Good afternoon, and welcome to the MGM Resorts International second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. Joining the call from the company today are Bill Hornbuckle, Chief Executive Officer and President, Corey Sanders, Chief Operating Officer, Jonathan Halkyard, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Hubert Wang, President and Chief Operating Officer of MGM China, and Andrew Chapman, Director of Investor Relations. Participants are in a listen-only mode. After the company's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. In fairness to all participants, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Please note, this conference is being recorded. Now I would like to turn the call over to Andrew Chapman. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, and welcome to the MGM Resorts International second quarter 2022 earnings call. This call is being broadcast live on the Internet at investors.mgmresorts.com. We've also furnished our press release on Form 8-K to the SEC. On this call, we will make forward-looking statements under the safe harbor provisions of the federal securities laws. Actual results may differ materially from those contemplated in these statements. Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ from these forward-looking statements is contained in today's press release and in our periodic filings with the SEC. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or otherwise. During the call, we will also discuss non-GAAP financial measures in talking about our performance.
You can find the reconciliation to GAAP financial measures in our press release and investor presentation, which are available on our website. Finally, this presentation is being recorded. I will now turn it over to Bill Hornbuckle.
Thank you, Andrew, and thank you all for joining us this afternoon. Our second quarter results represented our highest adjusted property EBITDAR quarter in the history of Las Vegas, both on an absolute and same-store basis, and the highest second quarter in our regionals ever, with seven of our U.S. properties setting all-time records. I again want to sincerely thank our employees for their continued hard work, commitment to excellence, and dedication to creating world-class experiences for our guests. Thanks to them, our company service scores have improved sequentially each quarter, both overall and across all the metrics we track. I could not be more proud of the progress we have seen in servicing our customers. Before I dive into our results in more detail, let me reiterate that our long-term strategic planning remains unchanged.
We're focused on continually improving our guest experience, delivering operational excellence, investing in our people and planet, and allocating capital responsibly. Let's turn to those results. We took another meaningful step in April to simplify our corporate structure and complete the monetization of our real estate assets with the closing of our strategic transactions between MGM Growth Properties excuse me, and VICI. This transaction brought us $4.4 billion in cash, which we intend to use to invest in our core businesses while continuing to pursue meaningful growth opportunities. One such opportunity was the acquisition of The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas that officially closed in May. I've had the opportunity to spend some time at the property and have met a number of the Co-Stars. I cannot say enough about the strength of the team at The Cosmopolitan and the exceptional service culture that has been created there.
Our focus now is on integrating the operations of the property into MGM Resorts' portfolio and working together to maximize the future success of this world-class resort. We also recently announced another strategic divestiture in our portfolio. In June, we reached an agreement to sell the operations of the Gold Strike Tunica to the Cherokee Nation for $450 million. As a company, we felt this was an opportunity to sharpen our focus in Mississippi on Beau Rivage and take advantage of an attractive valuation. Gold Strike is a very special property. I'd like to again thank every employee in Tunica for consistently delivering amazing first-class gaming entertainment experiences to our guests. We look forward to seeing Gold Strike continued success with the Cherokee Nation, and we expect this transaction to close in the first part of 2023.
The divestiture follows our prior announcement to sell the operations of The Mirage, which still also stay on track to close later this year. Consistent with our strategy to grow our international online gaming footprint, we announced in May a tender offer for LeoVegas, a leading global online gaming company with licenses in eight jurisdictions, primarily in the Nordics. LeoVegas has a talented management team, a cloud and mobile-based technology platform, and an appreciable growth plan that we'll execute on as we develop our digital gaming presence in Europe. We also expect this transaction to close in the third quarter of this year. Shifting now back to focus on our brick-and-mortar development pipeline, we are hopeful that New York will solicit applications by the end of the year for one of three additional casino licenses.
We are eager to respond and expand our existing property in Empire City, which is less than 15 miles from Manhattan, with an attractive footprint for development and growth. If we do receive a license, we look forward to working with the state of New York, Yonkers, and our surrounding jurisdictions to drive jobs and economic growth to that region. In Japan, we submitted our area development plan to the Japanese government in April and are optimistic that we'll receive an approval decision in the fall of this year. Following that process, we will share further details about the project. In the UAE, we continue to make progress on bringing the MGM brand family to Dubai, where we have a management agreement for a non-gaming integrated resort that has been developed in partnership with Wasl.
The project has broken ground, and work continues on the development progress. We will watch with great interest what does or doesn't happen around gaming, in the region, hopefully in the near future. Turning to BetMGM, Adam Greenblatt and the team provided a comprehensive update at their Analyst Day, reaffirming their long-term roadmap and path to profitability. The team at BetMGM is also working on a comprehensive refresh to improve the interface and customer experience later this year. Following a successful launch in Ontario in April, BetMGM announced a partnership with Carnival Corporation to provide onboard ship betting and gaming under the BetMGM brand. BetMGM operates now in 23 markets, United States and Canada, across retail, online sports, and iGaming operations.
In May, BetMGM commanded 21% in share in the active markets in both U.S. sports betting and iGaming, which puts us in the number two position. BetMGM is the clear leader in iGaming and having reached 29% market share in May. Looking forward, with the addition of Ohio, most recently Massachusetts, as well as the potential for California, we continue to see great opportunity for expansion with BetMGM, who are accessible to those three states as over 45 million addressable audience. Our investment in BetMGM is an important enabler to our omni-channel strategy and a key competitive advantage that allows us to drive incremental earnings between our brick-and-mortar and online channels. Early results of this strategy have been positive with a strong acquisition story with over 43% of our MGM Rewards sign-ups coming from BetMGM versus 33% in Q2 2021.
Of these sign-ups, we have seen substantial growth in those who are visiting MGM property for the first time. Turning to Macau, our operations were affected by limited visitation to the region, obviously due to the COVID restrictions. As you've likely seen, the Macau government closed all non-essential businesses in July in the face of rising case counts, which impacted our properties. Last week, we saw operations reopening on a limited basis, and we're working to minimize our operational costs in the short term and position our properties to capture more than our fair share of premium mass business as demand returns, hopefully in the long term. We're also working on our concession renewal. We are pleased to have received the terms of this tender last week with no surprises, with all the submissions due by September 14th.
The Macau government will then review the submissions and grant new concessions, hopefully by year-end. We remain confident in the future of Macau and are proud to be partners in shaping the future of one of the world's premier tourist entertainment and gaming destinations. While our second quarter results were nothing short of spectacular, we are of course mindful of the marketplace concerns of a potential recession. We also recognize that starting in the back half of the year, we'll be lapping strong comparisons driven by pent-up demand around our reopenings. With all of this in mind, it is important to highlight that we've built an incredibly agile business over the last few years due to COVID and other factors, and we will adjust and pivot quickly if we see any signs of consumer demand slowing.
That said, we sit here today, our business and forward-looking pace remains extremely strong. In fact, looking ahead, we continue to be quite bullish on our domestic business outlook based on a number of tailwinds coming in the new year, including a rebound in our convention business, the return of international travel, and a lineup of exciting events to Las Vegas. Let me touch on a couple of these points a bit more. First, in 2023, we expect to grow our convention mix and rate year- over- year. Also, in the terms of citywides, we look forward to welcoming CES back in better form and once again, the CONEXPO trade show to Las Vegas in March of 2023. This will be their first return post the COVID shortened 2020 event.
When in rotation, this is one of the most well-attended citywide events of the year with historical attendance well north of 130,000. Add to that the return of international visitation to Las Vegas, which in 2021 represented only 3% of visitors, then 10%-15% in pre-pandemic year. Our international customers have longer stay patterns than domestic guests, and we expect these guests to return in force as international flight capacity will reach over 80% of 2019 summer levels. Finally, the event calendar in Las Vegas is arguably the best the city has ever seen, and MGM will be primary beneficiary, even at our scale and positioning. Las Vegas is now truly a powerhouse sports destination with the Golden Knights and Raiders calling Las Vegas home.
Looking ahead in 2023, the city will host the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight rounds of the NCAA's men's tournament and our first-ever Formula 1 race. Then in early February of 2024, we'll play host to the Super Bowl. When you put it all together, the business case is incredibly compelling for continued growth and momentum in our business. As Jonathan will describe, we see tremendous value potential in the shares of MGM Resorts. With that, I'll turn it over to Jonathan to discuss the details of the quarter.
Thanks very much, Bill. I too would like to express my sincere thanks to all of our employees for the incredible results we achieved this quarter. We truly have the best team and the best talent in the business. I also want to acknowledge and thank the employees at the Gold Strike Tunica for their contributions to this great property, and also extend my welcome to the Co-Stars of The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas. Let's discuss our second quarter results in a bit more detail. Our consolidated second quarter net revenues were $3.3 billion, an increase of 44% compared to 2021, despite a $168 million negative impact from MGM China due to the COVID-related limitations to visitation Bill mentioned in his remarks. Our net income attributable to MGM Resorts was $1.8 billion, benefiting from a gain related to the sale of MGM Growth Properties.
Our second quarter Las Vegas Strip net revenues were $2.1 billion and adjusted property EBITDAR for the Strip was $825 million. Our same-store net revenues in Las Vegas, which excludes ARIA, Vdara, and The Cosmopolitan in 2022, increased 60% versus the second quarter of 2021, and same store adjusted property EBITDAR in Las Vegas was up 51% versus the second quarter last year. Now, unlike the visitation or the variation month-to-month that we experienced in the first quarter due to Omicron, our second quarter occupancy, ADR, and profitability were consistent through the quarter. Second quarter occupancy was 92%, continuing the strength that we saw when we exited March. As Bill mentioned, pricing remains strong with ADR in the second quarter at a record $225.
On a same-store basis, ADR of $201 was 34% above the second quarter of 2021. Our pricing power is driven by a number of factors, the attractiveness and sophistication of our marketing efforts, the relative value versus other destination markets, midweek conventions returning, and the benefit of certain room renovations, including the Bellagio and the ARIA Sky Suites, which we completed in 2021. Our preliminary results from July are also an encouraging sign for the third quarter, with occupancy of 94% and ADR up 6% year-over-year, this being our toughest comp versus 2021, given the strong reopening trend we experienced last year. Our gross bookings continue to be robust, with occupancy growth in all future months this year and rate up double di gits versus 2021 in each month.
In fact, during June, we booked the most rooms per day so far this year. Yep, we really like the demand outlook for Las Vegas. Our second quarter regional net revenues were $960 million, an increase of 12% versus the second quarter of 2021. We delivered regional adjusted property EBITDAR of $340 million, which was 7% above the second quarter of 2021. Margins were 35%, down approximately 200 basis points compared to last year as we brought back more of our nongaming operations. Moving to Macau, net revenues of $143 million in the second quarter represented a 54% decrease compared to the second quarter last year. Adjusted property EBITDAR was a loss of $52 million in the second quarter versus positive $9 million last year.
Public health policies remain a headwind in the region as entrance into Macau has been severely limited. Turning to BetMGM, our 50% share of BetMGM's losses in the second quarter was $71 million, which is reported as a part of the unconsolidated affiliates line of our adjusted EBITDAR calculation. We expect to contribute $225 million to BetMGM this year. Now, in the first half of 2022, BetMGM generated net revenues associated with operations of $608 million, which is an improvement of 70% compared to the first half of 2021 and well on track to meet our forecast of $1.3 billion. Our second quarter corporate expense, including share-based compensation, was $120 million, which included $21 million of transaction costs.
We're strategically investing our corporate expense in growth areas, including improvements to our IT infrastructure, enhanced digital offerings for our guests, and of course, our IR efforts in Japan. Before we wrap up our prepared remarks, I'd like to restate our capital allocation strategy and touch briefly on how we view the valuation of our company. Our strategy is as follows. First, we'll maintain a strong balance sheet with ample liquidity. Second, we'll invest where we have clear advantages, exercising prudence and measuring prospective returns for our shareholders. Finally, we'll return cash to those shareholders. The transactions we've completed and announced this quarter yet again demonstrate our commitment to and execution of these priorities. We bolstered our liquidity through the closing of the VICI transaction.
We improved our portfolio with the acquisition of The Cosmopolitan and the announced sale of the operations of The Mirage and Gold Strike Tunica. We invested in our international digital future with the announced LeoVegas transaction. We returned cash to our shareholders through share repurchases. During the second quarter, we repurchased 32.4 million shares for $1.1 billion. Since the beginning of 2021 through last night, we've repurchased 104 million shares for $4 billion or 31% of our market cap. This activity brings our share count down to approximately 393 million shares. We've been aggressively repurchasing our shares over the past 18 months because of the value we see at current trading multiples. Here's how I think about it.
As of yesterday, our share price was $33 and we had 393 million shares outstanding, so this implies a market cap of $13 billion. If we add our quarter-end domestic net debt and subtract the value of our 56% stake in MGM China, then we have the enterprise value of our domestic operations. Divide this by the trailing 12 months EBITDA, adjusted for corporate expense, Cosmopolitan, Mirage, and Gold Strike transactions, and this implies a trailing multiple of 5.3x with our stake in BetMGM for free. These deals were announced a few months ago, but our sales of the Mirage and Gold Strike traded at trailing EBITDA multiples of 17x and 11x respectively. Wait, there's more. Our traditional debt is all fixed rate, and our lease agreements escalate by only 2% annually for the first 10 years.
Thereafter, we have a CPI cap of 3%. We enjoy free cash flow operating leverage by driving EBITDA growth above 2% or 3%. In the second quarter, our domestic same-store adjusted EBITDA grew by 33%. Bill, back to you.
Thanks, Jonathan. I know where my new Chief S ales Officer is going to come from. As a company, we've been busy this year in our pursuit of our vision to be the world's premier gaming entertainment company. I could not be more proud of the progress we've made, but understand there is clearly more work to do. Again, I'd like to thank all of our employees for their contribution to everything we have accomplished. There is a lot of excitement in the rest of 2022 and beyond. I can't wait for what's to come. I truly believe our best days are yet to come. With that, operator, I'd like to open it up for questions.
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your Touch-T one phone. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. As a reminder, in all fairness, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Our first question will come from Joe Greff from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, guys. Bill, my first question to you is, and to Jonathan as well, can you talk about maybe any aspirations for large-scale M&A, particularly in Asia, you know, given the news about your potential interest in Singapore? That to us is a little bit different than some of the other capital allocation activities that you've talked about. I'll leave it open-ended, and you can discuss it as you wish.
Look, Joe, obviously, we love our position in Macau. We're excited about Japan. I'm not going to comment on anything else. We'll continue to be, you know, aggressively look at M&A and active to the extent it makes sense. I really don't want to comment on the Singapore situation. I don't know if Jonathan want to. We stand as we are, Joe.
Okay. Understood. Bill, I think you had comments that, you know, obviously the forward pace in Las Vegas and across the portfolio is not reflecting any consumer retrenchment from any kind of downturn that we're in or maybe going into, which is, you know, great to see, and that's consistent with others in the industry and others in our coverage universe. Can you talk about what plan B would be in terms of managing the business if we're going into a downturn and you see, you know, spend per visit and length of stay, you know, God forbid, start to retrench? How do you manage that from an OpEx perspective, from a labor perspective? You know, how does that maybe translate into sort of a flow-through, particularly in light of sort of the margin gains that you've achieved, you know, since the pandemic started? That's all for me.
Yeah. You know, I'll kick it off and maybe turn part of this over to Jonathan and/or Corey. Look, inflation's an interesting thing to our business. Obviously, we price our hotel rooms every day. So we, you know, we're in a great position there. Most of our food and beverage is also dynamic in some respect. I think we as a company have done a great job with energy. We've already bought energy through the end of 2023. Most of our employees, about 60% of them, are in some form of a union contract, and the biggest lift on that comes next year in 2023 with the culinary. We've got about 35,000 employees in some way, shape, or form in some kind of a review cycle. So we feel good generally where we are.
I would make this broad comment. You know, we just came through hell and back with COVID. We've learned how to manage this company at scale, at a premium, meaning, we're premium operators with high-end product. And I think our margins are still stretching, you know, high 30s% into the 40s%. Some of our significant properties even higher. Obviously, we're not naive to what may or may not happen. You know, I feel good about the operating model we've put in play. I feel good about the levers that we have and the handle we have on costs. And so Jonathan, I don't know if you want to talk about some specifics of what might happen, but that's my general view.
Yeah. Joe, we've done certainly forensics on prior recessions and the impact of changing customer behavior and pricing on our operating model and tried to adjust it for things like the dramatically different supply environment that we have now, better than what was experienced back in, say, 2007, 2008. You know, it really depends upon where any reduction in demand would come, whether it be from visitation or pricing or both. I certainly believe, having seen this now just in my relatively brief time with the company, our company twice has dealt with pretty material reductions in demand last August, September, and then, of course, back in January. The operating model really works here.
The company has playbooks and I'm confident that we will be able to adjust as much as possible to that kind of reduction and maintain margins, perhaps not where they are now, but above where they've been in the past under such circumstances. I think the other thing that I add is we still have a number of initiatives in flight that would help us greatly in such a situation. Those would include, of course, the cost work that we've done over the past couple of years, and also the MGM Rewards program, which is designed in part to stimulate increased visitation from our regional properties in Las Vegas. Visitation that I don't think we get our fair share of now, and also cross-property visitation while our customers are within Las Vegas.
These are huge opportunities, and I think would be a bit of a buffer for us in that kind of environment.
I think maybe one last comment here to think about our regionals. In many cases, market-leading large-scale, ultimately really resorts. They're not smaller properties that do $15 million -$20 million. They're large-scale places that hopefully do a couple hundred million. Our regional portfolio even sets up a little different. You know, 2/3 of our database, the average household income is over $110,000. It's substantial. We have a, you know, upmarket opportunity in the context of who our customer base are and therefore who may or may not be impacted and how severely by a significant downturn.
Great. Thank you.
The next question is from Carlo Santarelli from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Hey, guys. Thanks, and good afternoon. Jonathan, I know getting into property level stuff, and you certainly gave, you know, some same store metrics that were certainly helpful. I wanted to ask around Cosmo. I believe I think you guys had in the release at the time of acquisition, it was LTM run-rate a little over $415 or so. I was wondering, as you've kind of gotten in the asset and, you know, it's only been a couple months, but had some time to integrate, is there anything along the lines of synergies that you think exist there that might be tangible enough to call out?
Well, there are certainly synergies in this transaction. They relate to the things you might expect, the combination of some facilities that the Cosmopolitan needed to maintain and pay for, associated with their relatively small footprint, things like warehouse space, corporate offices, and the rest. I'm proud to say that on the day after we closed the transaction, we had their employees, the Co-Stars, able to park in the Bellagio garage and therefore not have to take bus transportation from a remote spot. The synergies I think we'll realize over the next couple of years. I would note that you can probably do this math yourself, but I'll save you a step on the same store sales or same store EBITDAR calculation.
In the six weeks that we owned The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas during the second quarter, it generated kind of just a little bit under $660 million of EBITDAR. This business is rocking and rolling right now. Corey?
Yeah, the other thing I would add, Carlo, that we've identified immediately is procurement savings that and they go both ways. They go on buys that they were getting through Blackstone and on buys that we get.
Great. Thank you, guys. If I could just one follow-up. I was wondering if you guys had any color you could add on the launch in Ontario and how that's gone, maybe at an industry level or at a company level, what the experience there has been to date, acknowledging it's a softer season on the sports side, but you know, perhaps you could shed some color on the iGaming side.
Yeah. Carlos, it's Bill . Look, it is softer sports season, as you know. We're exactly where we thought we would be, particularly with our iGaming business. Obviously, as you know, it was a great market that's now been regulated, so there's a couple dozen competitors. We're in the single digit, high single digit market share and growing. You know, it's clearly a real marketplace that is used to iGaming and sports betting, so our entry into that has been productive, and we're pretty excited by where that ultimately all goes.
Great. Thanks, Bill. Thank you, everyone.
The next question is from David Katz from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Afternoon, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. Could we just spend a moment on LeoVegas and just talk through the strategies for that and how it, you know, sort of fits into the, obviously this very busy plate that you have and what success looks like with it?
Sure. Again, Bill. David, pretty straightforward. You know, we believe ultimately that the digitization of our business and therefore our ability to take brands through omnichannel and otherwise and make something real of it is a real business. Obviously, you know, BetMGM's heading to a $2 billion revenue line next year. Hopefully profitability by year-end. We are interested and want rest of world. A smaller acquisition. You know the numbers. We're probably gonna be in it just under $600 million. Hopefully throw off between $40 and $50 the first year. It's got a expandable platform. It's got a built-in team that we really like in terms of its management. We're looking at M&A, we're looking at gaming studios.
They have dabbled in before live dealer, live gaming. We like the entry. We recognize it's not as large scale and therefore needle moving as we might want over time. We thought it was a great place to start, and most importantly, we like the platform and the players, meaning the team. That's, you know, in essence, that's it. We think over time, it's in Canada as well. It's an open marketplace, obviously for BetMGM, LeoVegas and our partners at Entain as well. We just like the exposure it gives us. It's a learning curve for us to understand rest of world, and we think we'll learn a lot from these guys.
Understood. As my follow-up, for Jonathan, I just wanted to talk about share repurchases. You've obviously done a fair amount of that, you know, of late. Just thinking through how share repurchases, you know, might be an ongoing or recurring aspect of the strategy and, you know, frankly, something that happens quarter in and quarter out, and how we might think about that.
Sure, David. Well, as mentioned in our results today, we purchased $1.1 billion of shares in the second quarter. That's our highest investment since this program restarted a little over a year ago at the should surprise nobody at the most attractive price, just $34 and change. I should note that since the end of the quarter, we've repurchased another 5.3 million shares at a price just above $29. We did continue the program into the third quarter. You know, my soliloquy at the end around the attractiveness of the value of the shares is certainly one of the reasons we've been so aggressive here and why I believe we'll continue to repurchase shares.
It's also true that this was a part of the strategy, our asset light strategy, to return this capital to our shareholders and fine-tune the leverage of the business. At $4 billion in the past 15 months, you know, I think more of that strategy is behind us than is still in front of us. We do have just under $1 billion remaining on our share repurchase authorization, and we'll be opportunistic, keeping in mind some of the other capital requirements we have coming up that we're excited about, things like LeoVegas, New York, and so on.
Understood. Thank you.
The next question is from Shaun Kelley from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon, everyone. I've two questions, both related to Las Vegas. The first would be just wondering in the second quarter, we obviously all saw a bit of the return of both group convention and some event, you know, some really large-scale events business. Can you just give us a sense of maybe relative to your normal or stabilized mix, how much group made up in the second quarter, just to get a sense of maybe what inning we're at in the recovery there. The second part would just be, can you just talk a little bit about the health of the Las Vegas gaming customer, specifically maybe some areas about rated versus unrated play, those types of metrics, just to give us a sense of, you know, how that's trending as we get kinda further and further into the recovery? Thanks.
Hey, Shaun, it's Corey. In Q2, we were about 93% of 2019 room nights in the convention segment, and we actually had our highest catering and banquet numbers since the fourth quarter of 2019. Pretty positive environment there. We did have one large group that canceled. It's been the only group that's not come back. We're happy to say we're seeing most of our big groups come back considerably. With regards to the gaming customer, the business is strong in all age groups across all segments of it, especially in Las Vegas, even our lower end is strong there. Our unrated continues to be outpaced where we were in 2019. It's flattened out since 2021, but all indications are very strong trends.
Shaun, we had said in 2022, we'd be at about 90% pace to 2019. With the exception of this cancellation, we're right on that point. You know, that's been the return of what we expected, and we've seen it. You know, I think next week we have Cisco in town with 27,000 people. So tech is back, large scale is back. That continues to, you know, look real positive into the next year, particularly given, as I mentioned earlier, the citywides are gonna cycle through.
Thank you very much.
The next question is from Dan Politzer with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Hey, good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to hit on capital allocation and your general script there. I think, you know, you guys have talked about becoming more global and the importance of diversifying your revenues and cash flows. I mean, how do you prioritize that in terms of? Or what's at the pecking order for diversification? Is it Europe or international or Asia, or is it just really the medium such as digital versus brick-and-mortar?
Dan, it's actually both. I mean, obviously, we have a keen interest. We're gonna invest $several billion in Japan if we're given the opportunity. That'll be another cornerstone for us in Asia. Between that and Macau, we feel pretty comfortable with what's going on there. Obviously, we'll watch, like everybody, what happens in Thailand or anyplace else for that matter. But we like where we are and furthermore, we'd love to be in Japan at scale. For us, you know, obviously domestically, particularly if you think about Las Vegas and some other places, there's only so many places we can go and continue to grow. That's why digital, among many reasons, is so attractive to us. We're gonna continue to lean into that.
You know, obviously continue to invest in BetMGM, while painful, is gonna be productive. We sincerely believe that now 2.5 years into this journey. It's hitting its marks, it's doing what it said it was going to do. Time to tell in that business how quickly it goes profitable. At the end of the day, if I said we're gonna invest $1 billion in a business and ultimately reap hundreds of millions, it, you know, and by the way, the build cycle is three years, you'd all say, let's go. We're excited by that, and we remain so. We'll watch for other opportunities in digital, either through our LeoVegas vehicle or anything else that potentially comes up that could be meaningful for either strategic or basically broader economic reasons.
Got it.
The only other point.
Go ahead.
Well, the only other point that I would add is that we have these, we think, two embedded growth vehicles within our business right now. One is the ultimate recovery of Macau, and the second is BetMGM, as Bill mentioned. Those do not require much more capital, at least as compared to the company's financial resources. At the same time, we've been applying capital to reduce our capital base for the benefit of our shareholders, and I think that will provide real leverage as we expect to see those two businesses provide earnings growth for the company.
Got it. Just on BetMGM, I think you guys said that you were still on pace for the $450 million total investment, which, you know, you're 50% of. As you're pacing through, I think you have a $160 million or so through the first half of the year. How should we think about the back half of the year on the cadence?
Yeah. The third quarter cadence goes way down given the seasonality. We get back into football, which is productive. The back half of the year, we're gonna still hit the target number of about $2-$2.25 invested on MGM's behalf. We are pacing as we thought we would. iGaming has been a little better, which is accretive to us. Sports betting not as much. You've probably seen this or heard about this. We are continuing to pull down some of our marketing spend. While share continues to be important, particularly in new markets, we're getting smarter and smarter and smarter about how we do this. We feel comfortable as we think about 2023 and beyond, our ability to make money in this business is within our grasp.
Got it. Thank you so much.
The next question is from Chad Beynon with Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. In terms of the Macau gaming, draft bill that was released, how are you guys thinking about, broadly thinking about what's expected from a rebidding process, whether it's time, commitments, or capital, when we see this at the back half of the year? Thanks.
I'll kick this off, and then we have Hubert on the phone, who maybe can add some color. Obviously, we just got last week the final request for RFP, RFI. The process has started. We have until September 14th to make our submission. You know, it's been obviously a tough couple of years. Time will tell who ultimately shows up for submissions, but I'm pretty confident the original six licensees will be there. You know, 10-year window presents some challenges when you think about we're still in the midst of COVID. The idea of a significant investment would have to be something we'd really understand and study. There's a lot of things that the government wants around social programming, employment, job opportunities, and other things that we're gonna dig heavily into.
There are a lot of things around programming and existing square footage that we already own as we delever out of junkets and into really more mass gaming, around experiences, around culture, around event activity. Ultimately, there's a big push on which kind of plays to our daily work in sports. Sports entertainment's a big, big push. They'd love to see more of that activity as in that market. I think we're ideally positioned to be able to do that, as well. Hubert, I don't know if you wanna add any more color.
Thank you, Bill. Thank you, Chad, for the question. I think that in terms of timing, we're aggressively working on the tender package. We'll submit, of course, by the September 14th deadline. In terms of commitment, the government does focus on overseas market. This is, I think, where MGM has a lot of strengths with its global distribution network. We'll be able to focus on that. There are a lot of requirements, as Bill mentioned, on the non-gaming side as well. We'll leverage our traditional strengths in arts and culture, and together with the show that we are currently underway to produce, to leverage these strength to fulfill the non-gaming diversification that government is asking for. Thank you.
Thank you very much. Appreciate it. Separate follow-up. Just in terms of CapEx, slide nine, you noted the U.S. $750 million-$800 million for this year. Can you just kinda remind us, are there other, I guess, medium-sized maintenance projects, particularly in Vegas, that could be coming in the next couple of years? Or, you know, how should we think about kind of a go-forward maintenance, just trying to square, you know, what free cash flow could be going forward? Thanks.
No, the largest components of our CapEx, Chad, are our room renovations and our technology investments. Through the first six months of the year, we've invested about $250 million in CapEx. We're behind pace, but I'm confident we'll be pretty close to the number that we've outlined for this year. Those will continue going into 2023 and 2024. You know, probably a reasonable number for maintenance CapEx is gonna be kind of in the you know, 5% or 6% of net revenue. We of course have a lot of flexibility on timing of those investments if we need to, but we've set forward a multiyear schedule of room renovations that we think are important in order to maintain and grow revenues.
I'll just point out, you know, what we have going on right now is a room renovation's just begun at New York-New York, one in a large segment of the MGM Grand. Down in Biloxi, a room renovation at the Beau Rivage, a business which, you know, under the leadership of Brandon Dardeau and his team, is just having a phenomenal year so far.
Thank you very much. Appreciate it.
Right.
The next question is from John DeCree from CBRE Securities. Please go ahead.
Hi, everyone. Thank you for taking my question. Maybe one, Bill or Jonathan, on the labor market and your hiring needs. How do you feel with staffing right now? Is it still difficult to get labor? Are you kind of where you need to be? Then perhaps in the context of, Bill, some of the events that you've outlined as international comes back, convention ramps, the big citywides, will you need to kind of continue staffing to get ready for those busy peak periods?
Yeah. A good question. Thank you, John. So look, I guess if there's such a thing as good news when I tell you this number, we're under 4,000 open jobs. Remember, in any given usual time, and I'm making usual 2018, 2019, et cetera, we've always had between 1,200 and 1,500. It's just hard to keep the cycle going at the scale that we need. We're in a better shape. We still have some key areas like most people in hospitality, around housekeeping, security, cooks, that we struggle with in terms of getting people back to work. That continues and it's seasonal here and even into our regions for sure, in some of the offshoot markets like Atlantic City and the Beau in Mississippi.
Obviously, Tunica has been a challenge, but it soon won't be our challenge. You know, I still feel our ability to flex up. We flex up into, you think about our portfolio, into the Bellagio and the ARIA of the world with employees. I'm not overly concerned. Things like F1 will be a significant undertaking for not only the community but the company. We're trying to get our head. We've assembled teams around all of that, in terms of the opportunity, which is amazing. I think what it's gonna be ultimately for retail business of note and potentially gaming business. You know, generally speaking, we're in decent shape. We're not running around with our hair on fire, if you will, anymore. It's kind of interesting state of the economy.
There's 1.5 million jobs available in this industry of the 11 million jobs still open in America, and we represent that, I think, fairly squarely. We are getting by and pretty excited by the folks that are coming back on board. You know, I think we're in decent shape.
That's great, Bill. Thanks. Maybe the follow-up to that, with that in context, like you said, F1 obviously a big opportunity, a lot of the big events, big revenue opportunity. In Vegas, how would you kind of think about or how should we think about the margin profile as some of those big revenue events come back, but probably some costs as well as you hire? Would you kind of expect margin stability absent any kind of pullback in leisure consumer spending, which is hard to predict at this point, but how would you think about kind of the cadence as business still ramps in Vegas on the revenue side as well?
Look, Corey will have a view on this, but I will tell you as it relates to something like F1, the retail potential and the upside of that are substantive. Like, we're talking room rates 3x what we are normally and potentially then some. There are packages that sell for that event at $100,000 retail. You know, the scale and scope we have access to. Our ticket buy alone will be about $20 million -$25 million. We have access to those tickets and then the ability to charge as we want and package as we want. I don't think that one will be a margin hurt. Matter of fact, I think that I'm pretty excited by that one, I gotta tell you. You know, some of the other activity, Corey, why don't you-
Yeah. What I would add, John, is our margins probably already seen the impact because of the way we have to record T-Mobile and the Grand Garden.
Yeah.
Now we're gonna benefit from these outside events, including, you know, what will happen at the Sphere if they bring U2 in and others. It will just bring more people into the city. I think we saw that, especially with Allegiant, with the NFL games, which will be in the fourth quarter, and the events that they've had. I think these upcoming events will allow us to bring premium customers in and actually maintain or increase our margins.
Understood. That's really helpful, everyone. Thank you so much, and congratulations on another good quarter.
Thank you.
The next question is from Robin Farley from UBS. Please go ahead.
Great. Thanks for taking the question. Was curious regarding your JV partner, Entain, because you had made an offer now I guess over 12 months ago. Since then, obviously, Entain's stock price is down quite a bit and they've lowered guidance. Now your offer, the offer you'd made last year is a significant premium to where that stock is now. I'm just curious whether you know how much sense does it make to revisit, because I would think all the benefits of owning 100% of BetMGM are still the same as they were a year ago. I'm just curious how you're thinking about that.
Robin, we think about it all the time, of course. It'd be foolish to think otherwise. You know, you can't buy what's not for sale. We remain keenly focused on BetMGM. We'd like more of it. We have a great partnership with them. That business is working well because of what we ultimately all provide, our IP, our database, their technology. You know, there are other ways to skin a cat, and potentially we may have to seek those, and it is what it is. Obviously we continue to follow the math, and we understand it intimately. For now, we have no story there.
Okay. All right. Then just as a follow-up, kind of unrelated, I know you've talked about the strength in Vegas that you're seeing and the forward outlook. I'm curious on the regional front, you know, others have talked about regional kind of slowing and having tough comps. I'm curious your view for the regional outlook. Thanks.
Yeah, Robin, this is Corey. I think we have two different sets of regional properties unlike our competitors. I think when we think about National Harbor, Beau Rivage, Borgata, you get a lot of tourists, a lot of FIT type customers. In those properties, we're seeing the same strength we're seeing in Las Vegas. As we get into our more traditional drive-in markets, you know, the higher-end customers are continuing to come in and play at the levels they were. Probably seeing a little softness at the bottom end of that range and a little bit in the unrated, especially at properties like Empire.
Okay. All right. Great. Thank you.
The next question will be from Barry Jonas from Truist Securities. Please go ahead.
Oh, great. As we look through your different Strip properties in Q2 and now, are there any major differences in performance as you sort of move from the higher end to the lower end?
I think it ties to the broader market. Look, anything tied to luxury and high-end retail, and you can obviously put in that category Bellagio, ARIA, now the Cosmopolitan, parts of MGM and parts of Mandalay are doing amazingly well. Room rate activity remains in the high-teens ADR percentages above all things ever. Our food and beverage and our casinos and our pricing, excuse me, is extremely strong. It ties to just about everything else you've heard about in the broader economy. We're able to leverage up on higher-end retail products, and it's done well for us. Corey, the-
The high-end gaming piece in those properties, we are seeing that incremental play. You'll see those properties outperform the legacy properties.
Got it. I just wanted to ask about iGaming. You know, just curious if you have any expectations around future state legalization. You think anything maybe is possible in the next year or two?
Yeah, I think there are a couple states. I think the reality is there's not a dozen right now. I think there are a couple states that we're clearly targeting. We think they have everything but iGaming in them, and they obviously make an interesting subject and an interesting discussion with regulatory and government officials and ultimately regulators. There's a couple, though, that we have benchmarked for next year and we think we can break into and continue to grow that because it is the key to the bottom line of that business, as you know. You know, we're excited to continue to do that. It's going to take some time, though. Depending on how deep this recession may or may not be, when states need money, sometimes they turn to this vehicle. We'll see.
Got it. All right. Thank you, and congrats on a great quarter.
Thank you, Barry.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Bill Hornbuckle for any closing remarks.
Thank you, operator. Just a couple of key thoughts as you think about our call today. Again, congrats to our entire team. I couldn't be happier with where we are and what we've accomplished. Much has been done and frankly, obviously, much more to go. There has been, I think, a shift. There's this insatiable appetite for travel, experience-based economy and the millennials stepping into it, and I think we've seen it in all of our properties, particularly here in Las Vegas. When you think about the Cosmopolitan and others, I think we're in a great place. I think we're ideally suited to take advantage of it. You think about travel experiences and how things are reported out. We feel ideally situated to do that. We think we've proven our working model and our operating model has worked, I should say.
Whether we lever up to the success we've had in the last two quarters or frankly, whether we need to weather the storm coming up, we think we're in great shape to do that, and we think we've learned a great deal as we think about the future, frankly, to go either way. We're not naive to what the economy may or may not do, and so we have constant pressure on ourselves around employment, around labor, around all things expense-related, and we remain keenly focused on that. We've all lived through this before, and don't wanna see some of the mistakes we've made in the past replicated. We're on that.
Generally speaking, if you think about where the company is today, our balance sheet of note, the opportunities in front of us to go more into Asia, potentially to go more into digital, to potentially buy back and take back some more shares for our stakeholders, I think we're in an amazingly great place, and I couldn't be more excited for our future. I appreciate everyone's time today and support generally, and we hope to look to continue to do the same kinds of things. Thank you.
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.