA, excluding Atlantic City, adjusting $6 million for natural disaster impact, up 39% over 2019. July was an exceptional performing month with a step down in August and early September, primarily from natural disasters that has improved into October. We expect to maintain recent margin improvements offset moderately by increased labor rates in 2022. Moving to North America Interactive. In the quarter, we had $11.4 million of revenue and $5.5 million of EBITDA losses. This is in line with our expectations as we continue to invest in brand awareness, customer engagement through free-to-play, as well as the development and integration of the Bet.Works and Gamesys technology stacks. In the quarter, we closed on acquisitions of the Association of Volleyball Professionals and Telescope that support our awareness, content, and consumer engagement efforts.
After the quarter closed, we acquired Degree 53, adding further expertise to our sports front-end development. Right now, Bally Interactive has four priorities. Firstly, to drive awareness of the Bally brand at a local level using proprietary assets and partnerships, building structural cost advantages relative to the competition. Secondly, to launch iCasino and OSB products that are loved by our customers. Thirdly, for interactive teams to work hand in glove with their retail colleagues to leverage our footprint and deliver an omni-channel experience that is both relevant and value-adding to the customer. Lastly, to develop content and consumer programming that creates unique opportunities for customer engagement with the Bally brand on a daily basis. In the quarter, we made good progress on our app launches. We will launch the Bally iCasino in New Jersey before the end of the year.
We are currently live with Bally Bet 1.0 app in Colorado and Iowa, and in the coming months, we will launch in Indiana and Virginia in beta phase. Our significant focus, though, is on the launch of Bally Bet 2.0 in the first half of 2022. This new app will see us play to our strengths as we integrate the Bet.Works B2B sports betting engine and the Gamesys B2C technology, data-driven experiences, and scalable player life cycle management tools. The Bally Bet 2.0 app will launch first in Arizona, focused on the core sports experience. Once deployed, the app will help us scale quicker across multiple states, and we will update on that progress over the coming months.
Brand awareness is strong and improving through the visibility given across Bally Sports, the free-to-play offering through our SportCaller business and our daily fantasy business, Monkey Knife Fight, that is now available in 38 states. Moving on to the performance of the Gamesys business in the quarter. As a reminder, we closed the acquisition of Gamesys on October 1. Revenue and EBITDA was a record performance on a constant currency basis. Revenue was $279 million and EBITDA was $84 million. Revenue increased 6% year-on-year, while EBITDA increased 7%. UK revenues increased 9% and Asia increased 10%, while Europe was down 25% as we are exiting non-core markets in Netherlands and Germany due to regulatory changes that accounted for 200 basis points of headwinds in the quarter.
In the U.K., active users were up 3% on the year prior. Our transition of the Heart Bingo proposition to Double Bubble Bingo in September has been well-received by the market, with us retaining in excess of 95% of revenues and growing. It gives us an improved trademark license rate and a 10-year term for the brand. Average stake size in the U.K. in the quarter was GBP 0.85 compared to GBP 0.86 the year prior. Our average stake size in slots for the quarter was GBP 0.75 versus GBP 0.76 the year prior. We continue to believe that the average bet size, customer profile, responsible gaming standards, and a lack of dependence on VIP business puts us in a favorable position as the U.K. progresses the Gambling Act review.
We have always been and will continue to be the leader of best practices in the market. In Asia, active users were up 47% year-over-year. Our strong growth comes from localized games in the market and leading customer acquisition practices. We continue to enhance our offering in Asia, most notably with daily free games that increase reach and frequency with more exclusive content to enhance retention and extending our customer service hours to 24/7. Our approach to customer service is unique in the market. Distribution costs, which is variable costs, including marketing, licensing, gaming tax, and processing fees, was 53.7% of net revenue versus 53.8% the year prior. Administration costs, which are fixed costs including compensation, professional fees and G&A, was 16.2% of net revenue, the same as in the same quarter in the prior year.
The Gamesys business has a very predictable cost structure and we'll look to maintain that going forward. Adjusted EBITDA of $84 million is a record for the company and a good benchmark for profitability throughout into the future. Prior to handing it over to Steve, I just wanted to leave you with a few more points. In the U.K., Gamesys has grown from a 9.6% market share in 2016 to a 13.3% market share in 2021. This was the best market share growth of any of our peers. This growth came from being a data-first company using analytics to drive best-in-class LTV determinations, which leads to better decision-making on CAC and lifecycle management to lower churn. We will deploy all these tools into the North America Interactive environment. Another key factor in growth was customer centricity.
We do not need to be first to market with an inferior product. Customers will always have choices, and we will take a customer-centric view of our products. We will launch when the product is right, and we are willing to cede short-term gains to build long-term trust and value. Our analytics and lifecycle management will be important to North America Interactive, but we'll also apply it to retail casinos, and we are starting to implement new technologies into the casino for better marketing analytics and driving a true omni-channel experience. The Bally brand is very recognizable, and it's critical for us to continue to build both the awareness and the relevance of the brand. My time at Gamesys saw the company become a leader in the U.K. in sustainability, responsible gaming, and being at the forefront of ESG in the industry.
In my first month at Bally's, we've hired group heads of sustainability and diversity and inclusion. These issues will be at the forefront of our minds, particularly as more focus is put on the North American gaming industry with the growth of online gaming. Finally, I get that the Bally's story has been a little complex up to now due to the incredibly fast growth of the group through multiple acquisitions. It is our job to simplify the story for investors, give clarity on the numbers and the roadmap, and execute very tangible progress through 2022 to create long-term value. With that, I will pass to Steve, who will provide some incremental color on the quarter.
Thanks, Lee. Very glad to be here with you today. Good morning, all. Thank you for attending the call. For the third quarter, we reported adjusted EBITDA margins for retail casinos of 34.9%. This includes the aforementioned $6 million of headwinds from natural disasters, as well as Atlantic City, which, while in positive territory, only delivered a 6.5% EBITDA margin in the quarter. North America Interactive EBITDA was negative $5.5 million. Adjusted corporate expense was $11.1 million, and rent was $11.4 million, which leads to adjusted EBITDA in the quarter of $78 million. Going forward, we will report retail casinos as EBITDA. That, of course, is EBITDA before rent. Again, our triple net rent in the quarter was $11.4 million.
Our North America Interactive business delivered approximately $11 million of net revenues in the quarter, with $5.5 million of negative EBITDA. This was in line with our expectations, and we expect this to continue to grow quarter-over-quarter going forward, as Lee has already mentioned. On the CapEx front, we expect requirements to increase as a result of the properties acquired in the last eighteen months. For the first nine months of this year, CapEx was approximately $66 million. We expect CapEx to continue to ramp into 4Q 2021. We expect the consolidated group to spend $40 million-$50 million of CapEx per quarter through the end of 2022. Moving forward, of course, our approach to maintenance and growth capital investment will continue to be focused and disciplined. We closed the Gamesys acquisition on October first that reset our balance sheet.
Our new capital structure includes a $1.945 billion term loan and $1.5 billion of unsecured notes split equally between eight- and 10-year tranches, as well as a $660 million revolver, which revolver was undrawn at the transaction closing. Our structure is covenant light with minimal amortization, allowing us to focus on growth in the coming years and to utilize substantial free cash flow in an ongoing capital allocation methodology. As part of the Gamesys acquisition, we issued Gamesys shareholders 9.8 million shares of Bally common stock. Starting in 2022, we will calculate adjusted EPS, assuming all warrants and options are converted to focus investors and management on adjusted cash EPS.
We have added information to the press release and Form 10-Q, which are or will be available on our investor relations site that should help analysts and shareholders model the business going forward. Total shares outstanding for that purpose is 68.3 million, which includes warrants and shares issuable to Sinclair and other contingent investments. Thanks for tuning in this morning. We appreciate your time. With that, I'll hand it back to Lee.
Thanks, Steve. In summary, we're pleased to have achieved solid quarterly results while expanding and diversifying our collection of land-based and digital gaming assets. We continue to evolve as a company and position ourselves to capitalize on favorable industry trends. We are confident that the closing of the Gamesys deal will drive a unique business proposition as we enter 2022. Please don't forget that the Gamesys founders, me and my management team, rolled our stock into the company because we believe in the upside opportunity, and we'll be investing our free cash with a shareholder's mentality. That concludes prepared remarks for this morning. I'll now ask the operator to open the line for questions.
We will take our first question from Jeffrey Stantial with Stifel. Your line is now open.
Hey, good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking our questions. Lee, it's great to be hearing from you on this call. I wanted to start on the North America Interactive division. You know, as we look out to 2022, you're gonna be looking at one to two quarters with Bally Bet 1.0, call it two to three of 2.0. If you think about hitting the ground running with a full marketing program and app, just how are you thinking about the potential revenue contribution from that segment in 2022? Any thoughts around how market share plays into that, you know, relative to your previously stated 10% target would be helpful as well.
Sure. Hi, Jeff. Thanks very much. We actually walked away from that 10% target some time ago, but we have been obviously looking and analyzing the market in terms of how we can enter. You know, Bally Bet 1.0 is very much a beta product. There's big focus on Bally Bet 2.0 and getting out the door, 'cause I think that combines the best of all the technology that we've got. We've talked about the kinds of investments that we intend making through 2022, and I think that will continue with that 20%, pre-tax, free cash flow level into 2023 as well. In revenue terms, we expect to be north of $125 million in North America Interactive in 2022.
Okay, that's really helpful. Just my follow-up, I wanted to drill into the Gamesys tech stack to be integrated into Bally Bet next year. You know, we were just listening to Penn and we heard them talk about some internal investment into technology, really focusing on improving player-level customization in the PAM, and this did stand out a bit, given I recall this being a key focus on the merger call back in April. Lee, since we now have the luxury of hearing from you directly on this call, I was hoping you might share some thoughts on how you see the Gamesys tech stack position here relative to some other players in the U.S. that might be playing a bit of catch up in certain ways.
Well, I think the way that we've tried to uniquely position ourselves in other markets has always been about the full personalization of customer journeys. To ensure that we're putting either the right bets or the right games in front of the right player at the right time on the right device, and to make sure that your experience as Jeff is different to my experience as Lee entering into any of those apps. It's that kind of managed choice and managed experience that we believe customers value, particularly over time. You obviously need to cover that with you know, a good brand to put behind it, to build trust into it, and to make sure that you deliver it with excellent customer service. You know, the technology really is all about how we can action our data to deliver a very tailored customer journey.
Okay, great. Very helpful. Thanks for the call here, and I'll hop back in the queue.
Thanks.
We will take our next question from Barry Jonas with Truist. Your line is now open.
Great. Thank you. Lee, you know, notwithstanding walking back from the 10% target, I wanted to focus on iGaming. You've had success there with the Tropicana app, and as we think about the impending launch and ramp in the state, you know, what are your expectations there for iGaming and maybe beyond Jersey over time?
Hi, Barry. Morning. Thanks for the question. I think we've actually probably discussed before that, you know, in New Jersey, you know, I've used the phrase that we've been operating with kind of one hand tied behind our back. We didn't have the luxury and the opportunity of a casino database to leverage and that casino footprint to help us along the way, if you like. You know, we've had 6% share, albeit, you know, one of those brands over time will go away from us in Tropicana, but we will have Virgin and we will have the Bally iCasino app to launch. I would be disappointed if over time we weren't beating the share that we had previously based on the fact that I said we had one arm behind our back in delivering that. How quickly we can get there, I wouldn't like to comment on right now, Barry, but I would expect to be above $6.5 share.
Great. Just wanted to touch on Gamesys just a little bit. You know, definitely helpful color. But can you talk about sort of your expectations around growth in the various segments? I know we've got a U.K. regulatory review coming up, but curious to get your overall thoughts there.
Sure. I mean, listen, the U.K. regulatory review is a Gambling Act review, but there's been regulations over the last six years dropping into the U.K. market. What we've seen is that every time there have been additional regulations dropping into the U.K. market, we've actually managed to increase share. We see regulation as opportunity, right? I think that it's really about the way that you execute new regulations, at least bring a level playing field to many of the dynamics. Every single time we've seen that in the U.K. over the last six years, we've inched forward over time. You know, the Asia market, I keep saying, has been one of our most stable regulatory environments for the last six to eight years with not much happening there at all.
Obviously, in Japan, there's a focus on integrated casino resorts. Any regulation for online gaming, I think, is probably many years down the line. We don't see anything changing there. On the Gambling Act specifically, looks like the white paper's now kicked into 2022. As I said on the prepared remarks, you know, we think that our broad base of customers are relatively low staking customers and our activity around RG, which has been in place for many years, will leave us well-positioned.
Perfect. Thanks, Lee.
Thank you.
We will take our next question from Lance Vitanza with Cowen. Your line is now open.
Hi. Thanks, it's a pleasure. My first question is on the North America Interactive side. I heard you mention a moment ago, Lee, the $125 million revenue target for 2022, but what about on the cost side? I mean, I would think you could spend twice that much in 2022 as you invest for growth, and I may have missed this, so I apologize, but did you say at what point you would expect NA Interactive to become EBITDA positive on its own?
No, I didn't, but thanks for the question. No, we haven't said that now. What I said is, you know, we will expect to invest against North America Interactive 20% of our pre-tax free cash flow. I see that in 2022, and I see that continuing into 2023. I think let us get the apps out the door. Let us build into a little bit of market share, understand what our marketing dynamics are like, and then we'll be in a much better position, you know, probably towards the end of 2022 to give you a point of view on when we see this turning positive.
Fair enough. My other question is with respect to the New York gaming opportunity and the partnership strategy that you've chosen there. I'm wondering if you could talk. I know maybe it's a little premature, but how do you feel about your prospects there in terms of whether you are selected, profitability if you are selected and timing of a decision from the state?
We're hopeful that we'll get the decision this side of the year. We're hopeful that that will come in December. I've seen some reports that that might come earlier, but let's see. We're comfortable with our position and with the group that we've been working with to ensure that we have access. No one's happy with a 51% tax rate. I think that would be true for all of the partners that we've been working with as well. It's a huge state and therefore, you know, the scale of it means that you can have opportunities. We also have some opportunities with some of the Sinclair programming that we can leverage in the outskirts of the state as well. Obviously I think it will change the cost dynamics of all operators that enter that market, in terms of how they might address and attack that market. Clearly, New York is not a market that you wanna miss out on.
Understood. Thanks so much for your help.
Thank you.
We'll take our next question from Daniel Politzer with Wells Fargo. Your line is now open.
Hey, good morning, everyone, and thanks for taking my questions. The first one just on sports betting and iGaming. Is it reasonable to expect that your share of iGaming would exceed that of sports betting just given that Gamesys core competency is kind of backbone for the iGaming component?
I don't think that's a given, to be honest, Dan. We're working extremely hard on the sports betting product that will come to market in the first half of 2022. We've got some incredible talent in Bet.Works, which will provide the betting engine. Gamesys have actually dabbled in the sports betting market previously in the U.K., and we've got some incredible new talent as well on the product side, which we think will give us an excellent step into the market with the Bally Bet 2.0 app. I'm definitely not giving that as a given that iGaming is naturally going to be ahead. Obviously we would love more states to have both sports betting and iGaming because that enhances the opportunity for everybody.
We think we would be extraordinarily well-positioned where the two products are both offered. I'm very optimistic about our 2.0 app and having seen a lot of the work that's been going on, I would hope that it can perform as well as our iGaming app.
Got it. Just for my follow-up, to what extent, if any, do you anticipate Bally Bet to be impacted by the Sinclair RSN uncertainty? I know that the Diamond Sports bonds are trading at distressed levels, so, you know, is there any impact or read-through there in the event that, you know, there is a credit event with Diamond?
Well, I think, you know, I don't wanna comment on the Diamond situation specifically, but, you know, we think we bring a lot of value to Bally Sports today. That value is only gonna continue to build over time. We've got a great relationship with Sinclair today, but if those RSN assets end up under other ownership in the future, we still believe that we'll bring a great deal of value from to whoever has that in the future if that was to be the way it went. Remember also you know, the Tennis Channel, local TV stations and Stadium app are all kind of outside of that Diamond structure, so it wouldn't all go away as well. You know, we value the partnership we have there. If it were to change hands, we'd look at whether or not we can find a valued partnership under a new owner.
Got it. Thanks for all the color and best of luck in the new role.
Thank you. Appreciate it.
We will take our next question from David Katz with Jefferies. Your line is now open.
Hi. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to go back to, I know you touched earlier on the Chicago bid. If you could elaborate just a bit on how, you know, management thought about its pursuit, you know, what success would look like, and more broadly speaking, how you're thinking about investing capital in the land-based portfolio, you know, next year or two. Thanks.
Hi, David. Thanks for the question.
Hi.
You know, the company has been following with interest Chicago for some time, and that obviously predates me. But our interest became very serious when the city moved to rationalize the tax structure. You know, I think we've got a very comprehensive plan that we're proud of, that George has been dealing with much of that plan over a much longer period. Maybe, George, can you comment on Chicago and the future CapEx investments?
Sure, thanks for the question, David. You know, we felt Chicago would be a perfect location for us to position this property as really a centerpiece of our national portfolio. You know, we view this as a tremendous cross-marketing opportunity that will be very attractive to our large and growing regional database customers. We've taken a very measured approach to development. The city hasn't put out anything related to our RFP yet, but you know, we're taking a phased approach to that property so we understand really what the levels of visitation would be in that market. You know, as far as the...
You'll see a highlight number of $1.6 billion, but that's after the first phase, which is temporary, a temporary casino as well as the Phase 1 of the project, which would include, you know, hotel room product and a substantial gaming place and gaming space. When we factor in both of the sites that we've identified, we feel that it fits in terms of the density of population.
When you add Chicago to, you know, what really is one of the top international destinations for tourism, conventions, trade shows, you know, we believe this could be, again, a centerpiece of our portfolio and we have a high level of confidence that it will produce an appropriate return on our investment.
Okay. Thank you for that. The second part of my question was really around the land-based portfolio and how you're thinking about CapEx and investment there.
The three CapEx programs which are running at the moment in Lincoln, Kansas City, and Atlantic City will all roll out over the course of 2022. You can start to see us get the full benefit from those in 2023. They're progressing at a pace which we are comfortable with. I'd say that Atlantic City is a little bit behind where we'd expected it to be. The vast majority of the impactful deployment of CapEx will be deployed by May of this year in time for the seasonality in that market.
Okay. No thoughts on sort of any of the other properties or markets at this time?
George, is there anything you'd like to add on any of the others?
You know, we're underway with our CapEx in Kansas City.
Yep.
You know, we're hoping to have that fully online for full year 2023. You know, we're focused on a rebrand right now. I think Lee touched on that recently. You know, initially we started that in the early second quarter of this year, really focused on marketing as well as kind of operational aspects related to rebranding and a lot of that has lead time, which is reliant on regulatory approval. Now we're underway with the physical rebrand of signage and we'll have completed that by the end of the first quarter of 2022. We should have our entire portfolio rebranded to then be aligned with what we're trying to do from an omni-channel perspective.
Got it. Thank you so much.
We will take our next question from Stephen Grambling with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Hi. Thanks. Lee, thanks for all the thoughts, but I'd love to start off with maybe a broader question on just how you're thinking about the North America digital market, both from a competitive standpoint and consumer behavior standpoint, relative to the experience in the U.K. and, you know, perhaps how that frames your view of the margin structure and market evolution over the long term.
Hi. Thanks, Steven. Thanks for the question. If I look back at the U.K., I guess, you know, a few lessons for us from the U.K., although, you know, I'm conscious not to just think everything is the same because I think there's quite a few different dynamics in the U.S. First thing to say is that the winners are not decided in the first few years. If you look back at the history and evolution of the U.K. market, that's rather over the first 10 years, which tend to bring that to the fore and decide who the winners are. You know, your use of data and how you leverage that is key.
We think that, you know, unique content and unique acquisition funnels will be kind of critical to avoid the kind of massive overspend with just throwing money above the line and hoping that it sticks. You've seen us with the acquisitions that we've already made and the partnerships that we've already struck, starting to craft together a different way to approach the market. You know, Gamesys has always been different in the way that it approached the market in the U.K. Very scientific in terms of the way that it acquires players, very focused on digital marketing. But in the U.S., of course, we'll have a number of different opportunities. One, through the media partnerships that we have.
Two, through some of the great acquisitions we've made on free-to-play and onsite like SportCaller and Telescope as super interesting parts of the business for us to really give us a better funnel. Of course, the retail casino database, which we intend to leverage in a more integrated way than we've seen done today. That's not a dynamic, of course, that really exists other than the, let's call it the betting shops in the U.K. You know, I mean, I think we're somewhat at the start of the beginning. I think it's way too early to call the winners. I think that us looking at differentiated funnels, differentiated content and ways to unlock that is kind of really critical for us over the next 12 to 24 months.
That's all super helpful. One unrelated follow-up. This may be more for Steve. The capital allocation, on the capital allocation front, I think I saw a buyback authorization. I guess, how are you thinking about redistribution of capital back to shareholders, even if that's over the longer term versus maybe further M&A and what the right leverage level is for the business in a steady state?
Steve, a good question. Capital allocation is a frequent topic for our senior team and board, and we go through it many times per year. Of course it is variable, right? What is the stock price? What are the ROIC expectations on capital investment opportunities facing us? What is our leverage through recent LTM cash flows, et cetera. So that kind of frames the discussion for capital allocation. That said, over time, we have said it many times, we have kind of a longer term steady state view of leverage in kind of the mid-fours range. Let me couch that as mid-fours on our two operating cash flow businesses, that being International Interactive and the retail casinos.
We have in our capital structure kind of parsed away North America Interactive, and that's as a separate investment opportunity. Let me also say that we do not have any issues with strong ROIC investment opportunities today. We have George just talked about the three retail investments we have going on. We've got opportunities potentially in New York and Chicago and elsewhere. Look, it's nice to have these problems to consider capital allocation. The good news is as the press release talks about, we've got an abundance of free cash flow between the two operating divisions, and so there's plenty to work with there.
Stephen, if I can also add to that maybe a little more directly, that if our stock remains as low as it is, we will be buying it. The quantum of that, you know, will depend on other opportunities that we're facing. You know, we will continue to be opportunistic on retail casinos. You've seen our ability to move fast to add things to the portfolio that we think make great sense, and I think our track record there is excellent. On digital, we'll continue to be interested in unique content and unique distribution models. Beyond that, I'd say we're happy with the asset set that we've pulled together today.
That's all super helpful context. Thanks so much, and best of luck.
Thank you.
Thanks, Stephen.
We will take our next question from Jordan Bender with Macquarie. Your line is now open.
Morning, everyone. You called out the media relationship as driving your brand awareness, and you kinda touched on the Sinclair RSNs earlier in the call. Could you and would you look to expand your media presence through other RSNs or media partnerships outside of Sinclair?
Yeah, Jordan, I don't think anything is off the table. We'll always look, but obviously that depends on the economics of that deal and whether or not we think that's gonna add to us in the right places and does it sync with the roadmap of rollout that we're considering and looking at. Yes is the answer. We do think that the right media partnership with the right economics in the right places can work very effectively for us. We're not limited to just the leverage of the Sinclair relationship.
Perfect. Understanding its early days, can you talk about the app downloads and kind of your first time depositors coming from your casino database?
Well, the app today is the Bally Bet 1.0 app. We really haven't pushed it, Jordan, is the truth because what's out there today is not the product that we want to put in front of our customers. It's been a great learning experience for the team. It was put together by, you know, the B2B team at Bet.Works, and I think they'd be the first to say that they're not the B2C experts in our group. They're specialists at delivering the betting engine. I think that what we wanna keep our powder dry to really push the 2.0 app when it's brought together all of the expertise of Bet.Works with the expertise of Gamesys, and that's something that we'll look to push.
Of course, post the 2.0 launches, we should have a lot more metrics to share with you.
Awesome. Thank you.
Thanks.
We will take our final question from Adam Cecil with Gravity. Your line is now open.
Yes, good morning. Lee, congratulations on telling a very complicated story with a lot of moving parts as simply as you can. Just to be clear, the 20% free cash flow reinvestment into North America Interactive for 2022 and 2023, that's largely gonna come through the P&L as marketing expense, right?
Yes. I think that the majority of that will come through the P&L in multi-spend.
Yeah. I know from having read something about what you did at Gamesys, that you do, as you mentioned in passing, take a very scientific approach to, you know, CAC to LTV and so forth. I think there's a fair amount of concern on the street that people that you're gonna, you know, waste money or throw money at this problem as a lot of people are. Can you just spend a couple of minutes explaining how you did it at Gamesys and how you think that will be, you know, you'll carry that over to OSB?
Sure. You know, throwing money at the wall just simply isn't in our DNA. I would say that there's no doubt we are gonna have to do a level of awareness build, if you like. We think that the media partnerships we have from Sinclair and the retail casino footprint and database that we have will limit the amount of, let's say, ATL brand awareness that we need to do. Our focus has always been on digital channels and ensuring that when a customer arrives at us, that we can understand their LTV quickly. We have PLV, which is our projected LTV algo, which effectively gives us, well, you can project it over whatever timeframe you like. We take two years just to be conservative. Most players stay a lot longer.
We project a LTV, plus or minus 10%, for two years within the first 48 hours of the customer experience in the site. That gives us huge latitude in terms of either opening the hose or closing the hose on marketing because we can buy on the ratio of CAC to LTV rather than buy a CPA. Absolutely, the deployment that we will do into North America Interactive, and so the vast majority of our marketing spend will be done with that consideration. Obviously, you can still then vary the ratio and look at what you do and typically when you enter a new market, you might have a CAC to LTV ratio more at 50% than 30% in a mature market. That's exactly the approach we will take.
Just as a quick follow-up, you know, if I take 20% of the $400 and change million of free cash flow that you put out, that's $80 million of spend in the P&L for North American Interactive against $125 million of revenue. Am I missing something to say that it sounds like North American Interactive could be free cash flow positive as early as next year?
I'm not expecting it to be free cash flow to positive in 2022. I think we'll be continuing to reinvest some of that revenue that is coming in. I think I said earlier in the call, Adam, that I think that towards the second half of 2022, we'll be in a much better position to give some idea of forecast on that day.
Thanks a lot. Appreciate it.
Thank you. Thanks for your time.
There are no further questions on the line at this time. I will turn the program back over to our presenters for any additional or closing remarks. That does conclude today's program. You may disconnect your line at any time and have a wonderful day.