April 15, 2025

Australian casino operator Star swings sharply as trading resumes after weak results

(Reuters) - Shares of Australia’s embattled casino operator Star Entertainment fluctuated sharply on Wednesday as trading resumed after the firm announced a larger-than-expected half-year loss.

Star Entertainment’s shares opened 9% lower but recovered to jump more than 13% in their first day of trading since late February. Trading had been halted pending its half-year financial performance.

The shares were last trading 2% lower at 10.75 Australian cents a share. It has lost more than 42% so far this year.

Stricter regulations and weak discretionary spending have pushed Star deeper in the red at a time when it is facing a massive liquidity crunch.

Last week, it agreed to an A$300 million ($190 million) rescue package from U.S. group Bally’s and major Star shareholders, the Mathieson family. In June, shareholders will consider approving a part of Bally’s investment, which will give the U.S. casino group control of 56.7% of Star.

"Star equity valuation will remain challenged, given significant levels of net debt," Jefferies analysts said in a note on Tuesday.

They cut their price target on the stock to 9 Australian cents from 15 cents and retained the "underperform" rating.

The Australian casino operator reported a net loss of A$136 million in the first-half ending December 31, much steeper than the A$93.9 million loss in a Visible Alpha consensus.

($1 = 1.5760 Australian dollars)

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