Bingo hall boom as Mecca owner Rank sees venues beat post-lockdown expectations
The company expects further growth as ‘travel restrictions eventually ease and tourism returns, particularly to London’.
Bosses at casino and bingo hall owner Rank Group have said its venues have performed beyond expectations since reopening in May after pandemic closures dragged the company to a steep loss.
They told investors on Thursday that further growth is anticipated as “travel restrictions eventually ease and tourism returns, particularly to London”.
Rank, which owns the Mecca Bingo and Grosvenor Casinos brands, hailed “encouraging progress” across its brands since restrictions were eased on May 17.
Meanwhile, its Mecca Bingo halls have reported sales for the period which were 21% down against the same period in 2019.
It came as the company plunged to a £92.9 million operating loss for the year to June 30, swinging from a £21.5 million profit a year earlier.
Rank Group chief executive John O’Reilly said he is “delighted” the year is over after an “exceptionally challenging” period for the business.
He added that the firm has had a particularly tough trading period in London, where it has nine casinos.
“Recently we’ve done really well in places like Blackpool and Bournemouth because people are looking for that entertainment thrill in the UK this year.”
The company said its net gaming revenues slid by 48% to £329.6 million over the year, as it was particularly affected by venue closures.
Rank said it lost £15 million a month during the height of the pandemic as it was completely unable to trade from its halls and casinos.
The firm also saw a “year of transition” for its UK digital business as it made progress with online platform technology, although revenue “disappointed”.
“Good progress is being made in our digital businesses and there is a renewed sense of confidence as we focus on the growth initiatives within our clearly defined transformation programme.
“Rank was delivering strong revenue and profit growth before the pandemic and the steps we have taken over the last 18 months, particularly in carefully managing our liquidity and developing the transformation plans, will enable the group to return to that growth trajectory as the impact of the pandemic reduces and consumer confidence for indoor leisure experiences grows.”