Penn Entertainment increases Q4 revenue 8.2%, witnesses $845.3m loss for FY2025
Despite the FY2025 loss increasing 169.8% from the previous full-year period’s loss of $313.3m, Penn Entertainment managed to lower its Q4 2025 loss by 45.1% to $73.4m.
Despite the FY2025 loss increasing 169.8% from the previous full-year period’s loss of $313.3m, Penn Entertainment managed to lower its Q4 2025 loss by 45.1% to $73.4m.
The operator delivered record net gaming revenue in FY 2025, driven by Mexico’s accelerating player growth, as management guides for further expansion.
The figures offer a key insight into behavioural trends in the licensed UK gambling market.
The GC’s Executive Director of Research and Policy explores everything UK gambling regulation at the BGC’s AGM.
The BGC welcomes delegates from all four corners of the British gambling industry for one of the most significant conversational AGM’s in recent memory.
Hong Kong-listed International Entertainment Corporation narrowed its interim loss by 9.7% despite a 40.4% drop in hotel revenue, as expanded Manila casino operations drove strong top-line growth.
Brokerages trim February GGR outlook to MOP 19.5bn (US$2.43bn) after early-week softness limits holiday gains.
Non-binding term sheet aims to refinance all existing debt and provide fresh liquidity.
Adjusted EBITDA rose to HK$14.5bn (US$1.85bn) for the year as the operator expanded its entertainment portfolio.
Despite also reporting a 7% increase in FY2025 revenue to just over $2.9bn, Churchill Downs also witnessed a net income decrease during the full-year period, falling 10.3% to $383m.