2025 Annual Report
Annual Report
2025
CONTENTS
01
About this Annual Report
02
About SkyCity
03
FY25 Performance and Highlights
04
Letter from the Chair
08
Letter from our Chief Executive Officer
12
Year in Review and Our Venues
18
FY25 Outputs and Financial Results
20
Five Year Financial Performance History
22
Our Strategy FY25
22
Transformation Programme
26
Key Achievements and Milestones
30
Our Three Year Strategy
32
Our People
32
Our Board
34
Our Senior Leadership Team
36
Health, Safety and Wellbeing
38
Diversity Equity & Inclusion
42
Diversity in Numbers
44
Sustainability Pillars
46
Our Customers
54
Our Community
61
Our Environment
64
Corporate Governance Statement
and Other Disclosures
64
Corporate Governance Statement
72
Remuneration Report
83
Shareholder and Bondholder Information
85
Directors’ Disclosures
87
Company Disclosures
90
Risk Management
92
Climate Statements
116
Financial Statements
117
Independent Auditor’s Report
122
Income Statement
123
Statement of Comprehensive Income
124
Balance Sheet
125
Statement of Changes in Equity
126
Statement of Cash Flows
127
Notes to the Financial Statements
164
Reconciliation of Underlying Results
to Reported Results
166
Glossary
167
Directory
About this
Annual Report
This report tells the story of SkyCity’s FY25
journey – a year that’s been all about getting
back to basics, foundation building, strategic
preparation and setting ourselves up for
what’s next. We’re not just looking back
at the numbers; we’re sharing how we’ve
learned f rom the past, made the most of
now, and started building an exciting future.
You’ll find our financial and operational
performance
1
laid out clearly, along with
the key milestones and lessons that have
shaped where we are today. We’re also
celebrating our people, our culture, and
our commitment to the communities
and stakeholders who matter to us. Most
importantly, we’re looking ahead to the bold
steps we’re taking to create a sustainable
and innovative future.
This year has been particularly significant
with major developments like ramping up
for the NZICC opening, rolling out Carded
Play and our new loyalty programme SHOW
by SkyCity in New Zealand, and getting
ready for New Zealand’s regulated online
casino gaming market. These aren’t just
business initiatives – they’re part of our
transformation into a more responsible,
customer-focused entertainment company.
We’ve prepared this report in line with
the NZX Listing Rules, the NZX Corporate
Governance Code, the New Zealand
Companies Act 1993, and the New Zealand
Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013 and as
a review of SkyCity Entertainment Group
Limited (SkyCity or the Company and,
together with its subsidiaries, the Group)
and its subsidiary companies’ performance
for the financial year ended 30 June 2025.
Where appropriate, information is also
provided in relation to the Group’s activities
after 30 June 2025.
It’s our way of being transparent about
where we’ve been, where we are, and where
we’re heading.
This annual report is dated 29 September
2025 and is signed on behalf of the
SkyCity Board by:
2025 HYBRID ANNUAL MEETING
The 2025 SkyCity Annual Meeting
will be held at the SkyCity Theatre,
Level 3, SkyCity Auckland, Corner
of Wellesley and Hobson Streets,
Auckland, and online on 31
October 2025 commencing at
10.00am (New Zealand time).
Instructions and further details on
how shareholders can participate
in the Annual Meeting will be
included in the Notice of Meeting
to security holders.
NZX LISTING STATUS
SkyCity Entertainment Group
Limited has been designated as
‘Non‑Standard’ by the NZX Limited
due to certain restrictions in
the company’s constitution. See
page 88 of this annual report for
further details.
JULIAN COOK
Chair of the SkyCity Board
CHAD BARTON
Chair of the Audit Committee
1. Unless otherwise stated, all dollar amounts in this
Annual Report are expressed in New Zealand dollars
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
B01
Introduction
About SkyCity
SkyCity isn’t just about casinos – we’re in the business of creating memorable
experiences for our customers and actively contributing to our wider community.
1. As at 30 June 2025.
2. As at 1 August 2025.
FY25 Performance
and Highlights
REPORTED
UNDERLYING
FY24: $870.5M
$
825.2
M
UNDERLYING REVENUE
1. Earnings per share.
2. Cents per share.
Our integrated entertainment
complexes across New Zealand and
Australia bring together gaming,
dining, accommodation, attractions,
and entertainment in ways that
appeal to both locals and visitors. The
business supports the thousands of
people directly employed and their
families and our charitable trusts
continue to provide a helping hand to
our communities.
In New Zealand, we operate in three
key locations: Auckland (our flagship),
Hamilton, and Queenstown. Each
venue has its own character, but they
all share our commitment to quality
entertainment and hospitality. In
Australia, our Adelaide property has
been a cornerstone of South Australia’s
entertainment scene for years.
Our hotel operations add an important
dimension to what we offer. Whether
it’s domestic or international visitors
in Auckland or Adelaide, we provide
high quality accommodation that
complements the entertainment
experience. This year the long-awaited
opening of Horizon by SkyCity marked
a significant expansion of our Auckland
hotel offering.
The New Zealand International
Convention Centre (NZICC) in
Auckland is expected to be completed
in late 2025 and open in early 2026.
Once open it will be New Zealand’s
largest convention centre bringing
international conferences and guests
to the Auckland precinct.
Then there’s our online gaming
presence and the opportunity that
presents for the company in the future.
SkyCity Online Casino, operating f rom
Malta, gives New Zealanders access
to online casino gaming experiences.
But the real excitement is what’s
coming – with New Zealand moving
toward regulated online gaming, we’re
positioning ourselves to be a local
leader in this new form of gaming.
What ties everything together is our
focus on connected entertainment. We’re
not just running separate businesses
under one roof – we’re offering connected
experiences to our customers across each
precinct and online.
Our commitment to responsible
entertainment is woven throughout
all our operations, f rom comprehensive
responsible host programmes in our
gaming areas to sustainable practices
in our restaurants and hotels. We
recognise, and take seriously, that
our long-term success depends on
maintaining the trust and support
of our customers, communities, and
regulators, which requires us to operate
with the highest standards of integrity
and social responsibility.
FOUR
PROPERTIES ACROSS
NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIA
FOUR
HOTELS
ONE
ONLINE CASINO
15,156
SHAREHOLDERS
2
$1,330M
IN NET ASSETS
1
$1,956M
IN PROPERTY ASSETS
1
$715M
TOTAL MARKET
CAPITALISATION
2
11.1%
56.4%
120.4%
120.4%
5.2%
15.9%
42.0%
42.0%
FY24: $928.5M
$
825.2
M
REPORTED REVENUE
FY24: $277.8M
$2
33.7
M
UNDERLYING EBITDA
FY24: $123.2M
$
71.5
M
UNDERLYING NPAT
FY24: 16.2 cps
9.4CPS
UNDERLYING EPS
FY24: $138.2M
$
216.1
M
REPORTED EBITDA
FY24: -$143.3m
$
29.2
M
REPORTED NPAT
FY24: -18.9 cps
3.9CPS
2
REPORTED EPS
1
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
0203
Introduction
The 2025 financial year has been
another challenging year for SkyCity,
our shareholders, the industry
we operate in, and the broader
New Zealand economy.
Despite the weak financial results for
the year, which I discuss below, we are
increasingly seeing that the platform
which will ensure the medium to
longer term success of the business,
is being put in place. There are many
moving parts to the SkyCity business
currently and I will take some time to
go through these.
Our key focus over the last two years
has been settling regulatory action
taken against us in Australia and New
Zealand for a number of historical Anti-
Money Laundering and Countering
Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT)
and host responsibility breaches. The
resolution of several long-standing
regulatory matters has removed
significant overhangs on our business
and strengthened our relationships
with key regulators.
We have established transformation
programmes to deliver a broad scope of
work to uplift our compliance systems
and performance. We have also put in
place new senior leadership.
These actions have enabled
the business to shift f rom crisis
management to being more proactive
and strategically focused. The 2025
financial year has seen the fundamental
work of rebuilding and resetting our
business with clearer strategic direction,
stronger operational foundations,
and renewed confidence in our
future prospects.
In Adelaide, new leadership has led
the re-scoping and reprioritisation of
our Adelaide remediation through
the Building a Better Business (B3)
programme. This is now a well-
resourced transformation programme
with clear deliverables, realistic
timelines, and proper cost visibility of
approximately $60 million over three
years to FY27.
JULIAN COOK
CHAIR
Letter f rom the Chair
FY25: A Year of Rebuild and Reset
In August, we welcomed the positive
suitable findings of the Independent
Review (Martin Review) into the
suitability of SkyCity Adelaide Pty
Limited (SkyCity Adelaide) to continue
to hold the casino licence and the
suitability of SkyCity Entertainment
Group to continue to be a close
associate of SkyCity Adelaide.
This was a significant milestone,
resolving a long-standing issue for
SkyCity. Whilst the positive outcome
was encouraging, both the Martin
Review and the AUSTRAC case against
SkyCity Adelaide - settled in June
2024 - underscore the seriousness
and scale of our past failings. There
is still considerable work ahead
through the B3 Programme before we
can confidently say our compliance
systems meet the standards required.
We also await hearing f rom the
Commissioner as to what enforcement
action he may decide to take in
response to the Martin Review.
In terms of compliance remediation
across the Group, we are in a
considerably better position than
we were a year ago and importantly
we are seeing good momentum
in the business. Turn-arounds of
this scale are complex, touch every
part of the business, involve large
numbers of people, have multiple
inter-dependencies and take time to
deliver results. But we are now seeing
those results, and we expect continued
progress as teams deliver on our
compliance commitments.
In New Zealand our new 5-star hotel
Horizon by SkyCity has completed
nearly a full year of trading and received
recognition f rom both the Institute of
Architecture and the Property Council.
We recently introduced Carded Play
across all our New Zealand casinos and
good progress has also been made to
regulate online casino gambling in New
Zealand with a draft Bill currently before
Select Committee in Parliament.
We are also nearing the end of
construction on the New Zealand
International Convention Centre
(NZICC). Handover f rom the contractor
is expected in the next few months and
the first events planned for February
2026. We are excited about the
transformational impact this world-
class facility will have on Auckland’s
position as an international business
and events destination. The quality of
the facility is exceptional and the long-
term benefits for Auckland and New
Zealand will be substantial. Operational
preparations are ramping up, including
recruitment for key positions and
planning for a strong launch.
We have also taken action to protect
our interests and have filed legal
proceedings against Fletcher Building
Limited and Fletcher Construction
Company Limited (together Fletchers),
seeking over $330 million in damages.
This reflects the substantial losses
incurred due to construction delays.
While we would have preferred a
commercial resolution, those efforts
were unsuccessful, and legal action has
become necessary.
In New Zealand consumer discretionary
spending has been under sustained
pressure despite the easing in interest
rates over the year. Unemployment
has been increasing and the property
market has been very weak. The
general economic uncertainty has
directly impacted our customers’
entertainment budgets and spending
patterns. We have observed stable
visitation levels but reduced spend per
visit. This has been a large factor in our
weaker earnings.
The business is also bearing a number
of costs f rom the B3 programme in
Adelaide, pre-opening costs f rom the
NZICC and start-up costs in relation
to regulated online casino gambling
in New Zealand. Through the 2025
financial year we saw these costs
increase as the B3 programme was
properly built out under new leadership
and there were ongoing delays with
the NZICC. Finally, our risk programmes
have meant we are more selective on
which customers can game with us.
The consequence of this is that our
core casino business earnings have
been structurally reset at a lower level
(with increased compliance costs and
stricter customer thresholds). This is
appropriate and necessary for us to
retain our licences. We are a safer and
more compliant business and better
for it.
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
0405
IntroductionChair Letter
The business has also been subject to
a number of capital requirements in
the last two years, including repurchase
of the Auckland car park f rom MPF
Parking NZ Limited as a consequence
of late delivery due to the NZICC fire
($204m), regulatory fines ($83m), and
settlement of penalty interest due in
relation to the casino duty dispute with
Consumer Business Services in South
Australia ($27m).
The earnings reset arising f rom our
improved risk and compliance settings
including the impact of Carded Play
against a backdrop of the weaker New
Zealand economy, plus the upcoming
costs associated with NZICC opening and
regulated online casino gambling in New
Zealand, weakened our capital structure.
Further delays in the NZICC, a deeper
NZ economic recession, particularly
in the second half of FY25, and the
inability to monetise the Auckland car
park concession during the year, placed
further stress on the business.
As a result, we made the decision
to raise $240 million f rom existing
shareholders and some new investors.
We understand and acknowledge
the concerns raised by some of our
shareholders about the timing and
size of the raise, and I want to be
clear that the decision was not taken
lightly. It was calibrated to protect the
company’s financial flexibility, preserve
our crucial investment grade credit
rating, and avoid the kind of high-
cost, restrictive funding outcomes
currently seen elsewhere in the sector.
With a stronger balance sheet, we’re
now better positioned to manage
regulatory headwinds, deliver on
compliance obligations, and better
protect our earnings.
The Board actively considered
alternatives to an equity raise. However,
none of these would have prevented a
credit rating downgrade and without
the equity raise we would have been
at risk of defaulting on our banking
covenants later this calendar year. The
Board considered asset sales in addition
to the car park concession but the pace
of the decline in earnings meant there
was not time to effect this.
Letter from the Chair (continued)
Raising equity provided funding
certainty and avoided considerable
extra interest costs in respect of our
funding and the potential extra costs
associated with seeking waivers to
those debt terms. The equity raise
meant that we retained our BBB- credit
rating and has also protected our ability
to access a broad range of debt capital
markets for the purposes of refinancing
or renewing our $175m NZ Retail Bond
as it becomes due in May 2027.
Furthermore, maintaining financial
suitability is necessary for SkyCity
as a responsible custodian of our
casino licences. Seeking covenant
waivers, or failure to act decisively to
preserve our balance sheet stability
could have jeopardised future licence
applications, including our anticipated
online casino gambling licence in New
Zealand. Ongoing financial stability
was a consideration in the Martin
Review of the Group’s suitability to hold
the Adelaide casino licence. We are
currently in the process of renewing
our Queenstown casino licence, and
our Hamilton licence is due for renewal
in 2027. We also expect to apply for
an online casino gambling licence in
New Zealand in 2026. Once regulated,
capital adequacy will also be a factor
in considering suitability of online
gambling licence applicants.
These licences are simply too
important to be put at risk.
The business is also in the process of
monetising further non-strategic assets
with a view to raising approximately
$200m in additional funding which will
be put towards further debt reduction.
This is in addition to the nearly $70m we
realised f rom asset sales during FY25.
We continue to target BBB (flat) credit
rating metrics within the structure
of our balance sheet. Maintaining an
investment grade credit rating allows
us to refinance debt on considerably
more favourable terms; unsecured,
covenant-light, and under a negative
pledge. It also preserves access to
key debt capital markets that would
otherwise be closed to us, which is vital
for long-term stability.
It is the intention and expectation
of the Board that SkyCity emerge
f rom its various regulatory issues
as a successful business, able to
capitalise on the investment in the
NZICC, with a successful online
casino gambling business in New
Zealand and returning to delivering
dividends to shareholders. While
the past financial year does not
represent a year of strong financial
results, it has unquestionably been
a year of meaningful progress. We
are systematically putting the right
people, plans, and priorities in place as
we reset and rebuild our business for
long-term success.
I want to express my sincere gratitude
to our Senior Leadership Team and
Board members for their unwavering
commitment and support during
another challenging year.
I also want to thank our 4,500+
employees who have embraced
change, maintained high service
standards, and demonstrated the
values that define our organisation.
I also want to acknowledge our
customers – the millions who chose
to visit SkyCity during FY25 – whose
loyalty and support are fundamental
to our success. Finally, I want to thank
our shareholders for ongoing support
and patience.
JULIAN COOK
Chair
I also want to thank
our 4,500+ employees
who have embraced
change, maintained
high service standards,
and demonstrated
the values that define
our organisation.
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
0607
IntroductionChair Letter
FY25 has been a difficult year but we
have made substantial progress toward
getting SkyCity back on the right path
by developing a strategy that clearly
defines where we want to take the
business in the future.
When I joined the organisation as
CEO in July 2024, the immediate
priorities were crystal clear: stabilise
the business operations, accelerate
our comprehensive transformation
programmes, and position ourselves for
sustainable long-term growth. While
the external operating environment has
remained difficult throughout the year,
we have made progress on each
of these critical objectives.
The economic headwinds we’ve faced
throughout FY25 have been both
persistent and substantial, creating
a challenging backdrop for all our
operations and industry. In New
Zealand particularly, we’ve experienced
the direct impact of reduced consumer
discretionary spending flowing
through to our business performance
in ways that have required careful
management and strategic adaptation.
Pleasingly, visitation to our venues
has remained relatively stable – our
customers continue to choose SkyCity
for their entertainment experiences
– but spend per visit has declined as
customers have become more cautious
with their entertainment budgets. The
reduced revenue has created margin
pressure and required us to focus
intensively on operational efficiency,
cost management, and service delivery,
to maintain our competitive position.
When economic conditions do improve,
we expect to benefit f rom improved
operating leverage f rom incremental
spend per visit requiring minimal cost
increases which will flow through to
increased earnings.
The situation in South Australia has
presented its own unique challenges,
with the competitive dynamics,
together with the overhang of historical
regulatory matters, requiring significant
changes to how we operate this
business. We have made progress in
Adelaide but acknowledge we have
more work ahead of us.
Underlying Group NPAT was $71.5m
(down 42%), due to the lower level of
operating earnings and higher interest
costs due to less capitalised interest
expense following the opening of the
Horizon by SkyCity Hotel in August
2024. Reported Group NPAT of $29.2m,
was significantly higher than last year’s
reported NPAT due to fewer significant
accounting items which were a feature
of the prior result.
Total underlying EBITDA for the Auckland
precinct was $209.6 million, 11.5% below
the prior period, with 9.4% less gaming
revenue being the main contributor to
the lower level of earnings.
A reset of our Premium customer
segment has resulted in lower levels
of activity when compared to prior
periods. We will continue to participate
in this segment of the market, but it will
deliver significantly lower revenue than
in the past.
Letter f rom our
Chief Executive Officer
The rollout and go-live of Carded Play
across our New Zealand operations
has been one of our most significant
operational achievements during FY25.
Along with a ref resh of our loyalty
programme to SHOW by SkyCity,
we have completely overhauled the
way we interact with our gaming
customers. This change represents
far more than regulatory compliance;
it’s a comprehensive transformation
of how we engage with customers,
manage operational risk, and deliver
personalised experiences. We now
have unprecedented visibility into
gaming customer behaviour patterns,
preferences, and engagement
levels that will enable us to deliver
personalised service and compelling
value propositions.
We have guided the market to the
earnings impact of Carded Play – with
FY26 EBITDA forecast to be impacted
by between $20 million-$30 million. We
are now focused on the opportunities
to leverage the customer insights that
SHOW by SkyCity provides.
Our other transformation programmes
have gained substantial momentum
during FY25, particularly in Adelaide
where our Building a Better Business
(B3) programme has been completely
re-scoped with clear deliverables,
realistic timelines, and proper cost
visibility. This programme now has
genuine operational ownership,
appropriate governance oversight, and
the resources on the ground in Adelaide
necessary for successful execution.
The cultural and operational changes
we’re seeing, f rom our ref reshed
management team, demonstrate that
meaningful transformation is possible
even in challenging circumstances,
and the lessons learned are being
applied across our broader operations.
The positive suitability finding f rom
the Martin Review was also welcome
recognition of the progress we’ve been
making in Adelaide, and we’re fully
committed to our three-year-long B3
programme and continuing to build
our relationships with our regulators.
Our preparation for New Zealand’s
emerging regulated online casino
gambling market has advanced
significantly during FY25. This
opportunity could be transformational
for our business, offering highly scalable
revenue streams, attractive margins,
and the potential to leverage our land-
based customer relationships and
brand recognition in new ways.
FY25 has seen extensive engagement
with policy makers and the
Government published the draft Online
Casino Gambling Bill in June 2025.
This Bill is expected to be passed into
legislation by early 2026, followed by the
auction of up to 15 licences to approved
parties and the market is expected to
be live in the second half of 2026.
We recognise the initial investment
requirements for the online casino
gambling opportunity are significant,
however we believe it’s vitally important
for SkyCity to secure a licence to
enable us to compete in this market to
protect our land-based business and
to access this potentially substantial
future earnings opportunity. It is both
a defensive and offensive move. We are
well positioned and our aspiration is to
become the local hero in this market.
Looking more closely at our FY25 result,
for the 12-months ended 30 June
2025, underlying Group EBITDA was
$233.7 million, 15.9% lower than last
year and impacted by the difficult
operating environment, particularly
in New Zealand; significantly higher
churn levels across our VIP customer
base, notably in Adelaide as we roll
out B3; and continued investment in
compliance-related activities across the
Group. This excludes the one-off costs
identified as part of the three-year B3
programme, which have been included
in the Reported EBITDA of $216.1 million,
56.4% above the prior financial period,
which included a number of significant
accounting adjustments.
120.40%
Stable visitation
across our operating
businesses is
testament to their
underlying quality.
JASON WALBRIDGE
CEO
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
0809
IntroductionCEO Letter
At our Auckland precinct, a highlight
was the opening of the Horizon by
SkyCity Hotel, which brings total
hotel rooms to just over 930 rooms,
including The Grand by SkyCity and
the SkyCity Hotel. Food and beverage
revenue f rom the Auckland portfolio of
outlets of $63.5 million was marginally
lower than the previous year due to
a lower customer spend per visit.
Pleasingly, visitation remained stable
when compared to the prior period.
The significant refurbishment of the
Auckland production kitchen was
completed in the first half of the year
and will provide many benefits to our
food and beverage operations.
The NZICC project is a key strategic
priority and we remain confident
in our February 2026 opening date.
While the timeline for building
completion has been disappointing,
we’ve taken decisive action by filing
legal proceedings against Fletchers
to recover the significant losses we’ve
incurred f rom the project delays.
Letter from our Chief Executive Officer (continued)
We are excited about the wider
economic impact this world-class
facility will deliver for Auckland as a
premier international conference and
events destination. Critically for SkyCity
the NZICC creates substantial synergies
with our existing entertainment
offerings and we are confident this will
be a key driver of business tourism to
New Zealand.
I also want to note the five-day
closure of our Auckland casino in
September 2024 after failing to
meet harm minimisation and host
responsibility obligations. During
this time, we conducted a five-day
programme of sessions with our
team designed to share information,
conduct ref resher training, and foster
engagement and collaboration across
different departments. The emphasis
on enhancing customer care, host
responsibility and minimising the risk
of financial crime are examples of
how we’re learning f rom our past and
taking ownership of where we’ve not
measured up.
In Hamilton, the performance of our
casino was also impacted by the
prevailing economic environment,
with both revenue and EBITDA lower
when compared to the previous year.
Lower revenue f rom electronic gaming
machines was a key driver, with table
games revenue flat on the prior period.
In Queenstown, gaming revenue was
marginally higher than the prior period,
helped by higher levels of visitation
f rom increased tourist arrivals. The
rollout of Carded Play will provide much
better visibility of our Queenstown
customer base and will allow greater
focus for our marketing spend
and activations.
EBITDA f rom the Queenstown
operations was in line with last year
after adjusting for one-off costs
associated with the closure of the
SkyCity Wharf casino operations in the
prior period. The sale of the surplus land
at 633 Frankton Road was completed
during the 2025 financial year.
In our Malta-based online casino
gambling operation, which offers online
casino gambling experiences to the
New Zealand market, contribution was
negatively impacted by our ongoing
investment ahead of the regulation of
the market and the uneven playing
field that currently exists – unlike some
overseas operators, and consistent
with the current regulation, SkyCity
does not advertise its online casino to
New Zealanders.
Gaming revenue was $3.7m, well
below the $9.3m in FY24, and EBITDA
of -$1.8m compares to $3.6m in the
prior period.
We have provided earnings guidance
for FY26 and anticipate underlying
EBITDA to be in the range of $190
million – $210 million, with consumer
discretionary spending expecting to
remain subdued in the short-term,
and the impact of Carded Play, with
both negatively impacting revenues
– at a time of required investment in
the NZICC opening and preparing
for the potential regulation of online
casino gambling. Having taken action
in August 2025 - with a $240m capital
equity raise to re-set our balance sheet,
we will increase the pace and focus to
monetise non-core assets to improve
financial stability and the value of our
business. We are acutely aware that
earnings recovery is taking longer than
we anticipated.
We are grateful for the support of
our shareholders as we navigate this
period and remain confident in the
opportunities ahead for our business,
particularly as we move into FY27
and FY28.
The cultural shift we’re seeing across
the organisation is encouraging and
will be critical to our long-term success.
Our people and culture initiatives have
been central to our transformation
efforts throughout FY25. We’ve
ref reshed our organisational values
through an inclusive, employee-driven
process that engaged staff across all
levels and locations. These values reflect
our commitment to doing the right
thing, caring for our customers and
communities, and delivering excellence
in everything we do.
This past year has been pivotal for
strengthening our leadership team to
take advantage of the opportunities
and ensure we have resolved the
issues of our past and I would like
to thank both the Board and my
Senior Leadership Team for their
ongoing support.
Thank you to all of the SkyCity team for
their ongoing commitment and high
standards as we serve our customers. I
would also like to extend my thanks to
our customers for choosing SkyCity as
their destination to stay, play and enjoy
the wide range of hospitality we have
on offer.
The year ahead will see several major
milestones that will shape SkyCity’s
future for years to come. The opening
of the NZICC will transform
Auckland’s convention and events
market while driving visitation to our
broader precinct.
Continued progress on our
transformation programmes will
strengthen our operational capabilities
and competitive positioning, and the
anticipated launch of regulated online
casino gambling in New Zealand
will create new revenue streams and
growth opportunities that could be
meaningful for our business.
While the economic environment
remains challenging, we’re confident
that the foundations we’ve built during
FY25 will enable us to capitalise on
growth opportunities as they emerge.
We’re entering this next phase with
confidence and the operational
capabilities necessary for success.
JASON WALBRIDGE
Chief Executive Officer
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceIntroductionYear In ReviewOutputsChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
1011
CEO Letter
Year in Review
OUR VENUES
Each of our venues operates within distinct market dynamics, serves different
customer segments, and contributes unique strengths to our integrated
entertainment strategy. Here we highlight key achievements for each venue.
PROPERTYSKYCITY AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND
Opened1996
Casino Venue LicenceRuns until 2048
2
Facilities •Casino
•3 Hotels
•17 Food and beverage outlets
•Entertainment and attractions
•Conventions
•Day spa
•3,065 car parking spaces
•Sky Tower
•Theatre
•Office/retail space
•Telecommunications and broadcasting
facilities
Licensed Gaming Product •1,877 electronic gaming machines
3
•150 table games
3
•240 automated table games
4
Workforce~2,860 staff
FY25 Revenue$514.3 million
1. FY24 revenue has been restated to remove gaming rebates due to a change in Company policy.
2. The casino venue licence can be renewed for a further period of 15 years pursuant to sections 134–138 of the New Zealand Gambling Act 2003.
3. This allowance may be alternatively utilised to enable automated table game terminals.
4. This allowance may be alternatively utilised to enable table games.
AUCKLAND – FLAGSHIP OPERATIONS
Auckland continues to serve as
our flagship operation and largest
contributor to Group performance,
representing the cornerstone of our
New Zealand operations and the
primary driver of our strategic initiatives.
The venue’s scale, diversity of offerings,
and central location make it uniquely
positioned to capture value f rom
multiple customer segments and
revenue streams, f rom local gaming
customers to international tourists and
business travellers.
The opening of Horizon by SkyCity
in August 2024 marked a significant
expansion of our Auckland
accommodation offering. This premium
hotel, with its three design awards has
been well received by guests and adds
another dimension to our integrated
entertainment complex.
Our restaurant portfolio continued to
earn recognition, with Metita, MASU by
Nic Watt, Cassia, and Depot all making
Viva’s Top 60 Auckland Restaurants
2024. Later in the year, Cassia, Depot,
Federal Delicatessen, Huami, MASU by
Nic Watt, Metita, and SkyBar were all
nominated for Iconic Auckland Eats by
the public – a testament to the quality
and diversity of our dining offerings.
The Sky Tower continues to be a major
drawcard for visitors. We launched
the new Sky Tower Observation Deck,
‘The Lookout’, enhancing the visitor
experience. The Sky Tower maintained
its position as TripAdvisor’s #1 attraction
in Auckland, earned Travelers’ Choice
Awards, and received Qualmark Gold
Winner status. The Sky Tower and
The Rock 2000’s success in winning
Best Network Station Promotion at
the NZ Radio and Podcast Awards
demonstrates our marketing
innovation and creativity in developing
engaging promotional campaigns
that capture public attention and drive
customer engagement.
The Auckland Casino closed its casino
gaming operations for five days in
September 2024 as part of an agreement
with the Department of Internal Affairs and
in recognition of its past host responsibility
failings. Initiatives such as facial recognition
technology and Carded Play strengthen
our host responsibility capabilities.
We celebrated 20 years of The Grand
by SkyCity, marking two decades
of premium accommodation in
Auckland’s heart.
The venue has been a cornerstone
of our hospitality offering and
continues to set standards for
luxury accommodation.
This premium hotel, with its
three design awards has been
well received by guests and adds
another dimension to our integrated
entertainment complex.
THE OPENING OF HORIZON
BY SKYCITY IN AUGUST 2024
MARKED A SIGNIFICANT
EXPANSION OF OUR AUCKLAND
ACCOMMODATION OFFERING
$514.3M
FY25 REVENUE
FY24: $546.7M
1
Pictured: Horizon by SkyCity, Auckland
Pictured: SkyCity Auckland
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
1213
IntroductionYear In Review
Year in Review (continued)
Our Adelaide property, located on
the banks of the River Torrens, was
named the official Entertainment
Venue Partner for LIV Golf Adelaide
through to 2027, strengthening our
position in South Australia’s major
events calendar. We also presented
the Festival of Footy in Station Road
& Festival Plaza during AFL Gather
Round, showcasing our ability to
activate our precinct for major
sporting events.
PROPERTYSKYCITY ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA
Opened2000
Casino Venue LicenceRuns until 2085
1
Facilities •Casino
•1 Hotel
•Conventions
•10 Food and beverage outlets
•Entertainment
•Wellness centre
Licensed Gaming Product •1,080 electronic gaming machines
•200 table games
2
•140 automated table games
Workforce~1,300 staff
FY25 RevenueA$212.2 million
1. The Approved Licensing Agreement between the Attorney General of South Australia and SkyCity Adelaide Pty Limited provides SkyCity Adelaide
with exclusive rights to provide casino gaming (except for interactive gambling) in South Australia until 30 June 2035.
2. This allowance may be alternatively utilised to enable automated table game terminals.
3. FY24 revenue has been restated to remove gaming rebates due to a change in Company policy.
ADELAIDE – TRANSFORMATION AND TOURISM LEADER
A$212.2M
FY25 REVENUE
FY24: A$218.6M
3
Our events team earned significant
recognition, winning South Australia’s
best Wedding Caterer and Caterer
of the year, plus the national Event/
Convention Centre Caterer category
in the Restaurant & Catering 2025
Hostplus Awards for Excellence.
Eos by SkyCity was awarded South
Australia’s best 5 Star Luxury
Accommodation in the Tourism
Industry Council of South Australia’s
Tourism Awards, highlighting the
quality of our accommodation offering.
We achieved full and final resolution
of the long-running South
Australian casino duty dispute,
removing a significant overhang on
our Adelaide operations.
Pictured: SkyCity Hamilton
Pictured: Eos by SkyCity, Adelaide
PROPERTYSKYCITY HAMILTON, NEW ZEALAND
Opened2002
Increased ownership f rom 70% to 100% in 2005
Casino Venue LicenceRuns until 2027
1
Facilities •Casino
•5 Food and beverage outlets
•Entertainment
•Conventions
•330 Car parking spaces
•Tenpin bowling
Licensed Gaming Product •339 electronic gaming machines
2
•23 table games
2
Workforce~320 staff
FY25 Revenue$62.8 million
1. The casino venue licence can be renewed for a further period of 15 years pursuant to sections 134–138 of the New Zealand Gambling Act 2003.
2. This allowance may be alternatively utilised to enable automated table game terminals.
HAMILTON - LOCAL MARKET EXCELLENCE
Our property in the heart of Hamilton
and the mighty Waikato region
continues to serve its local and
regional market well, demonstrating
our ability to adapt our integrated
entertainment model to different
market sizes, customer demographics,
and community expectations.
Throughout the year, SkyCity Hamilton
has maintained its local market-leader
position in gaming and entertainment,
with well established brands like Eat
Burger, popular restaurant tenancies,
including Palate, and entertainment
for all ages with a modern casino and
20-lane tenpin bowling alley, Bowl
and Social.
We have continued to positively
contribute to the local community
through the SkyCity Hamilton
Community Trust, key partnerships,
and community projects.
$62.8M
FY25 REVENUE
FY24: $65.0M
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
1415
IntroductionYear In Review
Year in Review (continued)
Pictured: SkyCity Queenstown
PROPERTYSKYCITY QUEENSTOWN, NEW ZEALAND
Opened2000
Increased ownership f rom 60% to 100% in 2012
Casino Venue LicenceRuns until 2025
1
for Queenstown
Facilities •Casino
•1 Food and beverage outlet
•Entertainment
•Conventions
Licensed Gaming Product •86 electronic gaming machines
2
•12 table games
2
Workforce~50 staff
FY25 Revenue$11.4 million
1. The casino venue licence is in the process of being renewed for a further period of 15 years pursuant to sections 134–138 of the New Zealand Gambling
Act 2003.
2. This allowance may be alternatively utilised to enable automated table game terminals.
QUEENSTOWN - TOURISM RECOVERY AND SEASONAL DYNAMICS
PROPERTYSKYCITY ONLINE CASINO, MALTA
Launched2019
Facilities •Online Casino
Gaming Product •Over 2,400 online games
Workforce~10 staff
FY25 Revenue$4.1 million
ONLINE - FOUNDATION BUILDING AND STRATEGIC PREPARATION
Queenstown’s performance is
influenced by the unique dynamics
of operating within one of New
Zealand’s premier tourist destinations,
including tourism recovery patterns
and seasonal variations.
The boutique venue benefits f rom both
domestic and international tourism
flows, with customers enjoying modern
gaming products and a f riendly
atmosphere. International visitor
numbers remain below pre-pandemic
levels despite gradual improvement
throughout the year.
The sale of a surplus land asset
during FY25 represents a strategic
optimisation of our property portfolio
that generates capital for reinvestment
in core operations while eliminating
the carrying costs and management
complexity associated with
non-core assets.
$11.4M
FY25 REVENUE
FY24: $12.0M
2
,
400
OVER
Online Games
SkyCity Online Casino has continued
to serve New Zealand customers
f rom our Malta operational base
throughout FY25. While our current
online operations are modest in scale,
they provide important operational
experience, customer data, and
market insights that inform our
strategic planning and preparation
for market regulation.
The New Zealand Government's formal
announcement of plans to regulate
online casino gaming, culminating
in the introduction of the Online
Casino Gambling Bill, represents a
potentially significant transformational
opportunity for our business and
validates the strategic investments
we've been making in online gaming
capabilities and platform partnerships.
Our active engagement with this
regulatory policy development has
provided valuable insights into the
likely structure and requirements of
the regulated market, enabling us to
tailor our preparations and strategic
positioning accordingly.
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
1617
IntroductionYear In Review
1. Calculated by reference to customers who used their SkyCity customer loyalty card to game, where one visit records a customer’s patronage on a day
irrespective of how many times they used their card on that day.
FY25 Outputs and Financial Results
Revenue and annual visitation
$584.8M
INCLUDING ONLINE
(Reported & Underlying)
2.65M
VISITS FROM LOYALTY
CARD MEMBERS TO OUR
LAND-BASED CASINOS
1
GAMING
$67.8M
281,448
ROOMS OCCUPIED
HOTELS
$202.1M
TO SUPPLIERS
$156.9M
IN TAXES TO GOVERNMENTS
(Including GST, income tax, and
gaming tax and duties)
$349.9M
IN REMUNERATION AND
BENEFITS TO STAFF
$137.8M
OF CAPITAL INVESTED
CONTRIBUTIONS
$4.6M
PAID IN PROBLEM
GAMING LEVIES
$9.7M
IN COMMUNITY CONTRIBUTIONS,
LEVIES, AND SPONSORSHIPS
$3.1M
IN GRANTS APPROVED
BY THE SKYCITY
COMMUNITY TRUSTS TO
119
COMMUNITY
ORGANISATIONS
$113.9M
4.2M
RESTAURANT/BAR
COVERS
HOSPITALITY
$22.9M
451,412
VISITS
SKY TOWER
$10.8M
137,635
CONFERENCE
DELEGATES
CONVENTIONS
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
1819
IntroductionOutputs
Five Year Financial
Performance History
REPORTEDUNDERLYING
2025202420232022
2021
restated
1,2
2025
2024
restated
2
2023
restated
2,3
2022
restated
2
2021
restated
1,2
Revenue825,225928,543926,180638,995951,879825,225870,504862,554570,612736,492
EBITDA 216,095138,157165,89996,936313,929233,667277,809301,820137,932248,577
Depreciation and
amortisation
(94,213)(92,021)(90,672)(94,660)(88,450)(94,213)(92,021)(90,672)(94,660)(88,450)
EBIT121,88246,13675,2272,276225,479139,454185,788211,14843,272160,127
Net interest expense(53,718)(15,996)(23,492)(35,044)(32,455)(26,390)(15,996)(28,126)(35,044)(32,454)
Profit/(Loss) before tax 68,16430,14051,735(32,768)193,024113,064169,792183,0228,228127,673
Tax (expense)/benefit(38,930)(173,488)(43,760)(827)(37,191)(41,590)(46,605)(50,236)1,469(37,649)
Profit/(Loss) after tax 29,234(143,348)7,975(33,595)155,833 71,475123,187132,7869,69790,024
Basic earnings per
share (cents)
3.9(18.9)1.1(4.4)20.69.416.217.51.311.9
Operating cash inflow45,162203,574280,09791,121284,785—————
Funds employed
Equity1,330,4241,303,8611,530,1971,571,2741,637,084
Non-current liabilities1,020,729970,905985,764903,547880,323
Total2,351,1532,274,7662,515,9612,474,8212,517,407
Comprises
Current assets83,755189,189318,542325,967279,557
Current liabilities(408,531)(506,270)(347,537)(268,881)(269,554)
Working capital(324,776)(317,081)(28,995)57,08610,003
Non-current assets2,675,9292,591,8472,544,9562,417,7352,507,404
Total2,351,1532,274,7662,515,9612,474,8212,517,407
Statistics
Dividends per share
(cents)
0.05.2512.00.07.0
Debt gearing ratio
(debt to debt plus equity)
3.1x2.6x1.6x4.6x2.3x
Interest cover (times)5.2x6.7x10.1x3.8x6.2x
Equity to total assets48.2%46.9%53.4%57.3%58.7%
1. FY21 reported and underlying results were restated for the impact of IFRS
Interpretations Committee decision on accounting for Software as a Service.
2. FY21‑FY24 underlying revenue results have been restated to remove gaming GST
and gaming rebates.
3. FY23 underlying has been restated to remove International Business normalisation.
Pictured: The Grill at Horizon by SkyCity, Auckland
$825.2M
REPORTED REVENUE
FY24: $928.5M
$825.2M
UNDERLYING REVENUE
FY24: $870.5m
$216.1M
REPORTED EBITDA
FY24: $138.2M
PeopleStrategyYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
2021
Introduction5-year Performance
Our Strategy FY25 – Comprehensive Strategic
Framework and Transformation Programme
Our strategic f ramework for FY25
has been constructed around three
fundamental pillars that address
both our immediate operational
challenges and our long-term
competitive positioning:
• stabilising and systematically
strengthening our core
business operations,
• driving customer focus across our
organisation to strengthen loyalty
and preference, and
• strategically positioning ourselves
for online regulation.
This approach recognises the interplay
between immediate performance
requirements of our land-based
operations and long-term value
creation that will come f rom our
strategic investments to build
sustainable competitive advantages in
this new digital environment.
Our strategy execution is supported by
our transformation programme, which
has evolved during FY25, transitioning
f rom a focus on legacy matters
centred on our risk uplift to proactive
capability building initiatives that create
sustainable competitive advantages.
The programme is designed to deliver
lasting improvements in governance
structures, risk management
capabilities, organisational culture,
and operational effectiveness across all
aspects of our business and position us
to take advantage of the opportunities
that are in f ront of us. It has a greater
emphasis on our core business,
our customers, and the expanding
digital opportunities within our
online channels.
The governance and leadership dimension has been strengthened by the
Board overseeing the programme via its Transformation Sub-Committee, and
the appointment of new executive Christina Katsibouba, our Chief Digital and
Transformation Officer who has accountability for the programme.
We have made solid progress against these priorities in FY25.
Make the most of
our existing assets
to help grow market
share and invest in
our future
Engage our
customers with
amazing experiences,
driving preference
and loyalty
Use our land‑based
presence to become
the online local hero
CORE BUSINESS
OPTIMISATION
CUSTOMER
FOCUS
ONLINE
GAMING
STRATEGIC PLAYS
CORE BUSINESS OPTIMISATION PROGRESS IN FY25:
MAKE THE MOST OF OUR EXISTING ASSETS TO HELP GROW MARKET
SHARE AND INVEST IN OUR FUTURE
Review of our assets is complete with a view to the monetisation of non-strategic
assets, particularly our car park and office property assets. While no transactions
have been completed to date, the detailed work we’ve undertaken has identified
substantial value creation opportunities that are progressing to generate capital for
reinvestment in core operations or debt reduction.
The Auckland production kitchen refurbishment was completed, enlarging our
production capacity and enabling both efficiencies and improvements in health
and safety, particularly ahead of the NZICC opening.
The NZICC revised opening date was announced with our pre-opening operational
workstream advanced and significant forward bookings made through to FY30. As
of July 2025, 23 international events have been confirmed between 2026 and 2028,
which are expected to attract 23,000 delegates and generate 126,000 visitor days,
representing substantial new business opportunities for New Zealand. A further 51
international bids are currently pending, with the potential to bring an additional
60,000 delegates and 280,000 visitor days.
New outdoor gaming space was approved for our Auckland casino, which will
significantly improve the experience for our customers.
The Sky Tower experience was ref reshed by opening ‘The Lookout’, creating greater
capacity at peak, and driving ticket price.
CUSTOMER FOCUS PROGRESS IN FY25:
ENGAGE OUR CUSTOMERS WITH AMAZING EXPERIENCES, DRIVING PREFERENCE AND LOYALTY
We delivered gaming system upgrades across New Zealand including investment in Angel Eye table games technology,
ensuring accurate player ratings and game integrity.
Increased global sales and marketing campaign for NZICC, driving further bookings of international events (23 confirmed) with
a further 51 international bids currently pending.
Design and planning for New Zealand site refurbishments commenced.
Launched the new loyalty programme, SHOW by SkyCity, across New Zealand sites in conjunction with the implementation of
Carded Play.
ONLINE GAMING PROGRESS IN FY25:
USE OUR LAND-BASED PRESENCE TO BECOME THE ONLINE LOCAL HERO
Continued strategic and operational preparation for the regulation of the online casino gaming market in line with
proposed legislation, including ongoing engagement with the Government, with the Online Casino Gambling Bill being
introduced to the House of Representatives in June 2025.
Secured new platform partner, EveryMatrix Software Limited, and commenced the build of the new online gaming platform.
Commenced the architecting and build in preparation for regulated market in July 2026.
People5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
2223
IntroductionStrategy
Our strategic pillars are underpinned by our critical enablers – centred around transformation – of our risk, digital capability and our
culture. These efforts have gained momentum throughout FY25. Risk transformation uplifts our enterprise risk capability and our
host responsibility and financial crime risk and compliance capability and competency. The cultural transformation initiatives we’ve
implemented focus on embedding sustainable operational improvements rather than pursuing quick fixes that don’t address
underlying issues. It embeds our ‘should we?’ culture as set out in our Code of Conduct. Our digital transformation sets us up for
future online regulation and our goal of a single view of our customer in order to deliver connected experiences.
Our Strategy FY25 – Comprehensive Strategic Framework and
Transformation Programme (continued)
We act with integrity in all aspects
of our business and are leaders in
host responsibility and preventing
financial crime
We bring our best every day,
fostering an inclusive culture and
creating meaningful experiences
for our customers, people,
and communities
Our systems and platforms support
a clear view of our customer and are
seamless, fast and efficient
RISK TRANSFORMATIONPEOPLE & CULTUREDIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
CRITICAL ENABLERS
PEOPLE & CULTURE FY25 PROGRESS:
WE BRING OUR BEST EVERY DAY, FOSTERING AN INCLUSIVE CULTURE AND CREATING MEANINGFUL
EXPERIENCES FOR OUR CUSTOMERS, PEOPLE, AND COMMUNITIES
Launched a Board approved, three year Group-wide culture change programme – focused on levelling up our company culture.
New values co-created with input f rom over 1,000 employees, senior leaders, and values champions across the business.
All People & Culture policies reviewed, updated, and streamlined to improve clarity and consistency.
Successfully concluded a two-year Collective Employment Agreement (CEA) for Auckland and Hamilton, and a three-year
Enterprise Agreement for Adelaide.
RISK TRANSFORMATION PROGRESS IN FY25:
WE ACT WITH INTEGRITY IN ALL ASPECTS OF OUR BUSINESS AND ARE LEADERS IN HOST RESPONSIBILITY
AND PREVENTING FINANCIAL CRIME
Design deliverables for the Adelaide Building a Better Business (B3) Programme are well advanced.
Ref reshed Code of Conduct, centred around using the ‘should we?’ test to guide how we work and make decisions, embedded.
Delivery of the host responsibility SkyCare Customer Care centre to support our customers and minimise gambling harm.
100% Carded Play implemented across SkyCity’s New Zealand sites in July 2025.
Board approved Risk Appetite Statement and associated Dashboard Metrics support improved risk management
and decision making.
Implemented an Integrated Risk Management platform as a single source of truth for risk information.
DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION FY25 PROGRESS:
OUR SYSTEMS AND PLATFORMS SUPPORT A CLEAR VIEW OF OUR CUSTOMER, ARE SEAMLESS, FAST,
AND EFFICIENT
Full technology readiness to support the NZICC launch, ensuring seamless integration across systems and processes.
100% Carded Play implemented across SkyCity New Zealand sites in July 2025, with new kiosks and both technology and
business teams operational.
Implemented a new Customer Risk Assessment system, meeting a critical compliance requirement and strengthening
customer due diligence capabilities.
Completed phase two of our facial recognition implementation and implemented Focal algorithm in Adelaide.
Pictured: SkyCity Adelaide
People5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
2425
IntroductionStrategy
FY25 has seen significant successes across our business as we made progress
delivering strategic priorities and critical enablers.
We evolved our culture and transformed how we operate, including how customers play with us through Carded Play and our
new loyalty programme SHOW by SkyCity. Policy developments in New Zealand’s online casino gaming regulation culminated in
the Online Casino Gambling Bill’s first reading in June 2025, opening up new business opportunities. We announced the NZICC
opening date with significant forward bookings driving value across our Auckland precinct. Here are some of our stories:
FY25 Strategy Stories –
Key Achievements and Milestones
SkyCity’s launch of the Carded
Play programme in July 2025
marked a pivotal step in our
SkyCare commitment to
enhancing customer care and
promoting safer gaming. This
enterprise-wide effort made
Carded Play mandatory across all
SkyCity’s New Zealand casinos,
supported by enhanced SkyCare
breaks and comprehensive
staff training.
As part of this transformation,
Premier Rewards was rebranded
to SHOW by SkyCity - a
ref reshed, research-led loyalty
brand developed in direct
response to customer feedback.
Customers wanted a simpler,
more rewarding, and responsible
gaming experience. SHOW by
SkyCity delivers by unifying loyalty
across gaming, hotels, dining,
and attractions at SkyCity’s New
Zealand sites.
Our enhanced SkyCare breaks
include continuous 30-minute
breaks after five hours of play,
continuous six-hour breaks after
10 hours of play, and maximum
36 hours gaming per week.
The regulated online casino market
represents a significant opportunity
and key strategic pillar for our
future. The Online Casino Gambling
Bill introduced to the House of
Representatives on 30 June 2025
marked a pivotal milestone, outlining
the f ramework to regulate online
casino gambling in New Zealand
with focus on harm minimisation,
consumer protection, and tax
collection.
The Bill proposes a three-stage
licensing regime empowering the
Secretary of Internal Affairs to issue up
to 15 licences to qualified operators,
valid for up to three years with the
ability to apply to renew the licence for
up to five years. Licensed operators will
be permitted to advertise subject to
strict regulatory controls.
SkyCity continues engaging
constructively with policy makers
while proactively advancing
readiness for participation in the
regulated market. We’ve successfully
operated, via international iGaming
company Gaming Innovation
Group Inc (GiG), f rom Malta for
over six years. We’re now looking
forward to participating in New
Zealand’s regulated market, offering
connected experiences that bridge
online and on-site entertainment.
We expect to launch our enhanced
offer, including mobile optimised
website and native app by July 2026.
In a future regulated market that
is likely to be very competitive
our focus is on combining digital
excellence and maximising our land-
based assets to be differentiated and
be the ‘local hero’ in the market.
Image
CARDED PLAY AND
SHOW BY SKYCITY AND THE
INTRODUCTION OF SKYCARE
ONLINE GAMING MARKET PREPARATION
The NZICC stands as a premier
Auckland venue with an expansive
32,500 square metres of floor space
offering flexibility and scale not
previously seen in New Zealand. The
facility accommodates conventions
for up to 3,000 attendees, one-off
events for 4,000 people, and concerts
with nearly 3,000 seats. Features
include up to 33 meeting rooms, a
tiered auditorium theatre divisible
into two theatres or flat-floor dining
space for 1,100 guests, and exhibition
halls spanning 6,700 square metres.
Located beside Horizon by SkyCity
and the SkyCity precinct, the NZICC
enjoys a premium location, and its
central CBD setting ensures the
benefits of increased visitation f rom
February 2026 will be felt across all
of Auckland.
As of July 2025, 23 international
events are confirmed between
2026 and 2028, which are expected
to attract 23,000 delegates, and
generate 126,000 visitor days. A
further 51 international bids are
pending with potential for additional
60,000 delegates and 280,000 visitor
days. Major secured conferences
include the International Coral Reef
Symposium and the International
Symposium on Microbial Ecology,
both scheduled for 2026 with a
projected economic impact of
$11 million.
The NZICC will create a combination
of permanent and part-time positions
for up to 500 employees, at its full
operational scale, while generating an
estimated $90 million in new annual
economic spend f rom international
delegates. For SkyCity Auckland, the
NZICC represents a major visitation
catalyst with an estimated 500,000
visitor days annually once fully
operational, with integrated access
via air bridges to our accommodation,
dining, and leisure offerings
maximising occupancy and spend.
NZICC – PREMIER CONVENTION DESTINATION
NZICC IN NUMBERS
32,500SQM
OF FLOOR SPACE
THREE
EXHIBITION HALLS
with operable walls that we can use to divide
the space into 16 different configurations
3
,
000
attendees, one‑off events for 4,000 people,
and concerts with nearly 3,000 seats
CAPACITY FOR
CONVENTIONS UP TO
2
,
850 SEATS
with flexibility to be:
‑ Divisible into 2 x 1,200 person theatres
‑ Flat floor dining space for 1,100
TIERED ‘AUDITORIUM’
THEATRE WITH
400
exhibition booths
CAN ACCOMMODATE
THIRTY-THREE
meeting rooms at any one time
UP TO
23,000
INTERNATIONAL DELEGATES
CONFIRMED BETWEEN
2026-2028
representing a significant
new business opportunity
for New Zealand
OVER
People5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
2627
IntroductionStrategy
With our B3 Programme anchored
in our Adelaide business – and with
solution design and development
being considered at Group level, our
New Zealand B3 Programme aims
to ensure that the deliverables are
incorporated across the relevant
areas of the SkyCity Group, including
overseeing where New Zealand
adoption requires additional
implementation effort. There are
four main streams of work in our
New Zealand B3 Programme:
• host responsibility – further
enhancing our New Zealand
business’ ability to safeguard
customer wellbeing and respond
to operational impacts across our
three land-based New Zealand
sites with procedures and
environments uplifted accordingly;
• financial crime – enhanced
monitoring and detection,
stronger controls, better risk
assessments, streamlined
reporting, trained staff, and
strengthened governance;
• people and culture –
strengthening our New
Zealand f rameworks to embed
accountability and culture,
ensuring people clearly
understand expectations and are
equipped with the tools, training,
and resources to perform; and
• data – strengthening our New
Zealand data governance to
ensure trusted, high-quality data
underpins strategic decisions,
regulatory interactions and
effective oversight through robust
controls and quality reporting.
LEVERAGING B3 DELIVERY – B3 NEW ZEALAND
Our Adelaide B3 Programme sits
within our broader risk transformation
strategic enabler, which is designed
to strengthen how we manage risk
and compliance across the Group.
Our risk transformation success is
assessed by an independent review of
our risk maturity.
Key to our risk transformation
programme was developing a
clear understanding of historical
shortcomings, and their cause, to
ensure these issues are fixed.
During FY25 we renewed Adelaide’s
leadership with Avril Baynes as
Managing Director and a completely
ref reshed leadership team. Our new
leadership has driven significant uplift
in SkyCity Adelaide, now 12 months
into transformation through our
multi-year B3 Programme - a
strategic reset designed to embed
integrity, accountability, and
long-term sustainability.
A major FY25 milestone for our B3
Programme was establishing fully
resourced Financial Crime and
Gambling Harm Minimisation teams
in SkyCity Adelaide, ensuring we
have the right expertise, leadership,
and f rontline support embedded
in the business. These teams play
critical roles in detection, reporting,
education, and engagement.
Over its first year, the B3 Programme
delivered progress across five key
transformation areas:
• modernising financial crime
detection through intelligence-led
systems and new Customer Risk
Assessment tools;
• proactive gambling harm
minimisation moving beyond
compliance to prevention through
advanced monitoring and the
SkyCare Customer Care Centre;
• strengthening enterprise
risk and compliance with
integrated f rameworks;
• building an accountability culture
through structured leadership
development and a ref reshed Code
of Conduct; and
• data-driven decision-making
through new dashboards
and Customer Workflow
Management System.
We’re already seeing meaningful
results such as: reduced staff
turnover and stronger employee
engagement; increased referrals to
gambling support services; uplift in
suspicious matter reporting and more
consistent, risk-aware decisions f rom
f rontline to Board level.
B3 is reshaping how we operate, lead,
and support our customers and our
people. It is restoring trust, reducing
regulatory and reputational risk, and
laying the groundwork for long-term
performance. Whilst there is still
much more to do over the next few
years, we are proud of the foundations
we have built in FY25.
BUILDING A BETTER BUSINESS (B3) - TRANSFORMING SKYCITY ADELAIDE
FY25 strategy stories – Key Achievements and Milestones (continued)
FY25 CONCLUSION –
FOUNDATION FOR
FUTURE SUCCESS
FY25 has been a transformational
year for SkyCity that will be
remembered as the period
when we transitioned f rom crisis
management to strategic growth
positioning. Despite persistent
economic headwinds that have
impacted consumer discretionary
spending across our markets, and
therefore our financial results,
we’ve made significant progress
on the strategic initiatives that
will define our future success.
Looking ahead, the foundations
established during FY25 will be
built upon in FY26, positioning
us to capitalise on significant
opportunities as economic
conditions normalise and our
strategic initiatives reach maturity.
To that end we are excited to share
with you our vision for the next
three years.
Pictured: Huami, SkyCity Auckland
Pictured: Chandelier Bar, SkyCity Adelaide
People5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
2829
IntroductionStrategy
Our Three‑Year Strategy – Market Leadership
and transformational growth
Our strategy for the next three years represents a bold future for SkyCity as a
market‑leading entertainment company that combines the best of land‑based
and digital experiences:
TO BECOME A REGIONAL GAMING LEADER DELIVERING CONNECTED EXPERIENCES FOR OUR CUSTOMERS
ACROSS ENTERTAINMENT VENUES AND ONLINE, DRIVING SUSTAINABLE GROWTH AND STRONG
SHAREHOLDER RETURNS.
This ambitious but achievable aspiration recognises that the entertainment industry is undergoing fundamental
transformation, driven by digitalisation, changing consumer behaviours, regulatory evolution, and increasing competition
f rom both traditional and non‑traditional players.
Our response is not defensive but proactive; we’re positioning SkyCity to lead this transformation rather than simply
respond to it, creating competitive advantages that will be difficult for competitors to replicate.
MARKET POSITIONING
By the end of 2028, we envisage SkyCity
as a leader in entertainment across
our markets, combining land-based
destination experiences with digital
engagement in ways that create unique
value propositions for customers while
generating returns for shareholders.
Our integrated approach to gaming
and entertainment experiences will
differentiate us f rom competitors who
operate in single channels or fail to
integrate their offerings effectively.
This strategy leverages our substantial
physical assets to drive online adoption
while using digital capabilities to
enhance the land-based experience,
creating customer engagement
opportunities that pure-play operators
in either channel cannot match. This
strategy provides clarity to how we
consider what physical assets we should
continue to hold and those that we
should monetise.
The strategic positioning we’re
developing recognises that success in
the future entertainment landscape
requires more than just operational
excellence in individual channels – it
demands the ability to create seamless,
personalised experiences across
all touchpoints while maintaining
the highest standards of customer
service, responsible gaming, and
regulatory compliance.
Our first strategic pillar focuses on
enhancing our position as a leading
entertainment provider across
all our markets, with world-class
gaming, leisure, and entertainment
assets that set industry standards
for quality, innovation, and customer
experience. This pillar recognises
that with the opening of the NZICC
and launch of regulated online
casino gaming we have a unique
opportunity to connect these
different experiences with our
existing land-based venues,
for our customers.
The opening of the NZICC in
February 2026 will drive substantial
new visitation across gaming, dining,
accommodation, and entertainment
offerings generating new
revenue opportunities.
Our customer-focused strategy
of connecting experiences is
designed to drive both visitation and
spend per visit through enhanced
experiences, personalised service
delivery, and seamless integration
across all our offerings. This
approach recognises that customer
lifetime value optimisation requires
sophisticated understanding of
customer preferences, behaviour
patterns, and engagement
opportunities across all channels
and touchpoints. An important
enabler of this pillar is our digital
transformation and shift to mobile
connection with our customers.
Our final strategic pillar represents
perhaps our most significant
growth opportunity:
Utilising our land-based
presence, brand recognition,
and customer relationships to
become the local hero in New
Zealand’s emerging regulated
online casino gaming market.
This opportunity could be
transformational for our business
model, financial performance, and
competitive positioning.
The potential New Zealand
online casino gaming market
is estimated at over $700
million annually, representing a
substantial opportunity that could
fundamentally change our revenue
profile and growth trajectory.
The regulatory f ramework being
developed provides for up to 15
licences through a competitive
auction process, creating a
competitive environment that will
require us to be at our best.
Our offering will focus on
superior customer experience,
comprehensive responsible gaming
measures, and offering our players
our land-based experiences. This
integrated approach will enable
unique value propositions that pure
online operators cannot replicate,
including cross-channel loyalty
programmes, integrated customer
support, and the trust and credibility
that comes with our established
physical presence.
The strategy to leverage our
land-based operations creates
multiple competitive advantages
including customer acquisition cost
efficiencies, higher customer lifetime
values, and retention rates that
should exceed pure online operators.
Our existing customer relationships
provide a substantial foundation for
online gaming adoption while our
brand recognition and trust levels
give us significant advantages in
customer acquisition and retention.
Our assessment of ways to
accelerate capability development
includes potential partnerships
and merger and acquisition
opportunities that could enhance
our competitive position, accelerate
time to market, or provide access to
specialised expertise and technology.
These strategic options are being
evaluated against our build versus
buy criteria while maintaining focus
on our core competitive advantages.
The growth potential extends
beyond the initial New Zealand
market to include opportunities to
expand into new offshore online
markets over time, leveraging the
capabilities, technology platforms,
and operational expertise we’re
developing for the domestic
regulated market. This expansion
potential provides additional upside
opportunities while diversifying our
geographic and regulatory exposure.
PILLAR THREE:
MARKET LEADERSHIP IN NEW ZEALAND ONLINE GAMING
This pillar continues the work
currently underway to optimise
our core business, ensuring
that we maintain our focus to
deliver our risk, culture, and
digital transformations – and
embed these changes into our
business. This pillar is also about
our social licence as a gambling
operator, and the privilege and
responsibilities that attach to that,
and the trust of our regulators,
communities and customers
that underpins it. In this pillar we
focus on our risk and compliance
culture and management.
Our asset review and
monetisation strategy provides
financial flexibility for strategic
investments while optimising our
capital allocation and balance
sheet efficiency. The monetisation
of non-core assets, particularly car
park and office properties, could
generate substantial capital for
debt reduction while maintaining
operational control over assets
critical to customer experience.
Cost discipline will remain an
underpinning of this pillar.
PILLAR TWO:
CORE BUSINESS OPTIMISATION
PILLAR ONE:
CONNECTED EXPERIENCES FOR CUSTOMERS
People5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
3031
IntroductionStrategy
Our People: Our Board
JULIAN COOK
CHAIR
Julian was Chief Executive Officer of
Summerset Group Holdings Limited
f rom 2014 to March 2021 and, prior
to this, Summerset’s Chief Financial
Officer where he oversaw the company’s
transition to become a publicly listed
company on the New Zealand and
Australian stock exchanges.
Prior to joining Summerset in 2010,
Julian was an Associate Director at
Macquarie Group where he gained
significant experience in the energy,
industrial services, tourism, and aged
care sectors over a 12-year career.
Julian is currently a director of WEL
Networks Limited, Winton Land
Limited, and Deakin TopCo Pty Limited,
and holds a Master of Finance f rom
Victoria University and a Master of
Science f rom the University of Waikato.
•Chair of the Governance and
Nominations Committee
•Member of the People and
Culture Committee
•Member of the Audit Committee
•Member of the Risk and
Compliance Committee
•Member of the Transformation
Sub-Committee
Appointed a Director of SkyCity in
June 2021 and Chair of the SkyCity
Board in January 2022
Appointed a Director of SkyCity
Adelaide in October 2022
Resides in New Zealand
CHAD BARTON
DIRECTOR
Chad is a seasoned director and
senior executive with over 25 years of
leadership experience across global and
local listed corporations. His extensive
background spans capital markets,
finance, mergers and acquisitions, and
property development, with a focus on
the technology, entertainment, and
services sectors.
Most recently, Chad served as the Chief
Operating Officer and Chief Financial
Officer of Nuix Limited, where he led a
highly successful transformation before
stepping down f rom his global role in
the past year. His previous executive
roles include Chief Financial Officer
at The Star Entertainment Group
Limited, Salmat Limited, and Electronic
Data Systems (EDS) for Australia and
New Zealand.
A passionate advocate for diversity and
inclusion, Chad founded and was the
inaugural Chairperson of Women in
Gaming & Hospitality Australasia, an
organisation committed to advancing
gender equity within the industry.
He has also contributed to medical
research and mental health advocacy
through board roles with the NeuRA
Foundation and the Schizophrenia
Research Institute.
Chad is a member of the Australian
Institute of Company Directors,
Chartered Accountants Australia &
New Zealand, and holds a Bachelor
of Business f rom the University of
Technology, Sydney.
•Chair of the Audit Committee
•Member of the People and
Culture Committee
•Member of the Governance and
Nominations Committee
Appointed a Director of SkyCity in
June 2021
Resides in Australia
KATE HUGHES
DIRECTOR
Kate is an experienced non-executive
director, holding board and committee
roles across a diverse portfolio.
Kate is currently on the Boards
of the Australian Maritime Safety
Authority, SuniTAFE and Lower
Murray Water. She also chairs the
Audit and Risk Committees for the
Victorian Department of Health
and the Australian Prudential
Regulation Authority.
Prior to embarking on a governance
career, Kate held executive roles
in risk management, governance,
and compliance across various
sectors, including financial services,
agribusiness, fast moving consumer
goods, telecommunications, and
tertiary education. Her private sector
experience is complemented by
regulatory experience at the Australian
Securities and Investments Commission
and NSW Treasury.
Kate holds tertiary qualifications
in commerce, applied finance and
occupational health and safety, and is
a graduate of the Australian Institute
of Company Directors.
•Chair of the Risk and
Compliance Committee
•Member of the Audit Committee
•Member of the Governance and
Nominations Committee
•Member of the Transformation
Sub-Committee
Appointed a Director of SkyCity in
September 2022
Resides in Australia
GLENN DAVIS
DIRECTOR
Glenn has practised as a solicitor in
corporate and risk throughout Australia
for over 35 years with expertise and
experience in the execution of large
transactions, risk management and
in corporate activity regulated by the
Australian Corporations Act and ASX.
Glenn has extensive board experience
across the public, private, family and
government sectors. He is currently a
director of ASX-listed entities Elders
Limited and iTech Minerals Limited. He
has broad board experience over many
years in the manufacturing, resources,
retail, property, seafood, and primary
production industries.
Glenn holds tertiary qualifications
in law and economics and is a
fellow of the Australian Institute of
Company Directors.
•Member of the Risk and
Compliance Committee
•Member of the Governance and
Nominations Committee
•Member of the Transformation
Sub-Committee
Appointed a Director of SkyCity in
September 2022
Appointed a Director of SkyCity
Adelaide and Chair of the SkyCity
Adelaide Board in September 2022
Resides in Australia
DAVID ATTENBOROUGH
DIRECTOR
David has strong gaming experience
with over 12 years’ experience at ASX-
listed company Tabcorp Holdings
Limited as Chief Executive Officer and
Managing Director. Prior to joining
Tabcorp, he was Chief Executive
Officer (South Af rica) of Phumelela
Gaming and Leisure in South
Af rica and previously held senior
roles with a variety of casino and
racing organisations.
David is currently a director of Host-Plus
Pty Limited, an Australian-based
superannuation fund.
David holds an MBA f rom Henley
Business School and a Bachelor
of Science (Honours) f rom the
University of Exeter and is a graduate
of the Australian Institute of
Company Directors.
•Member of the Audit Committee
•Member of the People and
Culture Committee
•Member of the Governance and
Nominations Committee
Appointed a Director of SkyCity in
March 2023
Resides in Australia
DONNA COOPER
DIRECTOR
Donna has over 25 years’ experience
in the financial services industry, most
recently as Chief Executive Officer of
TSB Bank Limited. Prior to this, she
was Chief Executive Officer of The
Warehouse Financial Services Group
and Managing Director and General
Manager New Zealand of Baycorp (NZ)
Limited. She has also held a number of
senior executive roles with American
Express International over a 14-year
period across the United Kingdom,
New Zealand, India, and Australia.
Donna is a Director of BSP Financial
Group Limited, the Chair of the Young
Presidents Organisation (YPO) NZ and
Principal Consultant at Green Sheep
Consultancy. She is a member of the
New Zealand Institute of Directors,
the Australia Institute of Company
Directors, and Global Women.
Donna holds a Master of Arts in
International Business f rom the Rennes
School of Business, France, a Bachelor
of Business f rom the Auckland
University of Technology, and a Global
Competent Boards Designation
(GCB.D) in Sustainability and ESG.
•Chair of the People and
Culture Committee
•Chair of the Transformation
Sub-Committee
•Member of the Risk and
Compliance Committee
•Member of the Governance and
Nominations Committee
Appointed a Director of SkyCity in
September 2023
Resides in New Zealand
Strategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
3233
IntroductionPeople
JASON WALBRIDGE
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
Jason joined SkyCity as Chief Executive
Officer in July 2024.
Jason has over 20 years’ senior executive
experience in the global land-based and
online gaming industries. Prior to joining
SkyCity, he was a Strategic Advisor to
global gaming and technology company
Aristocrat Leisure Limited on its acquisition
of NeoGames S.A, and the Executive
Chairman of National Entertainment
Network LLC, the largest amusement route
operator in the United States.
He has previously held roles with the online
gaming supplier NYX Gaming Group
Limited and its acquirer Light & Wonder
Inc and spent 18 years with Aristocrat
Leisure Limited where he held executive
leadership roles in New Zealand and the
United States. Prior to this, he held senior
roles within consulting, including with
Ernst & Young, and was an Officer in the
New Zealand Defence Force.
Jason holds a Master of Business
Administration in International
Management f rom the Auckland Institute
of Studies.
CALLUM MALLETT
CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER
NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIA
Callum is the Chief Operating Officer for
both the New Zealand and Australian
operations. Callum has significant gaming
and hospitality experience having held
a number of senior roles at SkyCity since
joining in 2006, including as General
Manager of SkyCity Darwin, General
Manager SkyCity Auckland Hotels,
Convention Centre and Sky Tower, and
Executive General Manager of Hospitality
for SkyCity Auckland. Prior to joining
SkyCity, Callum held numerous senior
leadership roles across the hospitality,
retail, and financial investment sectors.
Callum holds a Bachelor of Commerce
f rom Victoria University of Wellington,
and has completed studies with Cornell
University, The London Business School,
and the University of Nevada. Callum
currently sits on the board of the Tourism
Industry Association NZ.
PETER FREDRICSON
CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER
Peter joined SkyCity on 5 August 2024
as Chief Financial Officer, taking over
the role f rom 23 August 2024. He is
responsible for the financial management
of SkyCity, including financial reporting,
taxation, capital markets, treasury, and
corporate development. He also oversees
SkyCity’s investor relations and internal
audit functions.
Peter has over 20 years’ experience as a
Chief Financial Officer in ASX and NZX
listed entities in the energy, inf rastructure,
and financial services sectors. Previous
roles have included Chief Financial Officer
of AMP Limited, Acting Chief Executive
Officer and Chief Financial Officer of, then,
ASX-listed company Oil Search Limited,
Chief Financial Officer at APA Group and
Chief Financial Officer of Vector Limited.
Peter is a Chartered Accountant, holds a
Bachelor of Commerce f rom the University
of Auckland and is a graduate of the
Australian Institute of Company Directors.
Our People: Our Senior Leadership Team
ELAINE CAMPBELL
CHIEF LEGAL, GOVERNANCE AND
EXTERNAL RELATIONS OFFICER
Elaine joined SkyCity, in the newly created
Chief Legal, Governance and External
Relations Officer role, in March 2025.
She oversees the legal, governance and
corporate affairs functions to deliver a
unified strategic approach to SkyCity’s
regulatory, legal, and corporate affairs
work. This is an area of growing complexity
and importance for SkyCity.
Elaine is a highly respected executive
with a wealth of experience leading
organisations in heavily regulated
environments, most recently in the
financial services and telecommunications
industries. She has extensive experience
in capital markets and is a non-executive
director of NZX Limited.
CAROLYN KIDD
CHIEF RISK OFFICER
Carolyn joined SkyCity as Chief Risk
Officer in April 2023 and is responsible for
SkyCity’s risk management effectiveness
and the risk, AML/CFT and host
responsibility functions.
Carolyn is an experienced risk executive
with an extensive career in the banking
and finance industry across Australia
and New Zealand. Prior to joining
SkyCity, she held a number of senior
risk roles, including Chief Risk Officer at
Westpac New Zealand, Chief Risk Officer
at Bankwest (Commonwealth Bank of
Australia), Chief Risk Officer at Sovereign
Assurance, and Chief Credit Officer, Acting
Chief Risk Officer, and Head of Credit Risk
Management at ASB Bank Limited.
Carolyn is currently a director and
Senior Fellow of the Financial Services
Institute of Australasia and holds a
Bachelor of Arts f rom the University of
Auckland and a Diploma of Banking
f rom Massey University.
SIMON JAMIESON
GROUP GENERAL MANAGER - NZICC
DEVELOPMENT AND TOURISM
Simon oversees the development of the
NZICC in Auckland. He also oversees
SkyCity’s health and safety function.
Simon has held a number of senior roles
across the business since joining SkyCity
in September 2007, including General
Manager SkyCity Adelaide, General
Manager Hotels SkyCity Auckland and
Acting General Manager SkyCity Auckland.
With more than 35 years’ experience in
large-scale accommodation and hospitality
businesses, Simon brings a wealth of
commercial, property, project, and tourism
experience to the SkyCity business. Simon
has governance experience on industry
boards and Local Government owned
entities and trusts.
SHAUN PHILP
CHIEF PEOPLE AND CULTURE OFFICER
Shaun joined SkyCity as Chief People
and Culture Officer in August 2023 and is
responsible for leading the development
and implementation of best practice
people and culture strategy across the
SkyCity Group.
Shaun is a senior human resources
executive with expertise in supporting
leadership and culture transformation,
innovation and business execution
strategies across the telecommunications,
financial services, and inf rastructure
sectors. Prior to joining SkyCity, Shaun held
senior leadership roles across Australia
and New Zealand, including Chief People
Officer at Chorus New Zealand Limited
and Executive General Manager Human
Resources at AMP New Zealand.
Shaun has a Bachelor of Commerce
f rom the University of Auckland and is
a graduate of executive management
programmes at the Harvard Business
School and the London Business School.
STEVE SALMON
MANAGING DIRECTOR SKYCITY MALTA
Steve joined SkyCity in February 2019 in
the newly created role of SkyCity Online
Director and was appointed Managing
Director SkyCity Malta in February 2021.
Based in the United Kingdom, Steve is
responsible for launching, developing, and
leading SkyCity’s online gaming strategy,
including overseeing the operations of the
SkyCity Online Casino.
Steve has extensive global senior leadership
experience in the online gaming industry
with a successful record of achievement
driving growth and profitability within
established listed corporate entities and
entrepreneurial start-up consumer brands.
Steve has led across all industry verticals
(including sports betting, social gaming,
business-to-business, and business-to-
customer), been a driver of thinking in the
omnichannel space, and pioneered many
of the industry key innovations.
Steve qualified as a member of the
Chartered Institute of Management
Accountants and has a post graduate
qualification f rom the Cranfield School
of Management.
AVRIL BAYNES
MANAGING DIRECTOR ADELAIDE
Avril brings more than 30 years of
experience to her role as Managing Director
of SkyCity Adelaide. Avril returned to SkyCity
in November 2023 as General Manager
Hospitality at SkyCity Adelaide and took
over management of the SkyCity Adelaide
site in April 2024.
With a proven record in driving strategic
business growth, empowering high
performing teams and delivering superior
customer service, Avril is widely recognised
as an innovative and dedicated leader. She
has also made a profound contribution
to the communities where she has lived
and worked, most recently as Chair of the
Darwin Major Business Group, and as a
director of the Automobile Association of
the NT, Tourism Top End, Darwin Festival,
and Top End Group Training Board. A
qualified lawyer, Avril is also a former Telstra
Young Businesswoman of the Year (NT).
ANNA SHIPLEY
ACTING CHIEF CORPORATE
AFFAIRS OFFICER
Anna joined SkyCity as Chief Corporate
Affairs Officer in February 2025 and brings
a strong customer-centric focus and
diverse understanding in corporate affairs,
communications, marketing, brand,
government relations and stakeholder
management, earned while living and
working across New Zealand, China, and
the United Kingdom.
Prior to joining SkyCity, Anna was Chief
Corporate Affairs Officer at The Warehouse
Group. Anna’s other previous roles
include General Manager Corporate
Affairs at Bank of New Zealand (BNZ),
as well as Director of Communications
and Head of Marketing for Nokia China
and APAC based in China, and Head of
Communications for Nokia & UK based in
the United Kingdom.
CHRISTINA KATSIBOUBA
CHIEF DIGITAL AND
TRANSFORMATION OFFICER
Christina joined SkyCity in the newly
created role of Chief Digital and
Transformation Officer (CDTO) in
June 2025.
This role combines the traditional
responsibilities for the Chief Information
Officer with broader oversight of digital
and enterprise transformation.
As CDTO, Christina leads our ICT function
and is responsible for overseeing our plans
to deliver on our Three Strategic Plays and
Three Critical Enablers.
Christina brings deep experience in both
the gaming and commercial sectors.
Most recently she was at The Star
Entertainment Group, where she held a
range of senior positions including Chief
Financial Officer and Group Executive
responsibility for Gaming, including
oversight of the Group’s gaming product
strategy and revenue optimisation.
PHIL LEIGHTLEY
GENERAL COUNSEL AND
COMPANY SECRETARY
Phil is the General Counsel and Company
Secretary, being appointed to that role
in early 2025. Phil is responsible for legal
strategy and delivery for the SkyCity Group
as well as its Company Secretariat function.
Prior to joining SkyCity in 2022 as Deputy
General Counsel and Company Secretary,
Phil held senior roles at top law firms in
New Zealand and the United Kingdom
practising in corporate, mergers &
acquisitions and capital markets laws.
Phil is a Barrister and Solicitor of the High
Court of New Zealand and holds Law
(Honours) and Finance degrees f rom the
University of Auckland.
Strategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
3435
IntroductionPeople
Health, Safety And Wellbeing –
Comprehensive Care And Protection
The health, safety, and wellbeing of our employees, customers, and communities
represents a fundamental commitment that influences every aspect of our
operations and strategic planning. FY25 has seen continued investment in
programmes, systems, and capabilities that protect and support our people while
creating environments where everyone can thrive and contribute their best.
Our Health, Safety & Wellbeing Strategy
is delivered through a continuous
improvement f ramework, where our
Board sets annual objectives that
are closely monitored and delivered
through our Health, Safety & Wellbeing
Roadmap. The FY25 roadmap has
driven improvement in health and
safety outcomes, with an increased
focus on leadership and engagement,
structure and support systems, and
critical health and safety risks.
The risk management capability of our
workforce has been built and reinforced
by our enterprise training. This has
increased competency and confidence
in identification and management of
health and safety hazards and risks.
FY25 saw the introduction of a critical
risk f ramework and a comprehensive
critical control verification programme
for controlling our most critical risks.
Functional Health and Safety Employee
Ambassador/Engagement Groups have
enhanced our worker engagement.
These groups now include 200
registered Health and Safety
Ambassadors supporting their business
areas and colleagues.
An external review of our Health and
Safety culture maturity has highlighted a
shift f rom a perceived ‘compliance’ focus
since our last assessment in 2022, toward
a more value driven proactive approach
by our people. This reflects the mindset
in our Code of Conduct of ‘doing the
right thing’ and application of the
‘should we?’ test. This culture shift was a
key factor in the improved rating.
This f ramework provides a structured foundation to support personal and professional wellbeing through six key pillars,
outlined below.
FY25 saw a pivot f rom lag to lead
indictors - such as safety leadership
observations for critical risks, and timely
follow-ups on reported hazards and
corrective actions.
FY25 also saw the launch of the
SkyCity Psychosocial Safety &
Wellbeing Framework, reflecting our
commitment to a safe, inclusive and
supportive workplace. At SkyCity, we
recognise that mental health and
wellbeing are essential to our people’s
overall wellness.
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THRIVE
@ SKYCITY
JOB DESIGN &
FULFILMENT
Shapes tasks and
roles to ensure
effective workload
management
and encourage
positive workplace
behaviours.
Employees are
engaged in the
design of work and
provided growth
opportunities.
Promotes job
satisfaction,
enhances
performance, and
fosters personal
growth, leading
to improved
engagement and
higher productivity.
INFLUENCE &
INCLUSION
Advocates a fair
and respectful
workplace that
provides for security
and inclusion.
Diversity is valued
and employees
have influence
over their work.
Contributing to a
culture of trust and
inclusion, boosting
confidence,
ownership and
productivity.
LEADERSHIP
Fostering effective
leadership, built
on transparency,
authenticity
and support, to
drive employee
satisfaction,
retention, and
high performance.
Ensuring a positive
and engaging
environment
that aligns with
organisational
values and goals.
CONNECTION
Fosters shared
experience and
strong interpersonal
relationships.
Provides connection
at a workplace
and community
level, enabling our
teams to work in
alignment with their
purpose, values and
culture. A connected
workplace enhances
teamwork,
communication,
and morale,
contributing to
a supportive and
collaborative
environment.
HEALTHY
LIFESTYLE
Provides resources
to improve the
health of employees
and their families,
supporting personal
balance, with focus
on physical health,
life transitions, and
financial literacy.
Prioritising health,
performance and
wellbeing to foster
highly productive
employees.
HEALTHY
MIND
Supports the
emotional and
mental wellbeing of
employees, helping
identify abilities,
improve capability,
build resilience and
personal balance. A
psychologically safe
environment boosts
productivity, reduces
absenteeism, and
fosters resilience.
MY ORGANISATIONMY TEAMMY SELF
SkyCity Auckland also hosted
the NZ Blood Service mobile
collection team and collected
over 70 units of blood exceeding
ours, and the Blood Services,
expectations. Staff continue
to be offered f ree on‑site flu
vaccinations and cardio‑vascular
assessments across all sites.
Mental Health First Aid training
was also delivered at the
Adelaide site.
Overall good progress was made in Health, Safety and Wellbeing in the year,
with improvements in all monitored areas.
Pictured: Caption Placeholder
Strategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
3637
IntroductionPeople
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
In early 2025, SkyCity ref reshed its Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Policy to reflect its
position as an industry leader and the increasing maturity of its DEI programmes.
The updated policy introduces six core principles, clarifies roles and responsibilities, and sets refined, measurable objectives
which are designed to embed equity, diversity and inclusion into every level of the organisation in a lasting and meaningful way.
We are actively developing a roadmap that outlines the activities we will undertake to achieve our 2027 DEI commitments
and long-term goals. As part of this work, a DEI Strategy for the 2026 and 2027 period will be developed during FY26. This first
iteration will further embed DEI into the business by building on the ref reshed policy and the supporting Code of Conduct.
SkyCity’s DEI Policy is available in the Governance section of the company’s website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com.
2025 DEI SCORECARD - PROGRESS BY PRINCIPLE
To support transparency and track progress, SkyCity reports annually against its DEI objectives. These objectives are endorsed by
the Board and reviewed at the end of each financial year to guide future planning and continuous improvement.
For the year ended 30 June 2025, we have introduced a new scorecard format aligned to the six principles set out in the
updated DEI Policy. This format provides a high-level overview of progress and reflects the organisation’s evolving approach to
DEI reporting.
We achieved mixed success against the measurable objectives set by the Board as summarised below:
ON TRACK
Delivery is progressing well,
and outcomes are being met
PROGRESSING
Momentum is building,
but further focus or effort
is required
BEHIND PLAN
Progress is slower than
expected or off target;
additional action is needed
KEY
PRINCIPLEVISIONPROGRESS KEYSTATEMENT
Equal Opportunity
Employer (EOE)
As an EOE, we ensure fair and unbiased access to job
prospects, professional development, and workplace
support for all, regardless of personal characteristics.
We prioritise equity to dismantle systemic obstacles
and discriminatory practices.
Core work continued across gender,
ethnicity, pay equity, and talent with
some positive results.
Inclusive and
accessible
workspaces
We strive to remove barriers to participation,
providing equitable opportunities and necessary
accommodations. Our commitment ensures that
everyone has the resources and support needed
to excel.
Strong progress in Rainbow inclusion
and leadership development
marked a shift to coordinated,
enterprise-led progress.
Embedding
a culture of
belonging
We cultivate a culture where every employee feels
valued and integral to the team. By promoting
inclusivity and celebrating diversity, we create a
supportive and collaborative environment.
Progress was supported by active
Employee Resource Groups, stronger
communication, and recognition of
employee-led inclusion efforts.
Positive
interactions and
wellbeing
We prioritise fostering positive interactions
and enhancing employee wellbeing, focusing
on respectful communication, safe working
environments, teamwork, and attention to mental
and physical health.
Baseline wellbeing supports remain
strong, providing a solid foundation to
refocus and drive meaningful action
in FY26.
Recognising
and respecting
our Indigenous
communities
We honour the unique heritage and contributions of
our Indigenous communities. We foster relationships
based on respect and understanding, promote
cultural awareness, and integrate Indigenous
perspectives into our organisation, creating an
inclusive environment that empowers all members.
Meaningful engagement with mana
whenua in Aotearoa and delivery of
an impactful cross organisation te ao
Māori-based learning programme.
Progress in Australia was limited but
renewed commitment was shown in
late FY25.
Fostering our
future workforce
We invest in our employees’ growth and
development, offering opportunities for
continuous learning, skill enhancement, and
career advancement to prepare our team for
future challenges.
Development opportunities grew
through internal and external
partnership, with increasing focus on
neurodiversity inclusion.
SkyCity’s commitment to
inclusion is brought to life
through the voices of our
people - recognising and
valuing diverse voices,
perspectives and experiences
drives innovation and supports
better decision-making.
SkyCity’s Inclusion Council,
comprising elected
representatives f rom our
Employee Resource Groups,
provides critical insights and
leadership which help to shape a
workplace culture that is inclusive,
representative and responsive to
the needs of our people.
Through these networks,
our people lead and support
events, initiatives and cultural
observances that celebrate
identity, promote connection,
and strengthen belonging. Their
contributions not only enhance
our workplace but also create
meaningful opportunities to learn
f rom and appreciate the diversity
within our organisation.
VOICES THAT SHAPE SKYCITY
SkyCity embraces external
benchmarking programmes
as a key tool for evaluating
and enhancing the impact
of our DEI initiatives across
the organisation.
In 2025, SkyCity proudly achieved
GenderTick Advanced status for
the third consecutive year, nearly
six years after first becoming
a founding member of the
programme. As one of the original
six organisations accredited in
2018, SkyCity has continued to
lead as a champion for gender
equality. Over that time, we have
introduced inclusive initiatives
such as f ree period products
in employee bathrooms, a
menopause toolkit, and enhanced
parental leave provisions. We have
also made measurable progress
on reducing gender, Māori,
Pasifika, and Asian pay gaps,
reinforcing our commitment to
equitable outcomes.
This year SkyCity became the
first organisation to be formally
certified by Pride Pledge. This
recognition acknowledges
SkyCity as a workplace that is
not only inclusive of LGBTTQIAP+
(Rainbow) people, but also
actively committed to continuous
improvement. Informed by global
best practice and built on the
Rainbow Inclusion Stocktake,
the certification evaluates
leadership, strategy, policy,
employee engagement, and
ongoing learning. This milestone
strengthens our Rainbow
journey and affirms our focus on
creating spaces that are inclusive,
affirming, and accountable.
MEASURING WHAT MATTERS
PAY EQUALITY
SkyCity continues to monitor and
report on remuneration outcomes
by gender to ensure pay equality.
Over recent years, SkyCity has taken a
leading position in New Zealand and
Australia in relation to pay transparency
through the publication of our gender
and ethnic pay gaps, as well as the
measurable actions SkyCity is taking to
reduce underrepresentation and areas
of disparity which may lead to gender
and ethnic pay gaps.
In alignment with our continued
commitment to transparency and
equity, SkyCity is publishing its Rainbow
Pay Gap reflecting our advancing
maturity in applying an intersectional
approach to remuneration analysis and
our leadership in promoting inclusive
and equitable workplace practices.
SkyCity has again conducted gender
pay equality analysis for like positions
(being positions with similar degrees
of know-how, problem solving and
accountability). This analysis identified
that there are no indications of gender
bias across similar positions.
We remain focused on increasing the
representation of women in senior
roles across the business through a
gender balanced talent pipeline. These
initiatives, in addition to a strategy
deployed over the past six years to
lift the hourly wage rate of SkyCity’s
lowest paid staff, have contributed to
a meaningful reduction to SkyCity’s
gender pay gap in New Zealand.
SkyCity Adelaide has submitted
its annual report to the Australian
Workplace Gender Equality Agency in
accordance with the Workplace Gender
Equality Act 2012 (Cth) which outlines
its policies, strategies and actions on
gender equality, its workplace profile
(including workforce composition,
salaries and remuneration), and its
workforce management statistics
(including employee appointments,
promotions, resignations and parental
leave). A copy of the public report is
available at www.wgea.gov.au.
Strategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
3839
IntroductionPeople
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (continued)
GENDER PAY GAP
The following table illustrates the
SkyCity gender pay gap as at 30 June
2025 and as a comparison against the
prior periods since 2019 (when SkyCity
first commenced disclosing its gender
pay gap) and the respective national
gender pay gaps:
RAINBOW PAY GAP
The following table illustrates the SkyCity Rainbow pay gap as at 30 June 2025. Using 2023 New Zealand Census data on sexual
identity, analysis by our Rainbow partner Pride Pledge indicates the presence of a 16% Rainbow Pay Gap in New Zealand, though
the dataset is less detailed than that available for gender and ethnic pay gaps. No standard measurement exists in Australia.
NEW ZEALANDAUSTRALIA
SkyCity Gender
Pay Gap
1
(as at 30 June)
National
Gender
Pay Gap
SkyCity Gender
Pay Gap
1
(as at 30 June)
National
Gender
Pay Gap
20255.05%
8.2%
(June 2024)2.6%
11.9%
(November 2024)
20244.0%
8.6%
(Sep 2023)4.0%
12.0%
(Nov 2023)
20234.4%
9.2%
(Aug 2022)3.5%
13.3%
(Nov 2022)
20226.8%
9.1%
(Aug 2021)3.5%
13.8%
(Nov 2021)
20216.9%
9.5%
(Aug 2020)6.1%
13.4%
(Nov 2020)
20207.5%
9.3%
(Aug 2019)1.5%
13.9%
(Nov 2019)
20198.2%
9.2%
(Aug 2018)1.5%
14.1%
(Nov 2018)
NEW ZEALANDAUSTRALIA
% of
Rainbow
employees
SkyCity Rainbow
Pay Gap
(as at 30 June)
% of
Rainbow
employees
SkyCity
Rainbow
Pay Gap
(as at 30 June)
20256.5%2.8%4.2%+0.6%
1. The percentage difference between the median hourly rate for women compared to the
median hourly rate for men as at 30 June in the relevant year (including permanent and
temporary employees).
ETHNIC PAY GAP
The following illustrates the SkyCity ethnic pay gap as at 30 June 2025 and as a comparison against the prior periods since 2021
(when SkyCity first commenced disclosing its ethnic pay gap):
FOR EVERY $1.00 EARNED BY NZ
EUROPEAN MEN:
GroupEarns
NZ European women$0.97
Asian men$0.93
Pasifika men$0.92
Māori men$0.92
Asian women$0.90
Māori women$0.85
Pasifika women$0.85
WHAT DOES OUR PAY GAP LOOK
LIKE IN NEW ZEALAND (2025)?
FOR EVERY $1.00 EARNED BY
AUSTRALIAN EUROPEAN MEN:
GroupEarns
Australian European women$1.01
Asian men$0.89
Asian women$0.87
WHAT DOES OUR PAY GAP LOOK
LIKE IN AUSTRALIA (2025)?
SKYCITY ETHNIC PAY GAP AS COMPARED TO PĀKEHĀ MEN
NZ %
Pākehā WomenMāori WomenPasifika WomenAsian Women
As at
30 June 2021
7.9
18.9
16.6
11.3
2.8
14.9
14.9
10.3
6.8
14.0
13.8
10.9
As at
30 June 2022
2.9
10.3
7.9
6.0
As at
30 June 2023
6.0
13.9
13.9
9.2
As at
30 June 2024
As at
30 June 2025
As at
30 June 2021
As at
30 June 2022
As at
30 June 2023
As at
30 June 2024
As at
30 June 2025
SKYCITY ETHNIC PAY GAP AS COMPARED TO EUROPEAN MEN
AUS %
European WomenAsian Women
2.0
13.3
13.4
13.2
13.413.4
0.8
DIVERSITY IN NUMBERS
GENDER COMPOSITION
The gender composition of SkyCity’s Directors, Officers, Senior Executives, and total workforce as at 30 June 2025 and,
comparatively as at 30 June 2024, is set out below:
2025FEMALEMALE
Number%Number %Total
Directors233%467%6
Officers333%667%9
Senior Executives 646%754%13
Total Workforce2,16547.97%2,34852.03%4,513
2024FEMALEMALE
Number%Number %Total
Directors233%467%6
Officers545%655%11
Senior Executives 650%650%12
Total Workforce2,17849%2,30951%4,487
In the tables:
• ‘Officers’ are the Chief Executive Officer and those directly reporting to the Chief Executive Officer, other than the
Executive Assistant;
• ‘Senior Executives’ are, with the exception of the Chief Executive Officer, those who hold a strategic position (as determined by
the People and Culture Committee f rom time to time); and
• the ‘total workforce’ number does not include those who identify as gender diverse and those who elected not to identify as
being female, male or gender diverse.
No Directors, Officers or Senior Executives self-identified as gender diverse as at 30 June 2024 or 30 June 2025.
Strategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
4041
IntroductionPeople
Diversity in Numbers
The following graphic shows the make‑up of SkyCity’s workforce as at 30 June 2025
and, where relevant, as a comparison against our workforce as at 30 June 2024:
FY24: 4,512
4,592
STAFF (FULL/PART-TIME,
AND CASUAL)
FY24: 37 years
38 YRS
AVERAGE AGE OF
OUR WORKFORCE
FY24: 80 years
82 YRS
AGE OF OUR OLDEST
STAFF MEMBER
Women 47.8%
Men 51.8%
Gender diverse 0.4%
FY25
48.3%
51.2%
0.4%
FY24
KEY
Chinese 13.7%
NZ 13.5%
Indian 11.1%
Other Asian 10%
Filipino 9.9%
Australian 8.9%
Māori 5.5%
Other Sth E Asian 4.2%
Samoan 3.2%
European 2.6%
FY25
14.4%
13.3%
10%
8.8%
10%
8.7%
5.7%
4.1%
3.1%
3%
FY24
KEY
<29 yrs 27.2%
29‑44 yrs 42.7%
45‑60 yrs 23.3%
61‑79 yrs 6.6%
80+ yrs <0.01%
FY25
26.0%
43.7%
22.8%
7.3%
0.1%
KEY
FY24: 61
60
LANGUAGES SPOKEN
AND/OR WRITTEN BY STAFF
FY24: 45%
43%
LEADERSHIP ROLES
HELD BY WOMEN
FY24: 6%
5%
IDENTIFY AS PART OF
LGBTTQIAP+ COMMUNITY
FY24: 1%
1%
IDENTIFY AS HAVING
A DISABILITY
Given as a percentage of those
staff members who provided
details about their ethnicity and
those who elected “prefer not
to say”.
20.33%
OF OUR STAFF IDENTIFY
WITH TWO OR MORE
ETHNICITIES
FY24
FY25 GENDER DIVERSITY
TOP 10 ETHNICITIES OUR
STAFF IDENTIFY WITH
AGE BREAKDOWN
Where:
•senior leadership includes, with the exception of the Chief Executive Officer, those who hold a strategic position as determined by the People and Culture
Committee f rom time to time; and
• strategic leadership refers to individuals designated as senior manager or above in SkyCity’s 2025 Global Women’s Champions for Change Diversity Report
submission and is displayed as the mean across the categories.
DIVERSITY IN LEADERSHIP
BACKGROUND
OUR TOTAL
WORKFORCE
1
OUR SENIOR
LEADERSHIP
OUR STRATEGIC
LEADERSHIP
Asian30%6.3%13.1%
European
2
45%62.5%66.1%
Māori5%0% 5%
MELAA
3
3%0%0%
Pasifika9%0%0%
Other2%12.5%3.2%
Prefer not to say—18.8%6.3%
Given as a percentage of those staff
members who provided details about their
ethnicity and those who elected “prefer not
to say”.
1. Employees may report up to three ethnic
affiliations. As a result, the aggregate
percentage of ethnicities surpasses 100%.
2. Includes New Zealander and Australian.
3. Middle Eastern, Latin American
and Af rican.
MANDARIN (13.77%)
TAGALOG (8.93%)
HINDI (6.96%)
TOP 3 NON-ENGLISH
LANGUAGES
FY24: Mandarin, Tagalog
(Philippines), Hindi
Strategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
4243
IntroductionPeople
MATERIAL ISSUES FROM 2023 MATERIALITY ASSESSMENT
CATEGORY DESCRIPTION
MATERIAL TOPICS
IMPERATIVE
to value creation in the short,
medium and long term for
SkyCity (alternatively, they
present a serious risk to
value creation if they are not
managed well and can cause the
immediate erosion of value)
to value creation in the short
to medium term for SkyCity
(alternatively, they present a risk
to value creation if they are not
managed well in the short to
medium term)
to value creation in important
ways over a slightly longer
time horizon (alternatively,
they present some risk to
value creation if they are not
managed well)
ESSENTIALCONTRIBUTE
•Hosting responsibly
•Financial crime prevention
•Sustainable business
performance
•Destinations and experiences
•Employee health and safety
•Operational excellence and
business continuity
•Engaged, inclusive, and
capable workforce
•Governance, ethics, and
transparency
•Community investment
•Iwi and indigenous peoples
•Climate change
•Sustainable value chain
Sustainability Pillars –
Comprehensive ESG Framework
Our approach to sustainability represents our commitment to creating long‑term
value for all stakeholders while operating as a responsible corporate citizen across
all our markets and communities.
The development of our sustainability
f ramework has been informed by
extensive stakeholder engagement,
industry best practices, and alignment
with relevant international standards
and f rameworks. We recognise that
sustainability is not simply about
compliance or risk mitigation; it’s about
identifying opportunities to create
shared value, drive innovation, and build
competitive advantages that support
long-term business success while
contributing positively to society and
the environment.
Our sustainability governance structure
ensures appropriate oversight,
accountability, and integration of ESG
considerations into business operations
and strategic planning. This includes
Board-level oversight, executive
accountability, and operational
integration that ensures sustainability
considerations are embedded in
daily decision-making processes
rather than treated as separate or
secondary concerns.
STRATEGIC SUSTAINABILITY
REVIEW AND FUTURE
FRAMEWORK
During FY26 we will be ref reshing our
sustainability strategy, recognising
our three-year Sustainability
Implementation Plan FY23 - FY25
draws to a close. This ref resh will
be informed by a comprehensive
materiality assessment, which we
conduct regularly to understand what
matters most to our stakeholders over
the short, medium, and long term and
where our efforts can have the greatest
impact. The significant expansion of
our operations through Horizon by
SkyCity and the upcoming NZICC
opening means we cannot meet our
existing carbon commitments without
fundamental changes to our approach.
The reality is that our carbon footprint
will increase substantially with these
new assets coming online.
We are assessing whether our
targets remain realistic and taking a
transparent approach to assessing
our environmental commitments,
including the potential need to rebase
them, while maintaining our dedication
to continuous improvement and
responsible business practices.
Our most recent materiality
assessment, conducted in May 2023,
identified key topics that we have
grouped into three priority categories
that form the foundation of our current
sustainability efforts: Our Customers,
Our Community, and Our Environment.
These are the pillars of our FY23-FY25
Sustainability Implementation Plan. The
following pages outline our priorities,
targets, and progress across each
of them.
Pictured: The Kitchen SkyCity Adelaide
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
4445
IntroductionSustainability
SkyCity is committed to providing entertaining and profitable experiences with safe,
responsible, and well‑managed environments.
We take seriously our responsibilities to minimise the risks associated with gambling harm and to detect and deter money laundering
and terrorism financing. We continue to strengthen our efforts in these areas through targeted initiatives and ongoing investment.
Our customer-centric approach recognises that long-term success is built on earning and maintaining trust, loyalty, and
advocacy, achieved through the consistent delivery of exceptional experiences and responsible business practices.
PRIORITY
• Providing our customers vibrant experiences, responsibly
KEY STAKEHOLDERS
• Customers
• Department of Internal Affairs (DIA)
• Gambling Commission
• Office of Liquor and Gambling Commissioner
• Consumer and Business Services
• Government Ministers, agencies and officials, including the
Ministry of Health
• Treatment service providers and public health providers, including
Asian Family Services, Problem Gambling Foundation, Salvation
Army, Raukura Hauora o Tainui and Hāpai Te Hauora in New
Zealand and Relationships Australia, Overseas Chinese Association,
PEACE Multicultural Services and OARS SA in South Australia
•Australasian Gaming Council
• Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC)
• Police
• Local councils
IMPLEMENTATION PRINCIPLES
• Ensuring customer experiences are provided safely
and responsibly
• Commitment to continuous improvement and having
the systems and processes necessary to deliver vibrant
experiences, responsibly
• Creating vibrant experiences for SkyCity customers and
exceeding their expectations
FOCUS AREAS
• Host responsibility
• Prevention of financial crime
• Creating vibrant customer experiences, delivered
responsibly by our people
FY23 – FY25 SUSTAINABILITY TARGETSFY25 PERFORMANCE AGAINST SUSTAINABILITY TARGETS
Compliant prevention of financial crime programme as
evidenced by delivery of the Group AML Enhancement
Programme
Continued uplift of our compliance obligations by way of:
•Implementation of policy and process enhancements made to
improve risk management of core processes such as customer
due diligence
•The design and implementation of a centralised compliance
workflow management system
• Increasing awareness of AML/CFT risks and capability in
f rontline teams through the roll out of training sessions held
across the business
• Recruiting additional specialist financial crime resource to support
delivery of key uplift initiatives
• Design and implementation of a new AML/CFT risk
assessment methodology
Compliant host responsibility programme as evidenced by
internal/external audit processes and mystery shopper exercises
• Regulatory action against SkyCity for non-compliance with host
responsibility obligations in New Zealand was resolved with the
SkyCity Auckland casino closing for a period of five days
• Mystery shopping conducted on a regular basis to identify
opportunities to uplift processes and training
• DIA audits of the exclusion process for SkyCity Auckland, Hamilton
and Queenstown casinos were commenced with no findings yet
communicated to SkyCity
High levels of employee engagement as evidenced by
maintaining or improving survey scores
• The Groupwide MyVoice25 (Major) employee survey results reflect
continued high engagement
– 80% overall engagement score achieved (75% in the MyVoice24
(Pulse) survey)
– 80% would recommend SkyCity as a great place to work
(no change f rom the MyVoice24 (Pulse) survey
– 84% are proud to work for SkyCity (80% in the MyVoice24
(Pulse) su
rvey)
FY23 – FY25 SUSTAINABILITY TARGETSFY25 PERFORMANCE AGAINST SUSTAINABILITY TARGETS
100% of eligible employees have completed mandatory training
requirements (host responsibility and AML/financial crime)
• As at 30 June 2025, all eligible employees had either completed
their mandatory training or had been assigned training with
appropriate due dates. Exceptions, such as extended leave, were
managed in line with compliance protocols
Retain employees by growing access to career paths within
SkyCity, targeting 40%+ of roles filled internally each year
• Permanent (full-time and part-time) internal hiring remained
flat at 30.8 % including promotions, largely due to decreased
vacancies across the Group
Support vibrant and responsible customer experiences by
targeting year on year growth in the number of employees
accessing voluntary learning and development opportunities
• A range of upskilling options, including workshops, online
courses, learning communities and collaborative team sessions,
were offered to boost customer service skills and enhance
customer experience
•Voluntary, self-directed learning and development opportunities
remain integral to our curriculum and are regularly communicated
to staff
Customer satisfaction score - improvement year on year •The Sky Tower’s Global Review Index (GRI) score was 91.5%, while
down 0.7% it still exceeds the industry standard of 86.9%
•The Grand by SkyCity and SkyCity Hotel both saw an increase in
their GRI scores with 90.2% and 88.3%. Horizon by SkyCity achieved
a score of 93.9% in its first year. Eos by SkyCity maintained its GRI
score of 92% ranking #1 within its competitive set
FY25 KEY CHALLENGES
•Turnover rates are decreasing, largely due to cost of living pressures and employees choosing stability in their existing employment
•Inflation, higher interest rates, and cautious spending continue to create a challenging operating environment for our people
Our Customers – Excellence, Safety
and Responsible Entertainment
Pictured: The Grand by SkyCity, Auckland
SUSTAINABILITY IMPLEMENTATION PLAN FY23 - FY25 - OUR CUSTOMERS PILLAR
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IntroductionSustainability
CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE
EXCELLENCE AND INNOVATION
SkyCity is New Zealand’s largest
tourism, leisure and entertainment
company and we are committed
to maintaining our market-leading
position by delivering vibrant,
memorable experiences that exceed
customer expectations. These
experiences are delivered within a
strong f ramework of host responsibility.
To stay ahead of evolving customer
needs, we continually review our
precincts and offerings, ensuring they
remain relevant, engaging, and high-
quality. Our comprehensive customer
feedback systems play a pivotal role in
this process, offering valuable insights
into expectations, satisfaction, and
areas for improvement. We use this
feedback systematically to enhance our
experiences, elevate service standards,
and identify emerging trends that
guide both strategic planning and
day-to-day operations. The feedback
loops we’ve embedded across the
organisation ensure that the voice of
the customer is heard and acted upon
at all levels of our organisation.
FOOD AND BEVERAGE
In FY25, we partnered with Titanium
Food to conduct a comprehensive
review of the food and beverage
experience at our flagship Auckland
casino. This collaboration has paved
the way for a series of exciting
enhancements planned for FY26–28,
aimed at broadening our appeal and
elevating the overall dining experience.
Our Auckland restaurant precinct
continued to excel throughout
FY25, with Cassia, Depot, Federal
Delicatessen, Huami, MASU by Nic
Watt and Metita earning prestigious
Cuisine Good Food Awards. Several
establishments also received
recognition through the Metro Top 50,
TripAdvisor Travelers’ Choice Awards
(placing in the top 10% globally) and the
World Culinary Awards, where Metita
and Orbit were honoured as Best Hotel
Restaurant and Oceania’s Best New
Restaurant, respectively. Metita, Cassia,
Federal Delicatessen, Depot, Huami,
and SkyBar were also celebrated
as Iconic Auckland Eats, a public-
nominated distinction.
Meanwhile, our Adelaide operations
had an outstanding year, with the
SkyCity team securing South Australia’s
Best Wedding Caterer and Caterer of
the Year awards, alongside national
recognition as Event/Convention
Centre Caterer of the year at the
Restaurant & Catering Hostplus
Awards for Excellence.
HOTELS
In August 2024, we expanded our
hotel portfolio with the opening
of Horizon by SkyCity, a premium
property that has already garnered
three distinguished design awards.
The hotel has received strong guest
feedback, cementing its status as a
benchmark for contemporary luxury
and design excellence.
Both The Grand by SkyCity and SkyCity
Hotel continue to perform strongly,
with year-on-year increases in guest
feedback scores drawn f rom over 15,000
reviews across the Auckland portfolio.
Further highlighting our commitment
to delivering world-class hospitality,
Eos by SkyCity was awarded South
Australia’s Best 5-Star Luxury
Accommodation by the Tourism
Industry Council of South Australia. This
accolade reflects the exceptional quality
of our hotel assets and our ongoing
dedication to excellence in service,
design, and guest satisfaction.
AUCKLAND CITY RAIL LINK
The City Rail Link, a new 3.45-kilometre
twin-tunnel underground rail system
being constructed by the New Zealand
Government and Auckland Council
below the Auckland CBD, is set to
enhance connectivity to the SkyCity
Auckland precinct when completed in
2026. The new Te Waihorotiu Station, a
300-metre-long underground mid-
town station located near Wellesley and
Victoria Streets, is expected to become
New Zealand’s busiest train station.
Conveniently positioned adjacent
to the SkyCity Auckland precinct,
with entrances on both Victoria and
Wellesley Streets, it will provide direct
and easy access for visitors.
CASINO PRODUCT
In FY25 we continued to invest in new
gaming product, particularly with
the enablement of multi-protocol
technology across our New Zealand
sites, which facilitated the introduction
of QCOM products.
We also expect delivery of our new
Aristocrat Baron and Ainsworth Raptor
cabinets early in the new financial
year, positioning us among the first
casinos in Australasia to offer these
gaming options which enhance our
gaming offerings to customers. Gaming
product investment has been a key
focus in FY25 and remains a priority,
supported by significantly improved
speed to market for gaming machines
in New Zealand. Additionally, we are
committed to ongoing refurbishment
and improvements to floor layouts to
ensure an optimal experience for our
customers. We are pleased to have
received approval f rom the Gambling
Commission in FY25 for the remodelling
and extension of an outdoor balcony
at our Auckland site which, once
completed, will extend our outdoor
space by over 30 square meters. An
application to place gaming machines
in this new area is currently before the
Gambling Commission.
SKYCITY ONLINE CASINO
Our online casino gaming business,
SkyCity Online Casino, is currently
operated f rom Malta, through a
partnership with international iGaming
company Gaming Innovation Group
Inc (GiG). SkyCity intends to seek a
New Zealand licence for this operation
once the Online Casino Gambling
Bill 2025, introduced to the House of
Representatives in June 2025,
has passed into law.
SkyCity Online Casino is currently
delivered under a full outsource
model provided by GiG. This includes
the technical platform, gaming
content, managed services, f ront-end
development, and host responsibility
and AML/CFT procedures.
Currently, host responsibility and AML/
CFT procedures for the online casino
are managed by GiG, which delivers
tailored programmes designed to align
with SkyCity’s land-based practices
where appropriate. Market-specific
processes, such as age verification
and access to New Zealand support
services, have been developed to meet
local expectations. GiG ensures that
all relevant international AML/CFT
obligations are fully met.
Further details of our SkyCity
Online Casino host responsibility
practices can be found at www.
skycityentertainmentgroup.com/our-
commitment/responsible-gambling.
Our Customers – Excellence, Safety and Responsible Entertainment
(continued)
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IntroductionSustainability
EXCLUSIONS AND EXCLUDED PERSONS IDENTIFIED AT SKYCITY PROPERTIES
The following graph summarises the number of exclusion orders issued and number of excluded persons identified as returning
to each of the SkyCity properties in breach of an exclusion order over the 2025 financial year:
As part of the B3 Programme, SkyCity Adelaide has been reviewing all of its Host Responsibility processes including uplifting the
way we are capturing and reporting data. To ensure consistency and alignment of exclusion data reporting across the SkyCity
Group, for the FY25 reporting period onwards, SkyCity will no longer include Common Law Barrings / Common Law Barring
Breaches in its exclusion figures, which will help ensure there is no double counting of exclusion data across exclusion types.
354
852
76
115
22
25
211
697
AucklandHamiltonQueenstown
Breaches of Exclusion Orders IdentifiedExclusion Orders Issued
Adelaide
HOST RESPONSIBILITY
Gambling can be a fun and enjoyable entertainment activity. However,
it can also have harmful effects on some individuals, their families, and
their communities. Our challenge is therefore to ensure that we provide
experiences and environments that are both entertaining and profitable,
while doing so in a safe and responsible way.
SKYCARE AND OUR COMMITMENT
TO HOST RESPONSIBILITY
At SkyCity, we place great importance
on host responsibility throughout
every part of the organisation. SkyCare
is our commitment to caring for
and supporting our customers and
communities. It is how we approach
host responsibility and ensure we are fit
for the future.
A robust Host Responsibility
Programme (HRP) is in place at each
of our land-based sites, and within the
SkyCity Online Casino, to prevent and
minimise gambling harm. An outline
of SkyCity’s commitment to host
responsibility and detailed individual
site-related information, including
the HRP for each site and the SkyCity
Online Casino, is available at www.
skycityentertainmentgroup.com/our-
commitment/responsible-gambling.
The following information regarding
Host Responsibility and AML/CFT
relates to our land-based casinos.
OUR TEAMS
We are immensely proud of the culture
of care we have developed within our
casinos. We continue to focus on ways
to ensure that this culture of care is
maintained and that we have industry
leading host responsibility practices.
While all of our staff undergo host
responsibility training, a dedicated
team of experienced host responsibility
specialists is employed at each of
SkyCity’s land-based casinos, and an
experienced harm minimisation team is
in place for the SkyCity Online Casino.
Our team of Safer Gambling Advisors
(previously known as Responsible
Gambling Hosts) in Auckland and
Hamilton, our host responsibility staff
in Queenstown, and our team of host
responsibility co-ordinators in Adelaide
provide dedicated host responsibility
coverage in gaming areas. Working
collaboratively with our Gaming
Machines, Table Games, Security and
Surveillance teams, these teams are
focused on interacting with customers
in relation to their gambling activity and
time on site. These teams proactively
monitor gaming areas for signs of
potential gambling harm, and act as a
visible point of contact for customers
who would like to know more about
SkyCity’s host responsibility practices.
We also have host responsibility
staff available at all sites to support
customers through the exclusion
and re-entry process which includes
establishing safe gambling plans for
those customers.
BEST PRACTICE HOST
RESPONSIBILITY
A key strategic focus across the SkyCity
Group for minimising gambling harm
is prevention. By adopting a prevention
approach, we can increase our ability
to identify and respond early to new
or emerging concerns that may lead
to gambling harm-related issues for
our customers.
We promote and use a range of tools to
support safer gambling, including:
Facial Recognition
SkyCity operates a facial recognition
technology solution across all its
land-based casinos using cameras
positioned at all entry points to the
gambling areas to assist in identifying
customers excluded f rom re-entering
its casinos. An automated alert is
triggered notifying SkyCity personnel
when an individual matching an image
f rom SkyCity’s database of excluded
patrons re-enters, or attempts to
re -enter, a SkyCity gambling area.
This technology is enhanced with
additional cameras installed within
SkyCity’s Auckland and Hamilton
casinos to assist us in identifying
customers who remain within the
casino for extended periods (an
automated alert may be triggered
to notify SkyCity personnel when an
individual is identified as being within
the casino for an extended period).
We also utilise facial recognition
monitoring at our SkyCity Auckland,
SkyCity Hamilton and SkyCity
Queenstown ATMs to monitor
repeat withdrawals and declined
transactions, as these may be
indicators of gambling harm.
Focal
We operate a predictive algorithm risk
model (known as the ALeRT BETTOR
Protection System software) created
by Focal Research. This system uses
routinely stored customer data to create
complex models for identifying and
managing high-risk play that otherwise
may not be outwardly visible.
Carded Play
The July 2025 roll out of Carded Play,
which requires all customers to use
a SHOW by SkyCity card to play at
any SkyCity New Zealand casino, is
an important part of our SkyCare
commitment and provides for
scheduled pauses in play to enable
customers to enjoy a break f rom
gambling activities.
The use of these tools significantly
bolsters and assists our ongoing
efforts to detect and prevent excluded
customers f rom re-entering our casinos
and to detect continuous presence and
play. However, despite our best efforts
and our host responsibility measures
and initiatives, there is no guarantee
that such technology will be effective in
each and every case.
ASSURANCE AND AUDIT
As part of SkyCity’s assurance activities,
independent audit activities and
mystery shopping programmes
are carried out at each land-based
casino to monitor compliance with
SkyCity’s HRPs.
Each HRP is also subject to audit by the
relevant gambling regulator.
EXCLUSION OPTIONS
Exclusion is an important host
responsibility offering for those that
may be experiencing gambling harm.
Our casinos offer extensive information
to customers about exclusion options
and referral details to problem
gambling support services, including
gambling helplines and face-to-face
counselling organisations.
In New Zealand, customers can choose
to exclude themselves f rom all SkyCity
New Zealand casinos for a period of
up to two years. In some cases, SkyCity
itself makes the decision to exclude a
customer as a means to prevent risk of
harm occurring, or as a means to stop
further harm to that customer.
In Adelaide, customers can also choose
to exclude themselves f rom the SkyCity
Adelaide casino. In some cases, SkyCity
itself, or the Liquor and Gambling
Commissioner, makes the decision to
exclude a customer (known as common
law barrings) – all exclusions are referred
to Consumer and Business Services (the
South Australian Gaming regulator).
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
SkyCity actively engages with gambling
harm support agencies, government
agencies, researchers, and gambling
harm experts to improve information
sharing and collaboration in order to
advance SkyCity’s harm minimisation
and prevention approach. This
collaborative approach ensures that
knowledge about problem gambling
is shared between SkyCity and the
relevant stakeholders, and that we work
together to minimise harm.
SkyCity wants all of our visitors to
enjoy their experience with us. Please
take regular breaks, know your limits
and game responsibly.
Pictured: VIP Host, Gaming Machines
Our Customers – Excellence, Safety and Responsible Entertainment
(continued)
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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IntroductionSustainability
This responsibility includes a
sustained commitment to preventing
financial crime within our operations,
encompassing money laundering,
terrorism financing, f raud, and other
illicit activities.
We acknowledge past shortcomings
in our financial crime compliance,
highlighted by regulatory actions
and penalties and view them not
as defining setbacks, but as crucial
catalysts for transformation. We have
fully cooperated with regulators,
engaged independent experts,
and undertaken a comprehensive
internal review.
We are resolutely focused on building
a future where SkyCity is synonymous
with ethical conduct and proactive
financial crime prevention. Our
financial crime strategy forms the
bedrock of that commitment, driving
decisive action, continuous learning,
and adaptation to the evolving
threat landscape, ultimately fostering
trust, resilience, and success in a
sustainable way.
OUR FINANCIAL CRIME
UPLIFT PROGRAMME
SkyCity’s approach to preventing and
detecting financial crime is continually
evolving, integrating governance,
risk management, and operational
execution. Our financial crime
programme is focused on delivering a
sustained uplift across the key activities
that underpin our AML/CFT obligations
across the jurisdictions in which
SkyCity operates.
• Governance and Reporting: A
clear governance structure ensures
accountability throughout our
organisation. Regular detailed
reporting to senior management,
and the Board, facilitates informed
decision-making, allows for proactive
oversight, and supports our cycle of
continuous improvement in
AML/CFT practices.
• Comprehensive AML/CFT
Programme: Our AML/CFT
Programmes are designed to be
comprehensive and adaptive. These
provide the overarching structure to
deter, detect, and effectively manage
financial crime risks across all facets
of our operations, f rom land-based
casinos to our online presence.
• Dynamic Risk Assessment: We
employ a dynamic, risk-based
approach, conducting regular
assessments to identify, understand,
and mitigate the specific money
laundering and terrorism financing
risks SkyCity faces. The insights
derived f rom these assessments are
critical in informing the ongoing
refinement and strengthening of
our control environment.
FINANCIAL CRIME
At SkyCity, we recognise our integral role within the communities we operate in, and
with this comes a responsibility to ensure a safe, enjoyable, and ethical environment
for our guests and customers, our people, and the wider community.
• Customer Due Diligence (CDD):
CDD forms a cornerstone of our
prevention strategy. This involves
customer identification and
verification processes at the point of
onboarding, ongoing monitoring of
customer activity and transactions,
and the application of enhanced due
diligence measures for customers or
situations identified as presenting a
higher risk.
• Investigations: We maintain
structured and effective processes
for the investigation of suspicious
activities. This ensures timely
escalation of concerns and, where
appropriate, reporting to the
New Zealand Police Financial
Intelligence Unit and AUSTRAC, in
strict accordance with our legal and
regulatory obligations.
• Independent Assurance and
Continuous Improvement: To
validate the effectiveness of our
AML/CFT systems and processes,
and to ensure ongoing compliance,
our programmes are subject
to regular internal audits and
independent external reviews. An
internal audit function monitors
the outcomes of these reviews,
ensuring that any identified areas for
enhancement are appropriately and
promptly addressed.
STRATEGIC FOCUS FOR
FINANCIAL CRIME RISK
MANAGEMENT (2025–2028)
As we look ahead, SkyCity has identified
key strategic priorities to further
strengthen and mature our AML/CFT
capabilities over the next three years
(2025–2028). These focus areas are
designed to ensure we become effective,
agile, and fully aligned with evolving risks
and regulatory expectations.
• Programme and Processes: We will
continue to rigorously review and
enhance our AML/CFT Programmes
and processes, ensuring they remain
current, responsive to emerging
threats and provide for efficient
and effective risk mitigation.
• Intelligence: Our intelligence
gathering, and liaison capabilities
will be further developed, with a
strong emphasis on proactive threat
identification and collaboration
with regulatory authorities and
industry peers to share insights
and best practices.
•Training: Specialist training
programmes are being designed
for our teams to equip them with
the most current knowledge, skills,
and practical tools relevant to
their specific roles in combating
financial crime.
• Robust Controls: Our newly
established Controls Centre of
Excellence plays a critical role in the
design, assessment, and ongoing
validation of our control environment,
ensuring our defences are robust and
fit for purpose.
• Technology: Technology remains a
key enabler of our strategy. We are
actively expanding the use of data
analytics and machine learning
capabilities to improve the accuracy
and efficiency of our detection
systems. This includes the refinement
of typology-based rules to identify
complex suspicious transactions
that may not be captured through
traditional monitoring methods.
• Compliance Culture: Our unwavering
commitment to fostering a strong
compliance culture is underpinned
by our Code of Conduct, which clearly
reinforces the responsibility of every
SkyCity employee in preventing
financial crime.
• Engagement: We remain
actively engaged with regulatory
developments in both New Zealand
and Australia. Through ongoing
participation in industry forums,
we aim to stay well-positioned to
anticipate changes in the
AML/CFT landscape.
Pictured: Airbridge between Horizon by SkyCity and the SkyCity Auckland precinct
Our Customers – Excellence, Safety and Responsible Entertainment
(continued)
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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IntroductionSustainability
Our Community
As a business, we are deeply committed to making a meaningful impact on the
communities in which we operate. Beyond our core operations, we support various
initiatives that promote public awareness, environmental sustainability, and
social responsibility.
From lighting up our Sky Tower to raise awareness for good causes and events such as Breast Cancer Awareness, Pride Month,
and Matariki, to collaborating with key charitable partners including the Leukaemia and Blood Cancer Foundation for the
annual Firefighter Sky Tower challenge, and Variety – The Children’s Charity, SkyCity actively contributes to the well-being of
our community.
At the heart of our community efforts are the SkyCity Community Trusts, which play a crucial role in funding and supporting
local initiatives that align with our values. Through the Community Trusts, SkyCity provides grants to community organisations,
fosters partnerships, and helps drive social change. The Community Trusts focus on areas such as education, health, and social
welfare, ensuring that financial support is directed toward projects that have a lasting impact. Together, our broader community
initiatives and the Community Trusts form a cohesive ecosystem, where our business activities, philanthropic efforts, and
sustainability goals work hand in hand to create a positive, long-lasting influence on the communities we serve.
PRIORITY
• Positively contributing to vibrant communities in the places
where we operate
KEY STAKEHOLDERS
• Community groups
• Sponsorship partners, including Leukaemia & Blood Cancer
New Zealand and Variety – The Children’s Charity
• Community partnerships
• Recipients of SkyCity Community Trust grants
• Philanthropy New Zealand
• Mana Whenua, including Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei
• Ministry of Social Development
• TupuToa
IMPLEMENTATION PRINCIPLES
• Building and operating vibrant destinations in the places
where we operate. Contributing back to local communities
• Exceeding the expectations of a responsible business in the
communities in the places where we operate
• Commitment to continuous improvement and having
the systems and processes necessary to deliver vibrant
experiences, responsibly
FOCUS AREAS
• Supporting our communities through our Community Trusts
• Investing in collaborative partnerships in our local communities
where we operate
• Providing employment and development opportunities for
young people in our communities
• Build SkyCity’s confidence and capability to engage
authentically with mana whenua and the indigenous peoples
of South Australia
FY23 – FY25 SUSTAINABILITY TARGETSFY25 PERFORMANCE AGAINST SUSTAINABILITY TARGETS
300 Project Nikau recruits by 2025 41 rangatahi (young people) onboarded during FY25 and a total of
247 rangatahi onboarded since the programme commenced in 2019.
Project Nikau retention rate equivalent to, or better than,
SkyCity Group retention rate
95% retention rate for Project Nikau recruits in FY25 compared to
78.5% for the SkyCity Group.
Commitments (in line with Community Trust Deeds) met,
and impact of these commitments measured
Grants approved for 119 community organisations totalling
$3.1 million in FY25, aligned directly with the strategic intent
and desired outcomes for the Community Trusts.
SkyCity Adelaide employee population reflects South Australia
with 1.49% of employees identifying as Aboriginal or Torres
Strait Islander
As at 30 June 2025, 0.5% of Adelaide employees identified as
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander (0.5% as at 30 June 2024).
FY25 KEY CHALLENGES
• Role availability has impacted the number of Project Nikau recruits we have been able to move through the programme
• Managing community expectation with changing funding priorities
$3.1M
IN GRANTS APPROVED
BY THE SKYCITY COMMUNITY
TRUSTS TO
119
COMMUNITY
ORGANISATIONS
SUSTAINABILITY IMPLEMENTATION PLAN FY23 - FY25 - OUR CUSTOMERS PILLAR
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IntroductionSustainability
Our Community (continued)
SKYCITY COMMUNITY TRUSTS
The SkyCity Community Trusts are a valued part of the commitment SkyCity has made to its local communities. Collectively,
they have contributed over $81 million into the Northland, Auckland, Hamilton, and Queenstown communities. There have
been over 5,400 grants awarded since the first Community Trust was established in 1996. We have made lasting and impactful
investments into thriving communities across Aotearoa with a focus on youth development. Here are some of our stories:
NEW ZEALAND (SOUTH ISLAND)
The SkyCity Queenstown
Community Trust has supported
M!nt in Wānaka since their
establishment four years ago,
opening a hub in town where those
that have disabilities learn an art
form that they can then produce
for a weekly market.
KiwiHarvest Queenstown
SkyCity Queenstown Community Trust
has been a significant supporter of
KiwiHarvest Queenstown, who are New
Zealand’s perishable food rescuers.
KiwiHarvest collect good food before it
goes to waste and distribute it to those in
need to nourish the wider community.
In Queenstown, 200 tonnes total of
good quality surplus food has been
saved f rom landfill to create meals and
community connection. The rescued kai
is sorted then delivered to organisations
across Queenstown, Wānaka, Cromwell
and Alexandra.
KiwiHarvest delivers to many of SkyCity’s
community partners and over 15 charities
in the area that turn the donated kai into
packs or meals that keep the community
nourished. Kai is a great way to bring
communities together, food is often
the starting point for social agencies
working with their clients to break the
cycle of need. Having KiwiHarvest deliver
rescued food allows these agencies
to concentrate on tackling their core
issues and re‑focus their funding on
programmes to help their clients.
CHRISTCHURCH
NEW ZEALAND (NORTH ISLAND)
Manaaki Rangatahi ki Waikato
Manaaki Rangatahi is a collective that
brings together sector voices, services
and those with lived experience to
address and end youth homelessness.
Youth homelessness is a whole of
society issue that requires coordinated
action, leaning on the established
national network. The role of the
Waikato coordinator is to ensure that
key relationships are established, that
effective housing solutions are available
for our young people and to continue the
mahi to ensure policies are made that
enable the solutions of safe futures for
our young people.
28% of the homeless population are
under 25 years old, and there are no
specific solutions for them. The role of
Manaaki Rangatahi is to listen to the
voices of our rangatahi and ensure they
are being heard in the right places. Often
young people are homeless due to the
actions of adults and are often too young
to take on rentals, sign leases and/or live
on their own.
SkyCity Hamilton Community Trust
contributes to a newly established role
in the Waikato to further the impact of
the work happening to drive strategic
efforts, coordinate housing initiatives and
advocate for systemic change. We do
that in partnership with other Waikato
funders, as we know our funding and
impact can go further when we invest in
these programmes together.
The Serve in Hamilton has been
serving up hot meals for street
whānau across Hamilton and the
SkyCity Hamilton Community Trust
has funded this wholly volunteer led
vital service for three years enabling
social service providers to chat with
whānau who come for a meal to
get the support they need at a time
when they need it most.
HAMILTON
AUCKLAND
The Te Karanga Charitable Trust,
has been funded by the SkyCity
Auckland Community Trust for four
years, supporting the development
of their kaimahi to ensure they
are equipped to best serve the
rangatahi of Aotearoa New Zealand.
Papatūānuku Marae in Mangere
has created Koha Café where
rangatahi are able to learn
hospitality skills whilst serving
their community meals which they
can enjoy while paying what they
can afford.
Te Kowhai Print Trust is a
community‑based printmaking
studio that serves as a creative
hub in the heart of the quarry in
Whāngarei and provides facilities,
workshops and exhibitions for
artists and the public to explore
and enhance their artistic skills.
SkyCity has supported Te Kowhai
with two years of funding and
in July 2025 they joined other
community artists to showcase
their art on the tallest canvas in
Aotearoa, the Sky Tower. The Sky
Tower projected rangatahi art f rom
across the North Island as part of
the Winter Fest for SkyCity.
WELLINGTON
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IntroductionSustainability
Our Community (continued)
AUCKLAND COMMUNITY TRUST
Total $$64.23m
Total Grants2,812
FY25 Total Grants $$2.05m
FY25 Total Grants given68
Area of investments42 Auckland ($1.38m)
22 Northland ($504,000)
4 Operating in both Auckland and Northland ($169,000)
Mentoring & Leadership100% of investment
HAMILTON COMMUNITY TRUST
Total $$13.69m
Total Grants1,929
FY25 Total Grants $$885,267
FY25 Total Grants given39
Kai Solutions16% of investment
Community Connectedness and Resilience84% of investment
QUEENSTOWN COMMUNITY TRUST
Total $$2.77m
Total Grants709
FY25 Total Grants $$175,112
FY25 Total Grants given12
4 Wānaka
7 Queenstown
1 Glenorchy
Community Projects100% of investment
PROJECT NIKAU
Since launching in June 2019, SkyCity’s
employment pathway programme,
Project Nikau, has supported ~250
rangatahi into employment at SkyCity,
helping them build solid career
foundations through mentoring,
tailored training, and structured
development pathways.
SkyCity remains committed to investing
in Māori and Pasifika youth, who
continue to be overrepresented in
unemployment statistics. Our focus is
on creating real opportunities that lead
to lasting, meaningful employment.
Project Nikau continues to demonstrate
strong retention and career
progression, supporting rangatahi
into sustainable employment while
fostering leadership growth. As the
programme evolves, the focus remains
on scaling intake, enhancing leadership
pathways, and strengthening long-term
workforce development at SkyCity.
CAREER PROGRESSION &
INTERNAL MOVEMENT
• Delivered two leadership
development workshops for high-
potential Nikau alumni, supporting
career growth and talent retention
• Several rangatahi have moved
into leadership and specialised
roles, including a Senior Waiter,
Purchasing Coordinator, and a
Manager at Federal Delicatessen
• Three rangatahi have transitioned
into skilled positions, reflecting
readiness for the next step
• Two rangatahi have transferred
to different departments within
SkyCity, showing adaptability and
continued growth
ACADEMY-TO-EMPLOYMENT
TRANSITIONS
• 38 academy graduates have
successfully secured full-time
roles post-programme
PROJECT NIKAU IN NUMBERS
41 RANGATAHI
ONBOARDED
across three academy intakes so far
OUR FY25 GOAL TO EMPLOY
30 RANGATAHI WAS EXCEEDED WITH
200 YOUNG
PEOPLE
into employment at SkyCity
SINCE PROJECT NIKAU BEGAN IN 2019,
WE’VE SUPPORTED OVER
3 RANGATAHI ARE
STILL WITH SKYCITY
and celebrating seven years of service
FROM OUR VERY FIRST COHORT,
SKYCITY ADELAIDE IN THE COMMUNITY
In FY25, SkyCity Adelaide supported more than 60 local charities and events through cash donations and in-kind donations
of our premium goods and services. Key partnerships include South Australian charities supporting mental health research,
safe partying, and numerous local children’s charities. Events proudly presented by SkyCity this year include The Advertiser
SkyCity Woman of the Year Awards, the HAS Foundation Mother's Day Luncheon, the Sammy D Foundation's Impact Event, the
KickStart for Kids Against Period Poverty Fundraiser at SOL Rooftop, and the Breakthrough Mental Health Foundation’s High
Tea - Empowering Women’s Wellbeing.
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IntroductionSustainability
Our Community (continued)
SKY TOWER AND COMMUNITY
INVESTMENTS IN NUMBERS
• Celebrating 25 years partnering with
Variety, with over $6 million raised
during this time, supporting children
and families in need
– 356 bingo events in Auckland
in FY25, helping to raise over
$180,000 to support Variety
• Leukaemia & Blood Cancer
NZ (LBCNZ)
– Celebrating 21 years of partnership,
raising over $21m for LBCNZ
»This year’s support raised a
combined $2.3 million across the
Firefighter Stair Challenge and
Step Up events
• Lighting up the Sky Tower for
our community throughout the
year, including:
–Special interactive lighting, with
a special event where kids f rom
Starship Children’s Hospital
choosing the colours f rom their
hospital beds
–Interactive Lunar New Year
laser shows
– Matariki community artist
laser show
– Celebrating sporting triumphs
including America’s Cup, White
Ferns and Auckland FC
–Marking days of significance
including ANZAC Day, Daffodil Day,
Breast Cancer Awareness Month
and International Women’s Day
Our Environment
At SkyCity, we recognise our responsibility to operate in a way that protects and
enhances the environments in which we operate.
From FY23 to FY25, we have continued to integrate environmental responsibility into our operations, with a focus on addressing
climate change mitigation, accelerating the transition to a circular economy, and fostering a culture of sustainability across our
people and supply chain. This section outlines our progress against key environmental targets, challenges we faced, and the
future priorities that will shape our ongoing sustainability journey.
SkyCity is a climate reporting entity for the purposes of the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013, and our Climate Statements
comprising our second year of Climate-Related Disclosures, prepared in accordance with the Aotearoa New Zealand Climate
Standards issued by the New Zealand External Reporting Board (XRB), are included at pages 92 - 115.
PRIORITY
• Protecting and enhancing the environment in the places
where we operate
KEY STAKEHOLDERS
• Toitū Envirocare
• Climate Leaders Coalition
• REMONDIS (formerly SUEZ-ResourceCo)
• Beca
• Sustainable Business Council
• Proxima
IMPLEMENTATION PRINCIPLES
• Respecting, protecting, and enhancing the environment in
the places where we operate
• Responsible use of natural resources and a commitment to
minimise our impact and, where possible, enhancing the
environment in the places where we operate
• Dedicated focus on complying with all relevant environmental
regulations, including climate-related risk disclosures
FOCUS AREAS
•Climate change mitigation, adaptation, and transition
for our business
• Transitioning to a circular economy for our business
• Building a sustainability culture and engaging employees
on climate change and sustainability
• Supporting the environmental performance of our
supply chain
FY23 – FY25 SUSTAINABILITY TARGETSFY25 PERFORMANCE AGAINST SUSTAINABILITY TARGETS
Climate risk assessment and reporting (TCFD) completedCompleted our second climate-related disclosures, see pages 92
- 115 - our 2024 annual report contained SkyCity’s first climate-
related disclosures as required by the Aotearoa New Zealand
Climate Standards.
Emissions reduction of 25% by 2025 (38% reduction in Scope 1
and 2 by 2030 and 73% by 2050)
2025 emissions reduction target not met largely due to the first year
of operation of Horizon by SkyCity. Our Climate Statements contain
more information in respect of this.
5% reduction year on year in waste to landfill A 43% reduction f rom FY24 was achieved. This was due to improved
reporting as well as improved waste diversion processes.
10% reduction year on year in single-use plastic products A 4% reduction f rom FY24 was achieved. Our early successes against
this target have made the year on year reduction of 10% difficult
to maintain.
Employees’ knowledge of, and engagement on,
sustainability enhanced
• Increased employee awareness via Recycling Week activations
and the launch of a new Sustainability page on the staff online
communication platform.
• Ewaste awareness and collection processes in place.
By FY25, SkyCity’s EcoVadis score is at or above the benchmark
score of 55
Not completed in FY25.
FY25 KEY CHALLENGES
• Focussing on reporting requirements rather than operational environmental projects has diverted resourcing
• Resourcing of the sustainability function due to other areas of focus and staff attrition
across the Firefighter
Stair Challenge and
Step Up events
$2.3M
THIS YEAR’S
SUPPORT RAISED
A COMBINED
SUSTAINABILITY IMPLEMENTATION PLAN FY23 - FY25 - OUR ENVIRONMENT PILLAR
raised during this time,
supporting children and
families in need
+$6M
CELEBRATING
25 YEARS
PARTNERING
WITH VARIETY
to support Variety
$180,000
356 BINGO EVENTS
IN AUCKLAND
IN FY25,
helping to raise over
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IntroductionSustainability
Our Environment (continued)
REDUCING WASTE
SkyCity’s Zero Waste Strategy aims
to eliminate waste sent to landfill
and improve resource efficiency by
prioritising reduction and recycling,
particularly through the removal or
reduction of plastic packaging. As at
30 June 2025, SkyCity has achieved
a 51% reduction in waste to landfill,
compared to 2015 levels, marking a
significant milestone in our ongoing
waste minimisation journey. Since
April 2017, more than 1,640 tonnes of
food waste that could not be donated
has been collected and commercially
composted, supporting the soil health
and productivity to the New Zealand
horticulture sector. In the past financial
year alone, over 190 tonnes of food
waste were diverted f rom landfill, and
an ongoing focus on minimising food
waste at the source has led to a year-
on-year decrease in the volume of food
waste requiring composting.
ETHICAL SOURCING CODE
As part of our commitment to responsible business practices, SkyCity continues
to uphold the principles outlined in our Ethical Sourcing Code, which is publicly
available on our corporate website www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com. This code
reflects our alignment with the ten principles of the United Nations Global Compact,
which are derived f rom the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International
Labour Organisation’s Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work,
the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, and the United Nations
Convention against Corruption. All newly contracted vendors are introduced
to the Code during the onboarding process and we request that our suppliers
acknowledge these principles. By actively sharing the Code, we aim to not only
promote ethical standards across our supply chain but also to support our suppliers
by enhancing their own sustainability and governance practices.
ETHICAL AND SUSTAINABLE SOURCING PRACTICES
SkyCity recognises the influence we have through responsible procurement and
uses this position to drive positive environmental and social outcomes across our
supply chain. We actively promote principles of anti-corruption, fair competition, and
ethical business conduct in partnership with our suppliers and other organisations.
As a major purchaser of goods and services, SkyCity has a significant opportunity
to embed sustainability into procurement. Our sourcing strategy focuses on areas
where we can make the most meaningful impact, particularly in reducing our carbon
footprint and working closely with high-expenditure, high-impact vendors. Key areas
of focus include food and beverage, property, and marketing portfolios, where supplier
practices have a direct bearing on our environmental and social performance.
In the financial year ended 30 June 2025, SkyCity spent over $335 million on
operational goods and services, the bulk of which was spent with local suppliers
– with over $52 million on food and beverage items across New Zealand and
Australia. We continue to work with our food and beverage suppliers to gain more
understanding as to where our products are being sourced to ensure a local focus
where practical.
In Adelaide, SkyCity partners with
REMONDIS to progress towards
zero waste to landfill. Through this
partnership, general waste is separated
for recycling and food waste is
commercially composted. Remaining
dry waste is processed into Processed
Engineered Fuel (PEF) which is used
by Adelaide Brighton Cement instead
of using traditional fossil fuels. This
innovative approach not only diverts
waste f rom landfill but also contributes
to a 30% reduction in emissions with
cement production.
SkyCity partnered with Echo,
New Zealand’s largest e‑waste
recycling company who provides
a sustainable, transparent, secure
and accessible way to repurpose
or recycle electronics.
Through this partnership with
Echo, SkyCity responsibly
processed and recycled 5,249kg
of end‑of‑life IT equipment and
materials, and avoided 1,505kg of
Green House Gas Emissions.
TOP 100
SUPPLIERS
SAME
COUNTRY
LOCALLY
BASED
MAJORITY
LOCALLY BASED
Latest
%
Previous
%
Latest
%
Previous
%
Latest
%
Previous
%
Auckland84%85%71%65%62%57%
Hamilton93%96%27%31%75%75%
Queenstown95%95%40%40%74%70%
Adelaide91%91%73%74%62%69%
Same countryProducts procured f rom businesses in the same country
Locally basedProducts procured f rom businesses in the same region
as the relevant SkyCity property (for example,the Waikato
Region for SkyCity Hamilton)
Majority locally ownedProducts procured f rom businesses with greater than 50%
local ownership
SUPPLY CHAIN TRANSPARENCY
AND TRACEABILITY
To strengthen oversight of our supply
chain and ensure alignment with
SkyCity’s Ethical Sourcing Code,
since 2017 we have partnered with
EcoVadis, an independent provider
that rates key suppliers across New
Zealand and Australia. The EcoVadis
assessment evaluates suppliers against
a tailored set of environmental, social
and governance criteria through
a structured questionnaire and
supporting documentation. In FY22,
this process was extended to include
key suppliers at SkyCity Adelaide,
where the expanded operations,
now including a hotel and food and
beverage offering, have a procurement
footprint comparable to that of our
New Zealand operations. Although no
EcoVadis assessments were conducted
in FY25 due to internal resourcing
constraints, we remain committed to
the programme as a core component
of our supplier due diligence and
risk management.
As at 30 June 2025, 75 of our key
active New Zealand and Adelaide
suppliers, representing over $64
million (19%) of our total annual
procurement spend, had completed
the EcoVadis assessment.
Within the SkyCity Group’s food,
beverage, and retail categories, $22
million (42%) of procurement spend
was evaluated under the EcoVadis
f ramework. We continue to prioritise
greater visibility into our suppliers’
practises to ensure alignment with our
Ethical Sourcing Code. All new suppliers
are required to disclose their sourcing
practices prior to approval. However, the
scale, diversity, and geographical spread
of our supply chain present challenges
in embedding the Code and ensuring
our suppliers are actively upholding
their commitments.
MODERN SLAVERY ACT
In accordance with the Modern Slavery
Act 2018 (Cth), SkyCity publishes an
annual modern slavery statement
that outlines the risks of modern
slavery in our operations and supply
chains, as well as the actions taken
to address and mitigate those risks.
These statements are published on
the Australian Government’s Online
Register for Modern Slavery Statements
at www.modernslaveryregister.
gov.au and are also available in the
Governance section of our website
at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.
com. SkyCity operates primarily in New
Zealand and Australia with limited
supply chains.
As such, we believe that our exposure
to the risks of modern slavery is
low. However, we acknowledge the
potential for modern slavery to occur
and remain committed to identifying
and addressing any risks that may
arise. SkyCity has established a suite
of policies, practices, and procedures
to support supply chain due diligence
and ensures our procurement activities
align with SkyCity’s ethical sourcing
expectations. All new suppliers are
required to disclose information about
their sourcing and labour practices as
part of the onboarding process. This
enables us to make informed decisions
and apply appropriate scrutiny to
suppliers whose practices may not
meet our standards.
tonnes of food waste
have been collected and
composted
1,640
SINCE THE
PROGRAMME BEGAN
IN APRIL 2017
tonnes of food waste
to be commercially
composted
190
DURING FY25
SKYCITY AUCKLAND
SENT OVER
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IntroductionSustainability
Corporate Governance Statement
The SkyCity Board has adopted a number of governance cornerstone principles,
detailed below which reflect the Listing Rules and Corporate Governance Code
(31 January 2025 edition) of NZX Limited (NZX), the Listing Rules of ASX Limited
(ASX), the Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations (Fourth Edition)
of the ASX Corporate Governance Council, and the New Zealand Financial Markets
Authority’s Corporate Governance Principles and Guidelines.
SkyCity has a ‘Foreign Exempt Listing’ on the ASX, meaning that the primary regulatory role and oversight of SkyCity rests with
NZX, as the home exchange. Whilst it is not required to comply with ASX Listing Rule 4.10 regarding annual report content,
SkyCity has taken it into account and considers its corporate governance practices and principles have substantially reflected the
recommendations set by the ASX Corporate Governance Council, in addition to the corporate governance principles set out in
the NZX’s Corporate Governance Code, during the financial year ended 30 June 2025.
In addition, the cornerstone principles set out in SkyCity’s Board Charter (available in the Governance section of the company’s
website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com) continue to reflect the principles in the Corporate Governance Principles and
Recommendations (Fourth Edition) of the ASX Corporate Governance Council.
SkyCity’s constitution and relevant charters and policies are available in the Governance section of the company’s website at
www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com.
1. ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE BOARD AND MANAGEMENT
SkyCity’s corporate governance f ramework ensures Board accountability to shareholders and provides for an appropriate
delegation of responsibilities to the Chief Executive Officer and Senior Leadership Team.
The Board Charter details the Board’s role and responsibilities. The Board establishes the company’s objectives, the major
strategies for achieving those objectives and the overall policy f ramework within which the business of the company is
conducted, and monitors management’s performance with respect to these matters.
The Board is also responsible for ensuring that the company’s assets are maintained under effective stewardship, that
decision-making authorities within the organisation are clearly defined, that the letter and intent of all applicable company
and casino laws and regulations are complied with, and that the company is well managed for the benefit of its shareholders
and other stakeholders.
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited is committed to maintaining the highest
standards of corporate behaviour and responsibility and has adopted governance
policies and procedures reflecting this.
Specific responsibilities of the Board include:
•oversight of the company, including its control and accountability procedures and systems;
•appointment, performance, and removal of the Chief Executive Officer;
•confirmation of the appointment and removal of the senior executive group (being the direct reports to the Chief Executive Officer);
•setting the remuneration of the Chief Executive Officer and approval of the remuneration of the senior executive group;
•approval of the corporate strategy and objectives and oversight of the adequacy of the company’s resources required to
achieve the strategic objectives;
•approval of, and monitoring of actual results against, the annual business plan and budget (including the capital expenditure plan);
•review and ratification of the company’s systems of risk management and internal compliance and control, codes of conduct
and legal compliance; and
•approval and monitoring of the progress of capital expenditures, capital management initiatives, acquisitions and divestments.
The Board has responsibility for the affairs and activities of the company, which in practice is achieved through delegation to
the Chief Executive Officer and the Senior Leadership Team (including SkyCity appointed directors on subsidiary company
boards) who are charged with the day-to-day leadership and management of the company. The Chief Executive Officer also
has the responsibility to manage and oversee the interfaces between the company and the public and to act as the principal
representative of the company. The Board maintains a formal set of delegated authorities that details the extent to which
employees can commit the company. These delegated authorities are approved by the Board and are subject to annual review
by the Board.
Each director and senior executive has a written agreement with the company setting out their terms of appointment and responsibilities.
BOARD AND SENIOR LEADERSHIP TEAM STRUCTURE
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
SKYCITY BOARD
GOVERNANCE AND
NOMINATIONS
COMMITTEE
(standing committee)
SPECIALIST
SUB-COMMITTEES
(eg. Transformation
Sub-Committee)
PEOPLE AND
CULTURE
COMMITTEE
(standing committee)
AUDIT
COMMITTEE
(standing committee)
RISK AND
COMPLIANCE
COMMITTEE
(standing committee)
BOARD COMMITTEES
SENIOR LEADERSHIP TEAM
MANAGEMENT GOVERNANCE GROUPS
Further details of the standing Board Committees, including membership and their respective roles and responsibilities, are
outlined on page 68 of this annual report.
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Governance
2. STRUCTURE THE BOARD TO ADD VALUE
The SkyCity Board is structured to:
•understand and respond to the current and emerging issues of the business;
•review and challenge the performance of management and exercise independent judgement; and
•assist in the selection of candidates to stand for election by shareholders at annual meetings.
BOARD COMPOSITION, COMPETENCIES AND SKILLS MATRIX
The Board membership comprises a range of skills and experience to ensure that it is able to meet the structural requirements
outlined above.
In July 2025, Board members completed a self-assessment survey to identify the Board’s overall competency in relation to the
agreed areas of expertise and experience. The results of the survey are set out in the following graph – where 1 indicates low
competency and 5 indicates high competency. Details of individual expertise and experience of the directors are set out on
pages 32 – 33 of this annual report.
APPOINTMENT
The Board has established the
Governance and Nominations
Committee which oversees the
nomination and appointment of
directors to the Board. The procedures
for the appointment and removal
of directors are prescribed in the
company’s constitution, which,
amongst other things, requires all
potential directors to have satisfied the
extensive probity requirements of each
jurisdiction in which the Group holds
gaming licences.
The Board may appoint directors to
fill casual vacancies that arise or to
add persons to the Board up to the
maximum number (currently 10)
prescribed by the constitution. If the
Board appoints a new director during
the year, that person will stand for
election by shareholders at the next
annual meeting. Shareholders are
provided with relevant information on
any candidate standing for election in
the company’s Notice of Meeting.
Directors are appointed under the
company’s Terms of Appointment
and Terms of Reference for Directors
and Board Charter (both available
in the Governance section of
the company’s website at www.
skycityentertainmentgroup.com) for a
term of three years and are subject to re-
election by shareholders in accordance
with the rotation requirements of the
NZX and ASX and as prescribed in the
company’s constitution.
DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE
The Board Charter and the company’s
constitution require that the Board
contains a majority of its number who
are independent directors. SkyCity
also supports the separation of the
role of Board Chair f rom the Chief
Executive Officer position. The Board
Charter requires the Board Chair and
(where appointed) deputy chair to be
independent directors and prohibits the
company’s Chief Executive Officer f rom
filling either of these roles.
Directors are required to ensure all
relationships and appointments
bearing on their independence
are disclosed to the Governance
and Nominations Committee on
a timely basis. In determining the
independence of directors, the
Board has adopted the definition
of independence set out in the NZX
Main Board Listing Rules and has
taken into account the independence
guidelines as recommended in the
ASX Corporate Governance Council’s
Corporate Governance Principles and
Recommendations (Fourth Edition)
(ASX Independence Guidelines).
At its June 2025 meeting, the Board
reviewed the status of each director
in accordance with the definition
of independence set out in the NZX
Main Board Listing Rules and taking
into account the ASX Independence
Guidelines. The Board determined at
that time that all current directors were
independent at the balance date having
regard to those factors.
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
AND ADVICE
New directors participate in an
individual induction programme,
tailored to meet their particular
information requirements.
Directors are expected to maintain an
up-to-date knowledge of the company’s
business operations, are provided with
updates on industry developments
and undertake training and regular
visits to the company’s key operations.
The Board also undertakes periodic
educational trips (as a group and/or
individually) to observe and receive
briefings f rom other comparable
companies, including those in the
gaming and entertainment industries.
Directors are entitled to obtain
independent professional advice (at the
expense of the company) on any matter
relating to their responsibilities as a
director or with respect to any aspect
of the company’s affairs, provided they
have previously notified the Board Chair
of their intention to do so.
Corporate Governance Statement (continued)
Finance/Accounting/Audit
Business Strategy/Leadership
Government/Regulatory
Shareholder/Investment Relationships
Risk Management
Listed Company Experience
Customer Insight
Marketing
People and Culture/Reputation Management
Health and Safety
Public Relations/Media
Corporate Finance/Capital Markets/Transactional Experience
Sustainability
Property/Real Estate
Legal
AML/CFT
Hospitality/Tourism/Entertainment
Land Based Gaming Industry
Climate Governance
Gambling Harm Minimisation
Online Gaming Industry
2.67
3.17
3.33
3.33
3.50
3.50
3.50
3.50
3.67
3.83
4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
4.17
4.17
4.33
4.33
4.50
1.000.002.003.004.005.00
3.17
AVERAGE
DIRECTOR TENURE
BOARD SKILLS MATRIX
YEARS
100%
DIRECTOR
INDEPENDENCE
Gender Diversity
MaleFemale
67%
33%
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Governance
BOARD COMMITTEES
The Board maintains four committees – the Audit Committee, the Risk and Compliance Committee, the People and Culture
Committee and the Governance and Nominations Committee. The members of each of these committees are non-executive
directors and the non-executive directors of the Board appoint the chair of each committee.
Each committee operates under a formal charter document which sets out the committee’s role and responsibilities and is
available in the Governance section of the company’s website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com.
From time to time, the Board creates specific sub-committees to deal with a particular matter or matters and/or to have certain
decision-making authority as the Board may elect to delegate to that sub-committee. As at the date of this annual report, the
Board has established a Transformation Sub-Committee to oversee and monitor the Transformation Programme across the
SkyCity Group.
The following table sets out the members of each of the Board’s standing committees as at the date of this annual report and
summarises the role and key responsibilities of each committee.
Audit Committee
Risk and Compliance
Committee
People and Culture
Committee
Governance and
Nominations
Committee
MembersChad Barton (Chair)
Julian Cook
Kate Hughes
David Attenborough
Kate Hughes (Chair)
Julian Cook
Glenn Davis
Donna Cooper
Donna Cooper (Chair)
Julian Cook
Chad Barton
David Attenborough
Julian Cook (Chair)
Chad Barton
Kate Hughes
Glenn Davis
David Attenborough
Donna Cooper
RoleAssists the Board
in fulfilling its
responsibilities relating
to financial accounting
and reporting, external
and internal audit,
tax planning and
compliance, and
treasury matters
Assists the Board in
fulfilling its responsibilities
relating to risk assessment,
management and
monitoring, and ongoing
regulatory and other
legal compliance
Oversees the
management
of the human
resource activities
of the company, the
organisational culture,
the senior management
structure, senior
executive performance,
remuneration and
incentivisation, and
succession planning
Monitors the overall
governance of the
business, Board
and committee
composition and
performance, director
independence,
conflicts of interest,
statutory compliance,
and the identification
of and planning for
emerging issues
Key
Responsibilities
•Financial statements
and reports
•Compliance with
generally accepted
accounting principles
•Tax planning and
compliance
•Internal and
external audit
•Accounting policies and
procedures
•Expenditure authorities
•Treasury policy
and operations
•Dividend policy
•Climate-related
disclosures
•Risk management
•Business resilience, including
business continuity, crisis
management and
disaster recovery
•Workplace health and safety
and other critical safety and
staff wellbeing issues
•Anti-money laundering
compliance
•Host responsibility and
responsible gaming
•Gaming regulatory
compliance and casino
licensing
•Insurance coverage
•Climate-related risks
•Human resource
matters
•Performance and
remuneration
•Senior personnel
structure and
effectiveness
•Senior executive
succession planning
•Board structure and
performance
•Board succession
planning
•Appointment and
removal of directors
•Performance
evaluation of the
Board and its
committees
•Corporate governance
best practice
BOARD AND COMMITTEE MEETING ATTENDANCE
The following table shows director attendance at Board meetings and committee member attendance at the Board’s standing
committee meetings (both scheduled and unscheduled) during the financial year ended 30 June 2025:
Governance
Risk and People and and
Board Audit Compliance Culture Nominations
Total Number of Meetings 8 6 5 6 1
Julian Cook 8 6 5 6 1
Chad Barton 8 6 — 6 1
Kate Hughes 8 6 5 — 1
Glenn Davis 8 — 5 — 1
David Attenborough 8 6 — 6 1
Donna Cooper 8 — 5 6 1
3. INTEGRITY AND ETHICAL BEHAVIOUR
For SkyCity, it is important to be a good corporate citizen, whilst operating a sustainable and successful business model. SkyCity
expects its Board, management and employees to act in accordance with the company’s values, policies and legal obligations
and actively promotes ethical and responsible behaviour and decision-making.
Training and information on the company’s values, policies and legal obligations are provided to all employees on induction and
periodically throughout their time at SkyCity.
The SkyCity Board is responsible for monitoring the organisational integrity of business operations to ensure the maintenance of
a high standard of ethical behaviour.
This includes ensuring that SkyCity operates in compliance with its Code of Conduct (available in the Governance section of
the company’s website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com), which sets out the guiding principles of its relationships with
various stakeholder groups.
Compliance with the Code of Conduct is monitored through education and notification by individuals who become aware of
any breach. In addition, all senior managers are required annually to provide a confirmation to the company that to the best of
their knowledge all business matters undertaken within their areas of responsibility have been conducted in accordance with the
Code of Conduct. The most recent annual confirmations were provided by senior managers in August 2025.
TRADING IN SECURITIES
The company maintains a Securities Trading Policy (available in the Governance section of the company’s website at
www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com) for directors and employees regarding trading in, or giving recommendations
concerning, the company’s securities, including derivatives.
Details of any securities trading by directors and prescribed executives are notified to the Board.
In addition, directors and “senior managers” of the company must comply with the disclosure obligations under subpart 6 of
the New Zealand Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013 and the NZX Main Board Listing Rules and formally disclose their SkyCity
shareholdings and other securities holdings to the NZX and the ASX within prescribed timef rames.
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
SkyCity expects its directors and employees to avoid conflicts of interest in their decisions and to avoid any direct or indirect interest,
investment, association, or relationship which is likely to, or appears to, interfere with the exercise of their independent judgement.
Where conflicts of interest may arise (or where potential conflicts of interest may arise), directors must formally advise the
company or, in the case of an employee, their manager about any matter relating to that conflict (or potential conflict) of interest.
GAMING PROHIBITION
Directors and employees are not permitted to participate in any gaming or wagering activity at any SkyCity land-based casino.
Corporate Governance Statement (continued)
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4. SAFEGUARD THE INTEGRITY OF THE COMPANY’S FINANCIAL REPORTING
The Board is responsible for ensuring that effective policies and procedures are in place to provide confidence in
the integrity of the company’s financial reporting.
The Audit Committee has responsibility for oversight of the quality, reliability, and accuracy of the company’s internal and
external financial statements, the quality of the company’s external result presentations, and its relationships with its internal and
external auditors. The Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer are required to confirm in writing that the annual
and interim financial statements present a true and fair view of the company’s financial condition and results of operations
and comply with relevant accounting standards.
The Audit Committee oversees the independence of the company’s internal and external auditors and monitors the scope
and quantum of work undertaken and fees paid to the auditors for non-audit services. The Audit Committee has adopted an
External Audit Independence Policy that sets out the f ramework for assessing and maintaining audit independence. The Audit
Committee has formally reviewed the independence status of PwC and is satisfied that its objectivity and independence is not
compromised as a consequence of non-audit work undertaken for the company. PwC has confirmed to the Audit Committee
that it is not aware of any matters that could affect its independence in performing its duties as auditor of the company.
Fees paid to PwC during the financial year ended 30 June 2025 are set out in note 7 to the financial statements. Fees for audit
and other assurance work for the financial year ended 30 June 2025 represented 92% of total PwC fees.
5. TIMELY AND BALANCED DISCLOSURE
The Board is committed to ensuring timely and balanced disclosure of all material matters concerning the company to ensure
compliance with the letter and intent of the NZX and ASX Listing Rules. For the purposes of the ASX Listing Rule 1.15.3, SkyCity
confirms that it continues to comply with the listing rules of its home exchange, the NZX Listing Rules.
The company is committed to promoting investor confidence by providing timely and balanced disclosure of all material matters
relating to SkyCity and its subsidiaries (SkyCity Group). The company maintains a Continuous Disclosure Policy (available in the
Governance section of the company’s website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com) for directors and employees that sets out
guidelines in respect of the company’s continuous disclosure obligations.
The Company Secretary is accountable directly to the Board, through the chair of the Board, on all matters to do with the proper
functioning of the Board.
6. RESPECT AND FACILITATE THE RIGHTS OF SHAREHOLDERS
The company’s shareholder communications strategy is designed to facilitate the effective exercise of shareholder rights by:
•ensuring that information about the company (including its corporate governance f ramework, media releases, current and
past annual reports, dividend histories and notices of meeting) is available to all shareholders in the Investor Centre and
Governance sections of the company’s website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com;
•posting stock exchange announcements in the Investor Centre section of the company’s website promptly after they have
been disclosed to the market;
•giving shareholders the option to receive communications f rom, and send communications to, the company and its security
registry, Computershare, electronically;
•engaging in a programme of regular interactions with institutional investors, shareholder associations and proxy advisers;
•promoting two-way interaction with shareholders, by encouraging shareholders to attend general meetings of the company;
•making appropriate time available at such meetings for shareholders to ask questions of directors and management. Each
year, in the company’s Notice of Meeting, shareholders are invited to submit questions to the company prior to the annual
meeting to enable the company to aggregate the main themes of the questions asked and respond to them at the annual
meeting. Representatives of the company’s external auditors are also invited to attend the company’s annual meeting to
answer any shareholder questions concerning their audit and external audit report; and
•ensuring that continuous disclosure obligations are understood and complied with throughout the SkyCity Group.
7. RECOGNISE AND MANAGE RISK
The company maintains a risk management f ramework for the identification, assessment, monitoring and management of risk
to the company’s business.
A centrally managed Group Risk function evaluates and reports on risks across the Group. Management is required to report to
the Risk and Compliance Committee and Board on the effectiveness of the company’s management of its material business risks
at least annually. SkyCity also maintains an independent, centrally managed Group Internal Audit function which evaluates and
reports on controls across the Group. Management is required to report to the Audit Committee and Board on the effectiveness of
the company’s management of its controls at least annually.
The Audit Committee approves the internal audit plan, with the results and performance of the organisation’s risk and controls
regularly reviewed by the Audit Committee and the external auditors. The Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer
are required to confirm in writing to the Audit Committee at least annually that the statement in respect of the integrity of
the company’s financial statements referred to above is founded on a sound system of risk management and internal control
which aligns to the policies of the Board, and that the company’s risk management and internal control systems are operating
efficiently and effectively in all material respects. The most recent confirmations were provided by the Chief Executive Officer and
Chief Financial Officer in August 2025.
The company maintains business continuity, material damage and liability insurance cover to ensure that the earnings of the
business are well protected f rom adverse circumstances.
8. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION
EVALUATION OF THE BOARD AND ITS COMMITTEES
The Board and committee charters require an evaluation of the Board’s and its committees’ performance on an annual basis.
The annual evaluation of the Board’s and its committees’ performance is generally carried out in the form of a self-evaluation
questionnaire completed by each of the directors and select management. During the last financial year, the annual evaluation
of the Board’s and its committees’ performance was carried out by way of self-evaluation questionnaires, with the results
discussed by the Board at a meeting in December 2024.
EVALUATION OF SENIOR MANAGEMENT
The Board undertakes the performance review of the Chief Executive Officer and reviews the performance outcomes of those
reporting directly to that position in accordance with the company’s performance review procedures. In the case of the Chief
Executive Officer, the review generally involves a formal response/feedback process at both the half year and full year. In the case
of each senior executive, the review involves a formal response/feedback process between the Chief Executive Officer and each
senior executive.
9. REMUNERATE FAIRLY AND RESPONSIBLY
Our remuneration arrangements are designed to support effective long term sustainable risk management and are structured
to ensure positive risk and compliance outcomes are rewarded.
Our remuneration programmes reward our people for doing the right thing (behaviours) and having regard for our shareholders,
customers, communities, regulators, and ongoing corporate sustainability. Performance conditions attached to incentives are
designed to align the interests of our people and SkyCity by ensuring a clear link between remuneration outcomes and company
performance (financial, non-financial, and risk and compliance). Additionally, a proportion of senior leaders’ incentive outcomes
and value is linked to the SkyCity share price, ensuring they receive rewards that are aligned with shareholders’ interests and
encourage long term value creation.
Details of SkyCity’s various employee incentive plans are available in the Governance section of the company’s website at
www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com.
Corporate Governance Statement (continued)
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Governance
Remuneration Report
As we continue SkyCity’s transformation, our people remain a critical focus. They
are at the heart of our success, ensuring the business delivers on our strategic
objectives and aspirations to strengthen our values and culture. Our approach
to remuneration is a core enabler of this, rewarding our team effectively directly
supports both our current performance and long‑term sustainability.
DIRECTORS’ REMUNERATION
The total directors’ fee pool is $1,540,000 (plus GST, if any) per financial year, last increased in 2023. The fees paid to directors
are determined by the Board on the recommendation of the People & Culture Committee. Actual fees paid to directors were
last increased by 2% in 2018. In addition to directors’ fees, non-executive directors may also receive remuneration for additional
services provided to the company outside of their capacities as directors of the company at the discretion of the Board and
subject to the maximum remuneration amount which has been approved by the shareholders of the company. SkyCity also
meets the expenses incurred by directors in relation to company matters which are incidental to the performance of their duties,
including travel.
SkyCity’s Policy on Non-Executive Director Remuneration (included in the Board Charter available in the Governance section of
the company’s website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com) sets out a f ramework for SkyCity to attract and retain qualified,
highly capable directors for the purpose of driving value and maintaining the highest standards of corporate governance on
behalf of shareholders.
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited BoardPosition
Fees (exclusive of
GST, if any, and per
financial year)
($)
Board
Chair
1
280,000
Non-Executive Director128,500
Audit Committee
Chair35,000
Member15,000
Risk & Compliance Committee
Chair35,000
Member15,000
People & Culture Committee
Chair35,000
Member15,000
Transformation Sub-Committee
Chair35,000
MemberN/A
Governance & Nominations Committee
All non-executive directors are members of this Committee, but receive no
additional fees for this Committee
1. The Board Chair does not receive additional Committee member fees
Directors’ fees are also payable to non-executive directors appointed to the Board of SkyCity Adelaide Pty Limited as outlined in
the table below (as at 30 June 2025):
SkyCity Adelaide Pty Limited BoardPosition
Fees (exclusive of
GST, if any, and per
financial year)
($)
Board
Chair$130,000
Non-Executive Director$65,000
Individuals who are invited by the SkyCity Board to join the Board as non-executive directors are appointed subject to the
company obtaining the approval of the regulatory authorities in each of the gaming jurisdictions in which the company operates
(a process which usually takes some months to conclude) and are entitled to receive remuneration for consultancy services
provided to the company pending receipt of the requisite approvals.
KEY CHANGES MADE TO OUR
REMUNERATION PLANS IN FY25
As outlined in the Remuneration
Report for the financial year
ended 30 June 2024, the People
& Culture Committee completed
a comprehensive review of senior
executive remuneration structure.
This review was guided by our core
remuneration principles, which are
detailed in the ‘SkyCity Employee
Remuneration’ section of this report.
As a result, the following key changes
were implemented for the financial
year ending 30 June 2025:
•Rebalancing short- and long-term
incentives by upweighting the Long
Term Incentive (LTI) allocations and
reducing the Short Term Incentive
(STI) targets for senior executives;
•Including non-financial performance
measures in the LTI plan, focused
on strategic objectives, cultural
aspirations and our risk and
compliance maturity; and
•Simplifying the STI plan to ensure it
remains relevant, transparent and
easily understood for participants.
The People & Culture Committee
believe these changes strengthen the
link between performance and reward
outcomes across financial, regulatory
and non-financial dimensions
and better align with stakeholder
expectations including those of
shareholders, customers and employees.
Transparency and fairness underpin all
remuneration decisions.
CORPORATE PERFORMANCE
AND REMUNERATION OUTCOMES
FOR FY25
Our STI plans have two gateways, a Risk
gateway and Financial gateway. Given
the significant progress lifting risk and
compliance maturity across the business,
the Board determined that the Risk
gateway has been met noting further
work is needed to be done. As SkyCity
Group’s underlying EBITDA did not
exceed 90% of the Group’s budgeted
underlying EBITDA, the Financial
gateway has not been met. Therefore,
no STI payments or awards were made
under the SkyCity STI plan for the
financial year ending 30 June 2025.
ENHANCEMENTS TO OUR
REMUNERATION DISCLOSURES
The People & Culture Committee is
committed to ensuring remuneration
outcomes and rationale are clearly
communicated to our stakeholders, and
as a result have made enhancements in
this report, including:
•Improved transparency of the FY25
strategic scorecard metrics and
results, which account for 60% of the
STI Target for senior executives;
•Additional detail on the strategic
performance measures that underpin
the LTI f ramework; and
•Insight into the Board’s consideration
in setting the Chief Executive
Officer’s Long Term Equity grant
on his appointment.
NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR FEES
Considering the restrained trading
conditions and the current pause
on dividends, the Board will not be
seeking shareholder approval to
increase the existing non-executive
director fee pool at the 2025 Annual
Meeting, as foreshadowed in last year’s
Remuneration Report. As such, the
People & Culture Committee did not
seek independent benchmarking of
non-executive director fees this year.
Base non-executive director fees were
last increased by 2% in 2018.
On behalf of the Board, I hope you find
the information in this remuneration
report clear and valuable. As always, I
welcome your feedback.
Donna Cooper
Chair, People & Culture Committee
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Remuneration
REMUNERATION AND OTHER BENEFITS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2025
Remuneration paid to, and other benefits received by, directors during the financial year ended 30 June 2025 and, comparatively
during the financial year ended 30 June 2024, are outlined in the table below.
Director
Financial
Year
SkyCity
Entertainment
Group Limited
Board and
Committee
Fees
($)
SkyCity
Adelaide
Pty Limited
Board Fees
($)
Other Fees
and Benefits
($)
Total
($)
Julian Cook
2025
290,000.00
1
65,000.00-355,000.00
2024
300,000.00
1
65,000.00
161,538.00
2
526,538.00
Chad Barton
2025178,500.00--178,500.00
2024178,500.00--178,500.00
Kate Hughes
2025178,500.00--178,500.00
2024178,500.00--178,500.00
Glenn Davis
2025143,500.00130,000.00-273,500.00
2024143,500.00130,000.00-273,500.00
David Attenborough
2025158,500.00--158,500.00
2024158,500.00--158,500.00
Donna Cooper
2025203,500.00-
6,625.00
3
210,125.00
2024120,406.73-
24,937.22
4
28,500.00
3
173,843.95
The figures shown are gross amounts and exclude GST where applicable.
1. Includes $20,000 (plus GST) per financial year for additional services provided to the People and Culture Committee until 31 December 2024.
2. Being remuneration payable for executive support to the company for the period f rom 26 February 2024 to 30 June 2024 pending the
commencement of Jason Walbridge as the new Chief Executive Officer.
3. Being fees payable for additional services provided to the company for consultancy services in relation to strategic communications and the
organisational transformation programme.
4. Being fees payable for consultancy services provided to the company for the period f rom 21 July 2023 to 27 September 2023 (inclusive) prior to
her appointment as a director on 28 September 2023.
SHARE OWNERSHIP IN SKYCITY
To further align non-executive directors’ interests with those of shareholders, each non-executive director is encouraged, over
a period of two years f rom appointment, to build up and retain shares in SkyCity (purchased on market by each non-executive
director as governed by the SkyCity Securities Trading Policy) equivalent to at least one year of their base non-executive director
fees. Following this initial two-year period, non-executive directors are then encouraged to acquire 15% of their base director fees
per year in shares in SkyCity.
The directors disclosed the following relevant interests in SkyCity shares as at 30 June 2025:
Percentage of base Percentage
fee retained in shares Percentage of base
(based on the fee retained in shares
value at the relevant (based on the value at
Shares purchase date 30 June 2025
6
)
Director beneficially held (%) (%)
Julian Cook 115,000
1
135 39
Chad Barton 60,000
2
135 44
Kate Hughes 50,300 81 37
Glenn Davis 70,000
3
121 51
David Attenborough 100,000
4
174 73
Donna Cooper 57,109
5
100 42
1. Shares held by Motutapu Investments Limited.
2. Shares held by the trustee of the Casheaw Super Fund.
3. Shares held by Aloren (No 148) Pty Ltd as trustee for The Davis Family Trust.
4. Shares held by JJJ Family Pty Limited as trustee for the JJJ Family Trust.
5. Shares held by Adminis Custodial Nominees Limited as the custodian for the trustees of The Stanley Cooper Family Trust.
6. Based on a closing price on 30 June 2025 of $0.94 per share.
SKYCITY EMPLOYEE REMUNERATION
This section details SkyCity’s approach to remuneration, underpinned by the SkyCity Remuneration Policy, approved by Board.
The Remuneration Policy was substantially updated in the financial year ending 30 June 2024, and is underlaid by the following
principles, which support SkyCity’s purpose, strategic business goals, performance and our character, risk and culture goals:
•Fair and Valued – Our fixed remuneration (base salary, superannuation/KiwiSaver contributions, and other core benefits like
health insurance) are fair and market competitive
•Aligned to our Social and Regulatory License – We have clear links between reward outcomes and our responsibility to our
customers, our regulators, and our ongoing social and regulatory licences to operate
•Balanced Outcomes commensurate with our Risk and Compliance Profile – Our remuneration programmes reward our
people for doing the right thing (behaviours) and having regard for our shareholders, our customers, our communities, our
regulators, and our ongoing corporate sustainability
•Performance Focussed – Performance conditions attached to incentives are designed to align the interests of our people
and SkyCity by ensuring a clear link between remuneration outcomes and company performance (financial, non-financial,
risk and compliance)
•Transparent and Simple – Incentive measures are clear and align to shareholder, customer and employee expectations
and our incentive arrangements allow for board discretion and the process around the application of Board discretion is
transparent and fair
REMUNERATION ELEMENTS
FIXED REMUNERATION
Fixed Remuneration (base salary, superannuation/KiwiSaver contributions, and other core benefits such as health insurance)
is set at a market competitive level and considers the role impact, accountability, and complexity, as well as the individual
experience, expertise, performance, and internal relativity. Factors such as individual performance, scarcity/availability of resource/
skill, internal relativities and specific business needs are considered in determining the appropriate salary and salaries are
reviewed annually, but not automatically adjusted. Any adjustment considers individual performance, market movements and
affordability to SkyCity.
SHORT-TERM INCENTIVES (STI)
The SkyCity STI Plan for salaried employees (including Senior Executives) is designed to recognise the contribution employees,
collectively and individually, make to the ongoing success of SkyCity and to reward employees for the achievement of results,
aligned to SkyCity’s purpose and key strategic and risk goals. The STI Plan allows invited employees to share in the success of
SkyCity by offering them the opportunity, upon achievement of agreed financial, non-financial and company risk goals, to earn a
cash payment, and for certain senior salaried employees, acquire fully paid Shares in SkyCity under a deferred component.
The Board has discretion with respect to the SkyCity Short-Term Incentive Plan in terms of participation in, operation of and
any awards under the plan. An overview of the STI Plan is included below, as are the outcomes for the Financial Year ended
30 June 2025.
LONG TERM INCENTIVES (LTI)
The SkyCity Restricted Share Rights LTI Plan aligns executive interests with shareholders’ interests and encourages long term
sustainable value creation for SkyCity. It drives improved performance and incentivises and rewards long-term value creation,
rather than short-term goals.
The LTI Plan provides executives with the opportunity to share in the Company’s and shareholders’ success and acts as a
mechanism to attract the best employees f rom a regional and global marketplace where long-term incentives are prevalent and
form a key component of employee total remuneration. It is also designed to retain key executives in the face of an increasingly
competitive global market. The LTI Plan offers participants the opportunity to earn an incentive which is payable in Restricted
Share Rights which vest three years f rom the Declaration Date, following the meeting of specific financial and non-financial
(strategic) performance hurdles.
The Board has extensive discretion with respect to the SkyCity Restricted Share Rights Long-Term Incentive Plan in terms of
participation in, operation of and awards under the plan.
An overview of the LTI Plan is included below, as are the specific performance conditions for the 2025 allocation.
Remuneration Report (continued)
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CHIEF EXECUTIVE AND SENIOR EXECUTIVE REMUNERATION
The Chief Executive Officer and Senior Executive remuneration is reviewed by the Board annually, taking into account
recommendations f rom the People & Culture Committee. The Board also considers market benchmark data, provided by
remuneration consultants. An overview of Chief Executive Officer and Senior Executive remuneration for the Financial Year
Ended 30 June 2025 is outlined in the table below:
OVERVIEW OF CHIEF EXECUTIVE AND SENIOR EXECUTIVE REMUNERATION COMPONENTS FOR THE FINANCIAL
YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2025:
Fixed RemunerationSTILTI
StructureBase Salary, KiwiSaver/Superannuation
Contributions and other core benefits
such as health insurance.
75% cash, 25% restricted shares
deferred for one year.
Restricted share rights with
vesting subject to performance
over a three-year period.
QuantumSenior Executive roles are
benchmarked to consider the industry
in which we operate, meaning
executive roles may be benchmarked
across Australian and New Zealand
markets and, depending on the
individual experience and expertise,
will be benchmarked in a range f rom
the median to the 75
th
percentile.
Senior Executive:
•Target 40% to 50% of base salary
•Maximum 44% to 55% of base salary
Chief Executive Officer:
•Target 50% of base salary
•Maximum 55% of base salary
Senior Executive allocation of 30%
of base salary.
Chief Executive Officer allocation of
40% of base salary.
The remuneration arrangements for the Chief Executive Officer are detailed in the ‘Chief Executive Officer Remuneration for the
year ending 30 June 2025’ section on pages 78 - 81 of this annual report.
SHORT TERM INCENTIVE STRUCTURE PLAN AND OUTCOMES
CHANGES TO THE SHORT-TERM INCENTIVE PROGRAMME FOR FY25
In FY25, SkyCity simplified its Short Term Incentive (STI) approach by discontinuing the SkyCity Performance Incentive Plan (PIP).
The Chief Executive Officer, Senior Executives and certain senior managers now have a deferral component included within
the single STI plan. The table below outlines the key features and targets for FY25. The section ‘FY25 STI Outcomes for the Chief
Executive Officer’ on pages 79 - 80 of this Remuneration Report provides the STI plan targets and assessment as they relate to
the Chief Executive Officer.
STI PLAN OVERVIEW AND TARGETS FOR FY25
Purpose - To recognise and reward participants for their contribution to the successful delivery of the key objectives of SkyCity i.e.
align individual performance with company-wide outcomes.
Gateways
The STI Plan includes two gateways that must be met before any payment
eligibility is assessed
Gateway
Achieved
Financial
Gateway
SkyCity’s Group underlying Earnings before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and Amortisation for
FY25 (Group EBITDA) exceed 90% of the budget Group underlying EBITDA.
Gateway Not
Achieved
Risk GatewayAcceptable achievement of the company risk goals as determined by the BoardGateway
Achieved
Balanced
ScorecardMeasureWeightingTarget
Financial GoalsFor FY25, each participant has a financial goal based on the
financial performance of that participant’s business unit
and/or department.
40%100% of budgeted
business unit and/or
department EBITDA
Non-Financial
Goals
Non-Financial Goals are set both based on ‘What’ an individual
delivers (KPIs set on an individual level based on the participant’s
role) and ‘How’ they deliver. ‘How’ objectives are the same for all
participants and are based on SkyCity’s Values and behaviours, as
part of the Code of Conduct.
40%‘On Track’ - fully and
consistently meet
requirements of both
‘What’ and ‘How’ objectives
Company
Risk Goals
Goals specifically relating to risk transformation and performance
(including assurance), host responsibility and financial crime
(including regulatory and remediation programmes), and health
and safety. Company Risk Goals are the same for all participants.
20%Acceptable achievement
of Company Risk Goals, as
determined by the Board
STI PLAN OUTCOMES FOR FY25
For the financial year ended 30 June 2025, Management recommended, and the Board accepted that, no payment to be paid
under the STI plan.
LONG TERM INCENTIVE PLAN
For the financial year ending 30 June 2025, the Chief Executive Officer and select Senior Executives received allocations under the
Executive Long Term Incentive Restricted Share Rights Plan. Performance conditions were updated to include both financial and non-
financial measures.
It should be noted that if a participant leaves SkyCity, whether dismissed, made redundant, resigns, or leaves due to ill health
before the LTI vesting date, they will generally forfeit any entitlements under the LTI Plan. However, the Board may, at its
discretion, approve the issue of some or all Restricted Share Rights that the participant would have received if still employed at
the Performance Testing Date.
Outlined in the table below are the key measures for the LTI Plan:
PERFORMANCE
CONDITIONS AND
MEASURES
Financial Tranche (60% of the allocation of Restricted Share Rights)
•Absolute Total Shareholder Return (TSR) Measure
•Cost of Equity (COE) and Stretch COE Target
Financial Tranche Performance Measures
If SkyCity’s TSR over the relevant Restrictive Period is equal to SkyCity’s COE over the same period, then 50%
of the Restricted Share Rights in that Absolute TSR Tranche will vest. If SkyCity’s TSR is at or above SkyCity’s
Stretch COE, then all the Restricted Share Rights in that Absolute TSR Tranche will vest. If SkyCity’s TSR is
between these points, the percentage of Restricted Share Rights in that Absolute TSR Tranche that will vest
will be calculated on a straight-line basis between 50% (at SkyCity’s COE) and 100% (at SkyCity’s Stretch COE).
Non-Financial Tranches (40% of the allocation of Restricted Share Rights)
NZ Risk Transformation Programme
The Board approved programme is delivered as scheduled, achieving agreed outcomes within scope
and timef rame.
Carded Play Programme (CP)
CP is in place, meets regulatory requirements and delivers a high-quality customer experience.
Risk Maturity
SkyCity’s externally assessed Risk Maturity has progressed f rom ‘basic (1)’ to ‘integrated (4)’ on a five-point risk
maturity f ramework.
Adelaide Build a Better Business Programme (B3)
The B3 programme has been successfully completed, with all deliverables met as outlined in the CBS
approved programme.
Non-Financial Tranche Performance Measures
The Board, in conjunction with Senior Management, will determine the extent to which these Performance
Hurdles have been achieved as at the Performance Testing Date. The Board may determine that any one or
more of the Performance Hurdles has been partially satisfied, in which case it may determine the appropriate
vesting outcome at its discretion.
LTI PLAN OUTCOMES (PREVIOUS YEARS’ ALLOCATIONS)
During the financial year ended 30 June 2025 a vesting calculation was completed in relation to allocations made to
participants in September 2021 under the 2018 SkyCity Executive LTI Plan, resulting in 16.7% of the shares vesting to
participants. The unvested shares (83.3%) were forfeited in accordance with the terms of the 2018 SkyCity Senior Executive
LTI Plan. Details of the 2018 SkyCity Senior Executive LTI Plan can be found in the Governance section of the company’s
website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com.
From time to time as directed by SkyCity, the Public Trust acquires shares in the company on-market for the purposes of the
company’s long term incentive employee plans. As at 30 June 2025, the Public Trust held a total of 986,280 shares which are
unallocated and held on behalf of future participants in the company’s employee incentive plans.
Remuneration Report (continued)
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceIntroductionYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial Statements
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Remuneration
BOARD DISCRETION, MALUS AND CLAWBACK PROVISIONS
Under both the STI and LTI plans, the SkyCity Board retains a broad discretion to, at any time prior to payment or vesting of
Restricted Share Rights, review all payments and Restricted Shares Rights issuable to participants based on the criteria and may
adjust the amount payable or the number of Restricted Share Rights up or down (in whole or in part) if it considers that this will
provide a more equitable result for a Participant or as between Participants, taking into account (among other things) the overall
performance of the Company or a particular Business Unit or Department or if it is appropriate to do so to reflect the Company’s
performance or non-performance in meeting its regulatory, risk and compliance obligations.
Both the STI and LTI include clauses for Malus and Clawback, meaning (in broad terms) that incentives may be clawed back
where there has been a material misrepresentation of the financial outcomes on which the incentive had been assessed and/or
a participant’s actions have been found to be f raudulent or dishonest.
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER REMUNERATION FOR THE YEAR ENDING 30 JUNE 2025
This section details the remuneration earned by the Chief Executive Officer (Jason Walbridge) f rom his commencement date
on 15 July 2024.
The total remuneration earned by Mr Walbridge for duties relating to the position of Chief Executive Officer over the period
15 July 2024 to 30 June 2025 is outlined in the following table:
Salary and BenefitsAt Risk Remuneration OutcomesAnnualised
Expense of
Commencement
RSR Grant
3
($)
Total
Remuneration
($)
Fixed
Remuneration
($)
Health
Insurance
($)
Relocation
Benefits
1
($)
Subtotal
($)
STI
Outcome
($)
LTI
Grant
2
($)
Subtotal
($)
1,442,3088,983177,9771,629,267Nil582,524582,524394,7372,606,528
1. Reflects contributions made for the relocation of Mr Walbridge to Auckland, including removal services, flights and temporary accommodation.
2. Reflects an allocation of 401,739 Restricted Share Rights under the Executive Long Term Incentive Restricted Share Rights Plan in
September 2024.
3. Total value of the Commencement RSR Grant is $2,250,000 split into two tranches. Tranche one vests in January 2028 and tranche two vests in
July 2029 the annualised Expense is reflected in the table.
Remuneration Report (continued)
FY25 STI OUTCOME FOR THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
Mr Walbridge did not receive any STI payment for FY25. The table below shows Mr Walbridge’s FY25 STI plan structure, targets
and achieved outcomes.
Plan GatewaysComment
Financial GatewaySkyCity’s Group underlying Earnings before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and
Amortisation for FY25 (Group EBITDA) exceed 90% of the budget Group
underlying EBITDA
Gateway not Achieved
Risk GatewayAcceptable achievement of the company risk goals as determined by the BoardGateway Achieved
BALANCED SCORECARD
Financial Goals – 40% Weighting Target
Percentage
Achieved Comment
•Group Underlying EBITDA100% of budgeted Group Underlying
EBITDA0%
SkyCity’s budgeted Group
Underlying EBITDA target
not met.
Non-Financial Goals – 40% Weighting
Percentage
Achieved
(Aggregate)Comment
Strategic Refresh
•Board approved strategic ref resh
75%
The SkyCity strategic ref resh
has been completed,
successfully communicated
with key internal and external
stakeholders and delivery is
progressing as planned.
Risk Transformation includes:
•Building a Better Business Programme (B3) running to timetable and
fully resourced
•Carded Play (CP) in line with agreed timetable and largely complete with a
smooth customer experience
The overall B3 Programme
was behind due to B3 in
Adelaide progressing too
slowly for much of the year,
this now has appropriate
resource and focus. CP was
on track for delivery.
NZICC includes:
•Approved delivery date to SkyCity achieved or on timeline
NZICC is on track to open in
February 2026 with continued
third-party delays f rustrating
progress but being managed
well by the team.
Online includes:
•SkyCity on track to secure a minimum of one online licence
•Robust and deliverable set-up plan in place and progressed as appropriate
The Online strategy and
deliverables are on track with
financial performance behind
plan due to the unregulated
competitive landscape.
Leadership, Culture and Reputation includes:
•Culture Programmes in New Zealand and Adelaide in place
Culture programmes are in
place and progressing well
against milestones, with an
Employee Engagement result
of 80%. This is above the Global
average and close to the top
25% of companies worldwide.
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Remuneration
Company Risk Goals – 20% Weighting
Percentage
Achieved
(Aggregate)Comment
Risk Transformation Including Risk Culture
•Demonstrate sound risk and compliance leadership
60%
Demonstrable uplift in
Risk and Compliance
understanding, prioritisation,
leadership and culture.
Risk Performance, including Assurance
•Demonstrate sustainable processes for uplifting and management of controls
•Demonstrate a strong discipline in closing assurance recommendations
and outcomes
Clear Risk policies and
processes are in place and
becoming embedded. Controls
assessment and assurance
plans are underway with mixed
progress.
Rebuilding the Trust
•Demonstrate leadership commitment to rebuilding the trust with our
regulators, communities, and shareholders
Diligent progress on the
resolution of outstanding
regulatory issues and delivering
on our commitments, closer
effective engagement in place
with key stakeholders.
Host Responsibility and Financial Crime (including Regulatory and
Remediation Programmes)
•SkyCity complies with the regulatory standards in both Australia and New Zealand
•Ensure that operations remain within all aspects of the specified risk appetite,
including (but not limited to) on time completion of training requirements
•Implementation of Financial Crime and Host
Responsibility roadmaps
•Meet regulatory and shareholder expectations through the efficient and
effective delivery of risk and compliance remediation and regulatory related
programs, notably Adelaide B3 and CP
Significant advancement
in Host Responsibility and
Financial Crime maturity with
robust programmes in place
and in operation. Resourcing
remains a focus.
Health and Safety
•Corrective actions f rom nonconformities are promptly addressed and closed out
•Incident investigations are completed to gain better learnings and
continuous Health and Safety improvement
•Hazards are promptly addressed and closed out
•Reduce total recordable injury f requency rate (TRIFR) across all properties
•Ensure that operations remain within all aspects of the specified risk
appetite for H&S, including (but not limited to) on-time completion of
training, and completed safety observations for people leaders
•No high-consequence events resulting in a class 1 injury or illness
Strong progress on
Health and Safety policies,
plans and procedures
with a review by external
consultants IMPAC in April
2025 noting significant
improvement in the last
2 years.
Total percentage achieved42%
One-off Commencement Restricted Share Rights Grant for the Chief Executive Officer
On 23 December 2024, the Board made a one-off commencement share offer to Mr Walbridge of 5,597,359 restricted share rights
(RSRs) under the SkyCity Restricted Share Rights Plan – split into two tranches:
•the first tranche (3,040,541 Restricted Share Rights) vesting in three years and 6 months f rom the grant date (being 15 July
2024), with a final exercise date of five years following the grant date; and
•the second tranche (2,556,818 Restricted Share Rights) vesting in five years f rom the grant date, with a final exercise date of
seven years following the grant date.
This one-off commencement grant was made to Mr Walbridge in consideration of his long-term retention as the Chief
Executive Officer and to ensure he is appropriately incentivised to grow sustainable shareholder value through share price
returns. The RSRs will only vest if Mr Walbridge remains continuously employed by the company up until the relevant vesting
date(s). The performance measures associated with the vesting of the RSRs relate to the increase in share price achieved
with an exercise price of $1.37 (subject to adjustment for dividends paid by the Company) per RSR. Each vested RSR may be
exercised by Mr Walbridge on or before the relevant final exercise date by paying the exercise price.
Remuneration Report (continued)
Chief Executive Officer Remuneration Mix
The graphs below show the mix of remuneration earned by Mr Walbridge for his performance over the period f rom 15 July 2024 to
30 June 2025 in his position as Chief Executive Officer, alongside graphs illustrating the target and maximum remuneration mixes.
FY25 ACTUAL REMUNERATIONFY25 TARGET REMUNERATIONFY25 MAXIMUM REMUNERATION
28%
72%
26%
21%
28%
20%
52%
SHORT TERM INCENTIVESLONG TERM INCENTIVESFIXED REMUNERATION
53%
In his position as Chief Executive Officer, Mr Walbridge’s base salary remuneration ratio to the median annualised employee base
salary was 22:1.
Chief Executive Officer Remuneration for FY26
Following a market review and in consideration of the restrained trading conditions, the Board has determined that
Mr Walbridge will not receive an increase to his base salary for FY26. The following table details the remuneration
structure for Mr Walbridge for FY26.
Salary and BenefitsAt Risk RemunerationAnnualised
Expense of
Commencement
LTI Grant
1
($)
Total
Remuneration
($)
Fixed Remuneration
($)
Health
Insurance
($)
Subtotal
($)
STI
Target
($)
LTI
Allocation
($)
Subtotal
($)
1,500,0008,9831,508,983728,155582,5241,310,680592,1053,411,768
1. Total value of the Commencement RSR Grantis $2,250,000 split into two tranches. Tranche one vests in January 2028 and tranche two vests in
July 2029. The expense is reflected in the table.
Chief Executive Officer Employment Agreement
Mr Walbridge’s employment agreement for the position of Chief Executive Officer commenced 15 July 2024 and reflects
standard conditions that are appropriate for a senior executive of a listed Australasian company.
Mr Walbridge’s employment agreement may be terminated by:
•either Mr Walbridge or the company by giving six months’ notice in writing;
•the company without notice in the case of serious misconduct, serious breach (including substantial non-performance) or
other cause justifying summary dismissal; or
•the company immediately if the SkyCity Board forms the view that substantial incompatibility and/or irreconcilable differences
have developed with Mr Walbridge or the Board otherwise wishes to terminate his employment when he is not at fault
(including a redundancy situation or medical incapacity).
Remuneration of Former Interim Chief Executive Officer
Callum Mallett (Chief Operating Officer) commenced as Interim Chief Executive Officer f rom 9 March 2024 through till 15 July 2024.
The total remuneration earned by Mr Mallett for duties relating to the position of Interim Chief Executive Officer over the period f rom 1
July 2024 to 15 July 2024 is outlined in the following table:
Salary and BenefitsAt Risk Remuneration Outcomes
Total
Remuneration
($)
Fixed Remuneration
($)
1
Health
Insurance
($)
Subtotal
($)
STI
Outcome
($)
LTI
Grant
($)
Subtotal
($)
49,72436350,087NilNilNil50,087
1. Represents the pro‑rata fixed remuneration paid to Mr Mallett during his tenure as Interim Chief Executive during the FY25 Financial year,
f rom a full year equivalent of $1,292,823.
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceIntroductionYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial Statements
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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Remuneration
FY25 EMPLOYEE REMUNERATION
The numbers of employees or former employees of the company and its subsidiaries, not being directors of the company, who
received remuneration and other benefits in their capacity as employees, the value of which was in excess of $100,000 and was
paid to those employees during the financial year ended 30 June 2025, are listed in the table below.
For the purposes of the table, remuneration includes, where applicable (if any),
a) salary;
b) short term cash bonuses;
c) health insurance premiums and other health benefits;
d) the value of share rights expensed during the year (including PAYE and PAYG on vested share rights, but excluding accrued
PAYE and PAYG on unvested share rights) under the 2021 SkyCity Executive LTI Plan and the Executive Long Term Restricted
Share Rights Plan;
e) sign-on cash payments;
f) relocation benefits; and
g) settlement payments and payments in lieu of notice with respect to certain employees upon their departure f rom
the company.
Remuneration Number of employees
$100,000–$109,999 185
$110,000–$119,999 121
$120,000–$129,999 76
$130,000–$139,999 72
$140,000–$149,999 48
$150,000–$159,999 31
$160,000–$169,999 23
$170,000–$179,999 26
$180,000–$189,999 24
$190,000–$199,999 13
$200,000–$209,999 8
$210,000–$219,999 11
$220,000–$229,999 9
$230,000–$239,999 4
$240,000–$249,999 4
$250,000–$259,999 3
$260,000–$269,999 7
$270,000-$279,999 7
$280,000-$289,999 2
$290,000-$299,999 6
$300,000-$309,999 1
$310,000-$319,999 3
$320,000-$329,999 2
$330,000–$339,999 2
$340,000-$349,999 3
$350,000–$359,999 4
$380,000-$389,999 1
$400,000-$409,999 1
$420,000-$429,999 1
$450,000-$459,999 1
$460,000-$469,999 1
$490,000-$499,999 1
$600,000-$609,999 1
$640,000-$649,999 2
$650,000-$659,999 1
$660,000-$669,999 2
$670,000-$679,999 1
$980,000-$989,999 1
$1,020,000-$1,029,999 1
$1,460,000-$1,469,999 1
$1,950,000-$1,959,999 1
Total 712
Remuneration Report (continued)
TWENTY LARGEST REGISTERED SHAREHOLDERS AS AT 1 AUGUST 2025
Number of
shares
% of
shares
1JP Morgan Nominees Australia Limited107,849,58614.19
2Citicorp Nominees Pty Limited95,067,13212.51
3Accident Compensation Corporation - NZCSD69,201,7239.10
4HSBC Custody Nominees (Australia) Limited58,150,4117.65
5JPMorgan Chase Bank NA NZ Branch - Segregated Clients Acct - NZCSD39,223,4485.16
6HSBC Nominees A/C NZ Superannuation Fund Nominees Limited - NZCSD36,122,3624.75
7BNP Paribas Nominees (NZ) Limited - NZCSD34,108,7814.49
8HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited A/C State Street - NZCSD22,053,4412.90
9Citibank Nominees (New Zealand) Limited - NZCSD18,815,1992.48
10New Zealand Depository Nominee Limited18,420,8522.42
11Sandhurst Trustees Ltd15,682,0402.06
12BNP Paribas Nominees Pty Ltd11,202,5801.47
13ANZ Wholesale Australasian Share Fund - NZCSD9,860,7061.30
14TEA Custodians Limited Client Property Trust Account - NZCSD9,563,6131.26
15Citicorp Nominees Pty Limited7,527,0270.99
16HSBC Nominees (New Zealand) Limited - NZCSD7,010,9640.92
17Masfen Securiities Limited5,750,9860.76
18Custodial Services Limited4,862,3490.64
19FNZ Custodians Limited4,202,4900.55
20Public Trust - NZCSD4,150,0000.55
Total578,825,69076.14
Total ordinary shares on issue as at 1 August 2025 were 760,205,209 of which 986,280 were held in aggregate by the Public Trust
on behalf of eligible and future participants pursuant to various SkyCity Restricted Share Rights Plans.
The ordinary shares are quoted on both the NZX Main Board and ASX under the ticker code ‘SKC’.
No shares were held by the company directly as treasury stock (i.e. where SkyCity is the registered owner).
DISTRIBUTION OF ORDINARY SHARES AND REGISTERED SHAREHOLDINGS AS AT 1 AUGUST 2025
Number of
shareholders
Number of
shares
% of total
ordinary shares
in the company
1–1,0004,3991,716,3130.23
1,001–5,0005,61215,313,2592.01
5,001–10,0002,25016,322,0092.15
10,001–100,0002,66170,857,8149.32
> 100,000213655,995,81486.29
Total15,135760,205,209100
As at 1 August 2025, there were 3,093 shareholders (with a total of 646,897 shares) holding less than a marketable parcel of shares
under the ASX Listing Rules, based on the closing share price of A$0.90. The ASX Listing Rules define a marketable parcel of
shares as a parcel of shares of not less than A$500.
Shareholder and Bondholder Information
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceIntroductionYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial Statements
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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Remuneration
SUBSTANTIAL PRODUCT HOLDERS
The following persons had given notice as at 30 June 2025, in accordance with subpart 5 of Part 5 of the New Zealand Financial
Markets Conduct Act 2013, that they were substantial product holders in the company and held a relevant interest in the number
of ordinary shares shown below.
Date of
substantial product
holder notice
Relevant interest
in number
of shares
% of shares
held at
date of notice
Allan Gray Group6 February 2025114,518,90015.06
AustralianSuper Pty Ltd20 January 202578,258,45010.29
Accident Compensation Corporation16 May 202566,517,7258.75
Investors Mutual Limited4 August 202347,843,3146.29
Substantial product holder notices received since 30 June 2025 can be viewed at www.nzx.com/companies/SKC/announcements.
The total number of quoted voting securities of SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited as at 30 June 2025 was 760,205,209.
TWENTY LARGEST REGISTERED BONDHOLDERS AS AT 1 AUGUST 2025
Number of
bonds
% of
bonds
1Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited62,448,00035.69
2Custodial Services Limited28,595,00016.34
3FNZ Custodians Limited25,502,00014.57
4Forsyth Barr Custodians Limited7,668,0004.38
5Investment Custodial Services Limited5,615,0003.21
6JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited4,580,0002.62
7PT (Booster Investments) Nominees Limited - Retail - NZCSD3,226,0001.84
8TEA Custodians Limited Client Property Trust Account - NZCSD2,628,0001.50
9JBWere (NZ) Nominees Limited2,000,0001.14
10FNZ Custodians Limited1,880,0001.07
11ANZ Custodial Services New Zealand Limited - NZCSD1,628,0000.93
12Forstyth Barr Custodians Limited1,581,0000.90
13Westpac Banking Corporate NZ Financial Markets Group - NZCSD1,161,0000.66
14Public Trust Class 10 Nominees Limited - NZCSD1,050,0000.60
15NZX WT Nominees Limited943,0000.54
16FNZ Custodians Limited927,0000.53
17Adminis Custodial Nominees Limited850,0000.49
18Woolf Fisher Trust Incorporated815,0000.47
19Richard Barton Adams & Allison Ruth Adams750,0000.43
20Leveraged Equities Finance Limited750,0000.43
Total154,597,00088.34
On 21 May 2021, SkyCity issued 175 million unsecured, unsubordinated, fixed rate, 6 year bonds at an issue price of $1.00 per bond.
The bonds pay a fixed rate of interest of 3.02% per annum until the maturity date and are quoted on the NZX Debt Market under
the ticker code ‘SKC050’.
DISTRIBUTION OF BONDS AND REGISTERED HOLDINGS AS AT 1 AUGUST 2025
Number of
bondholders
Number of
bonds
% of total
bonds issued
1,000–5,00036177,0000.10
5,001–10,0001141,091,0000.62
10,001–100,00038212,154,0006.95
> 100,00049161,578,00092.33
Total581175,000,000100
Shareholder and Bondholder Information (continued)
DISCLOSURE OF DIRECTORS’ INTERESTS
Section 140(1) of the New Zealand Companies Act 1993 requires a director of a company to disclose certain interests. Under
section 140(2) of the Act, a director can make disclosure by giving a general notice in writing to the company of a position held by
a director in another named company or entity.
The following are particulars included in the company’s Interests Register as at 30 June 2025:
Julian Cook (Chair)
Deakin TopCo Pty LimitedDirector
Gillies McIndoe Research Institute
Trustee
1
Lightwire Advisory Board
Member
1
Motutapu Investments LimitedDirector
WEL Networks LimitedDirector
Winton Land LimitedDirector
Chad Barton
Casheaw Pty LimitedChair and Shareholder
Kate Hughes
Australian Maritime Safety Authority
Director
1
Australian Prudential Regulation AuthorityChair of Audit and Risk Committee
Department of Health (VIC)Chair of Audit and Risk Committee
Lower Murray WaterDirector
SuniTAFEDirector
Glenn Davis
Adrad Holdings LtdChair
DMAW Lawyers Pty LtdChair
Elders Limited
Director
1
iTech Minerals LtdChair
Mitolo Family FarmsDirector
Mort & Co Holdings LtdDirector
Stratco GroupChair
David Attenborough
DRAMLA Pty LtdDirector
Host-Plus Pty LimitedDirector
JJJ Family TrustTrustee
Donna Cooper
Green Sheep Consultancy LimitedDirector and Shareholder
BSP Financial Group Limited
Director
1
1. notices given by directors during the financial year ended 30 June 2025.
The following details included in the Interests Register as at 30 June 2024, or entered during the financial year ended
30 June 2025, have been removed during the financial year ended 30 June 2025:
•Chad Barton is no longer Chief Operating Officer or Chief Financial Officer of Nuix Limited and is no longer a director of its
associated subsidiaries
•Glenn Davis is no longer a director of A Raptis & Sons Group
•Kate Hughes is no longer Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee for Comcare (Australia)
Directors’ Disclosures
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceIntroductionYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
8485
DIRECTORS’ AND SENIOR MANAGERS’ INDEMNITIES
Indemnities have been given to directors and senior managers of the company and its subsidiaries to cover acts or omissions
of those persons in carrying out their duties and responsibilities as directors and senior managers. The company also provides
professional indemnity insurance cover for directors and executives acting in good faith in the conduct of the company’s affairs.
DISCLOSURE OF DIRECTORS’ INTERESTS IN SECURITIES TRANSACTIONS
Pursuant to section 148 of the New Zealand Companies Act 1993, directors have neither acquired nor disposed of any relevant
interests in SkyCity securities during the period to 30 June 2025:
Details of the directors’ relevant interests in SkyCity securities as at 30 June 2025 are outlined on page 74 of this annual report.
COMPANY DISCLOSURES
STOCK EXCHANGE LISTINGS
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited is a listed issuer with ordinary shares quoted on both the NZX Main Board and ASX (in each
case, under the ticker code ‘SKC’) and bonds quoted on the NZX Debt Market (under the ticker code ‘SKC050’).
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited has been designated as ‘Non-Standard’ by NZX Limited due to certain restrictions in the
company’s constitution. In particular, the constitution places restrictions on the transfer of shares in the company in certain
circumstances and provides that votes and other rights attached to shares may be disregarded and shares may be sold if these
restrictions are breached, as more particularly described on page 88 of this annual report.
SkyCity is listed as a ‘Foreign Exempt Listing’ on the ASX.
DIRECTORSHIPS
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited
The following persons held office as directors of SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited as at 30 June 2025:
DirectorsAppointment to Office
Julian Cook (Chair)8 June 2021
Chad Barton8 June 2021
Kate Hughes8 September 2022
Glenn Davis8 September 2022
David Attenborough3 March 2023
Donna Cooper28 September 2023
Directors’ Disclosures (continued)
Subsidiary Companies
The following persons held office as directors of subsidiaries of SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited as at 30 June 2025:
New Zealand subsidiaries
DirectorsJason Walbridge and Peter Fredricson
CompaniesCashel Asset Management Limited
Horizon Tourism (New Zealand) Limited
New Zealand International Convention
Centre Limited
Otago Casinos Limited
Sky Tower Limited
SkyCity Action Management Limited
SkyCity Auckland Holdings Limited
SkyCity Auckland Limited
SkyCity Casino Management Limited
SkyCity Hamilton Limited
SkyCity International Holdings Limited
SkyCity Investments Australia Limited
SkyCity Investments Queenstown Limited
SkyCity Management Limited
SkyCity Properties Albert St Limited
SkyCity Queenstown Limited
Overseas subsidiaries
DirectorsJason Walbridge and Peter Fredricson
CompaniesHorizon Tourism Limited
SkyCity Investment Holdings Limited
DirectorsJason Walbridge, Peter Fredricson and Avril Baynes
CompaniesSkyCity Australia Finance Pty Ltd
SkyCity Australia Pty Ltd
SkyCity Treasury Australia Pty Limited
DirectorsGlenn Davis, Julian Cook and Avril Baynes
CompanySkyCity Adelaide Pty Ltd
DirectorsSteve Salmon and Joe Borg
CompanySkyCity Malta Limited
DirectorsSteve Salmon and WH Management Limited
CompanySkyCity Malta Holdings Limited
DirectorsSteve Salmon and Jason Walbridge
CompanySkyCity Management (UK) Limited
For the financial year ended 30 June 2025, SkyCity paid director’s fees of:
•€12,000 (plus VAT) to WH Partners for professional services provided by Joe Borg in relation to his directorship of SkyCity Malta
Limited; and
•€6,000 (plus VAT) to WH Management Limited for professional services provided in relation to its directorship of SkyCity Malta
Holdings Limited.
Other than:
•director’s fees paid to Glenn Davis in his capacity as the Chair of the Board of SkyCity Adelaide Pty Ltd; and
•director’s fees paid to Julian Cook in his capacity as a director of the Board of SkyCity Adelaide Pty Ltd,
(as detailed on pages 73 - 74 of this annual report), no director’s fees were paid to, or received by, any other director of a subsidiary
company during the financial year ended 30 June 2025.
Company Disclosures
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceIntroductionYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherFinancial StatementsRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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Company Disclosures (continued)
WAIVERS FROM THE NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIAN STOCK EXCHANGES
The following waiver f rom the NZX and ASX Listing Rules was either granted and published by the NZX or ASX (as the case may
be) within, or relied upon by the company during, the 12-month period preceding the balance date:
•on 17 September 2019, the NZX granted SkyCity a waiver f rom NZX Listing Rule 8.1.5 (which provides that no benefit or right
attaching to a quoted financial product may be cancelled or varied by reason only of a transfer of that quoted financial
product) to the extent that that rule would otherwise prevent SkyCity f rom suspending voting rights or requiring a transfer
of shares in accordance with the provisions set out in the company’s constitution. Further details of those provisions are set
out below. The waiver was granted following the introduction of new NZX Listing Rules on 1 January 2019 and effectively re-
documents prior decisions of NZX Regulation in respect of the same matters.
All other waivers granted prior to the 12-month period preceding the balance date had ceased to have effect or were not relied
upon during the period.
VOTING RIGHTS ATTACHED TO SECURITIES
Each share gives the holder a right to attend and vote at a meeting of shareholders. Holders have the right to cast one vote per
share on a poll of any resolution put to the shareholders.
There are no voting rights attached to SkyCity’s debt securities although bondholders are welcome to attend the annual meeting
of shareholders.
LIMITATIONS ON ACQUISITIONS OF ORDINARY SHARES
The company’s constitution contains various provisions which are included to take into account the application of the:
•Gambling Act 2003 (New Zealand);
•Casino Act 1997 (South Australia); and
•legislation providing for the establishment, operation and regulation of casinos in any other jurisdiction in which SkyCity or any
of its subsidiaries may hold a casino licence.
SkyCity needs to ensure when it participates in gaming activities that:
•it has the power under its constitution to take such action as may be necessary to ensure that its suitability to do so in a
particular jurisdiction is not affected by the identity or actions (including share dealings) of a shareholder; and
•there are appropriate protections to ensure that persons do not gain positions of significant influence or control over SkyCity or
its business activities without obtaining any necessary statutory or regulatory approvals in those jurisdictions.
Accordingly, the constitution contains the following provisions restricting the acquisition of shares in the company to achieve this.
Clause 11.12 of the constitution provides that if a transfer of shares results in the transferee, and the persons associated with that transferee:
•holding more than 5% of the shares in SkyCity; or
•increasing their combined holding further beyond 5% if:
–they already hold more than 5% of the shares in SkyCity; and
–the transferee has not been approved by the relevant regulatory authority as an associated casino person of any casino
licence holder,
then the votes attaching to all shares held by the transferee and the persons associated with that transferee are suspended
unless and until either:
•each regulatory authority advises that approval is not needed; or
•any regulatory authority which determines that its approval is required approves the transferee, together with the persons
associated with that transferee, as an associated casino person of any applicable casino licence holder; or
•the Board of the company is satisfied that registration of the proposed transfer will not prejudice any casino licence; or
•the transferee and the persons associated with that transferee dispose of such number of SkyCity shares as will result in
their combined holding falling below 5% or, if the regulatory authorities approve in respect of the transferee and the persons
associated with that transferee a higher percentage, the lowest such percentage approved by the regulatory authorities.
If a regulatory authority does not grant its approval to the proposed transfer, SkyCity may sell such number of the shares held by
the transferee and by any persons associated with that transferee, as may be necessary to reduce their combined shareholding
to a level that will not result in the transferee and the persons associated with that transferee being an associated casino person
of that casino licence holder.
The power of sale can only be exercised if SkyCity has given one month’s notice to the transferee of its intention to exercise that
power and the transferee has not, during that one-month period, transferred the requisite number of shares in SkyCity to a
person who is not associated with the transferees.
During the financial year ended 30 June 2025, the Board considered all such transfers and was satisfied in each case that the
registration of the relevant transfer would not prejudice any casino licence.
DONATIONS
Donations of $47,636.57 were made by the company during the financial year ended 30 June 2025 ($13,791.76 during the financial
year ended 30 June 2024).
SkyCity also provides a range of in-kind donations and contributions, directly and through the SkyCity Community Trusts, to a
variety of community organisations as outlined elsewhere in this annual report.
OTHER LEGISLATION AND REQUIREMENTS
General limitations on the acquisition of securities imposed by the jurisdiction in which SkyCity is incorporated (ie. New Zealand
law) are outlined in the following paragraphs.
Other than the provisions included in the company’s constitution, the only significant restrictions or limitations in relation to the
acquisition of securities are those imposed by New Zealand laws relating to takeover, overseas investment and competition.
The New Zealand Takeovers Code creates a general rule under which the acquisition of more than 20% of the voting
rights in SkyCity, or the increase of an existing holding of 20% or more of the voting rights in SkyCity, can only occur in
certain permitted ways. These include a full takeover offer in accordance with the Takeovers Code, a partial takeover offer
in accordance with the Takeovers Code, an acquisition approved by an ordinary resolution, an allotment approved by an
ordinary resolution, a creeping acquisition (in certain circumstances), or compulsory acquisition if a shareholder holds 90%
or more of the shares in the company.
The New Zealand Overseas Investment Act 2005 and the Overseas Investment Regulations 2005 regulate certain investments
in New Zealand by overseas persons. In general terms, the consent of the New Zealand Overseas Investment Office is likely to
be required when an ‘overseas person’ acquires shares or an interest in shares in SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited that
amount to 25% or more of the shares issued by the company or, if the overseas person already holds 25% or more, the acquisition
increases that holding.
The New Zealand Commerce Act 1986 is likely to prevent a person f rom acquiring shares in SkyCity if the acquisition would have,
or would be likely to have, the effect of substantially lessening competition in a market.
ESCROW AND BUY BACK ARRANGEMENTS
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited has no securities subject to an escrow arrangement.
From time to time, the Public Trust acquires shares in the company on-market for the purposes of the company’s employee
incentive plans as detailed in the Remuneration Report in this annual report. In addition, SkyCity (or a nominee or agent of
SkyCity) may, f rom time to time, acquire existing shares in the company to satisfy its obligations to participating shareholders
under the company’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan established in February 2011.
CREDIT RATING
As at the date of this annual report, SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited has a BBB– rating (negative outlook)
f rom S&P Global Ratings.
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Environment, Social and Governance Risk covers sustainable and responsible business practice failures. SkyCity continues to
embed environmental and social risk matters, focusing on enhanced supply chain and procurement environmental and social
risk management processes. See pages 61 - 63 of this report for more information on these risks.
Cyber Risk encompasses data confidentiality/integrity impacts f rom internal/external attacks. The Group is committed to
keeping customer and sensitive information secure through ongoing programmes improving cyber security capabilities,
including malware defence, simulation exercises and penetration testing. Regular staff training includes simulated
phishing campaigns raising security awareness.
Financial Risk involves adverse financial condition variations, market fluctuations and funding uncertainties. Liquidity
risk is managed through continuous cash flow monitoring and maintaining committed credit line flexibility with various
counterparties and maturities, governed by Treasury Policy refinancing and liquidity controls regularly reported to the Board.
Operational Resilience Risk covers technology and non-technology disruption impacting critical operations. The Group
maintains comprehensive operational resilience practices supporting preparedness and response to natural disasters, fire,
emergencies and pandemics. Regular training exercises improve crisis response and recovery capability, with insurance
coverage mitigating key operational risks.
Data and Privacy Risk involves inappropriate data collection, handling and maintenance, including protection of personal
information. Policies and standards are in place to manage customer data and the safeguarding of personal information to
ensure data is used in an ethical manner in line with customer expectations.
People Risk encompasses human factor challenges including employee obligations, behaviour and performance. Policies
are in place that ensure SkyCity meets its people related obligations.
Technology Risk covers technology not meeting business needs and poor technology change delivery. The Group continues to
embed project oversight and governance improvements, including change delivery requirements and quality outcome evidence.
Health and Safety Risk involves failing to ensure customer and employee safety and wellbeing. SkyCity undertakes assurance
activities maintaining certifications and improving health and safety performance. Ongoing safety assurance assesses control
effectiveness, strengthening critical risk controls. Harm prevention programmes reduce minor injuries and promote wellness.
Third Parties Risk covers poor third-party engagement outcomes and contractual rights/obligations management failures.
Standard contractual terms are implemented with appropriate review and approval processes for proposed changes.
Strategic Risk affects or is created by strategic choices meaningfully impacting business outcomes and objectives. SkyCity
continues to invest in products, services and experiences delivering vibrant customer experiences responsibly, including
digital experience integration with land-based offerings. A Transformation Programme Office oversees strategic priority
delivery with periodic Board Transformation Sub-Committee reporting.
Further detail regarding SkyCity’s key risks are set out in Appendix B of the Equity Raising and Balance Sheet Initiatives
presentation dated 21 August 2025.
SkyCity operates in a dynamic, highly regulated environment with both risks and
opportunities. We identify, monitor and manage exposures to risk and are committed
to having risk management systems, policies, processes, and practices that support
high standards of risk governance and management, enabling SkyCity to operate
within risk appetite
RISK GOVERNANCE
The Board approves the Risk Appetite Statement and, through the Risk and Compliance Committee and Enterprise Risk
Management Framework, oversees the ongoing assessment of risk management effectiveness across the Group.
The Board has delegated authority to the Risk and Compliance Committee to review and recommend the Risk Appetite
Statement for approval, approve the Enterprise Risk Management Framework, monitor the Group’s risk profile and controls,
approve risk management f rameworks and policies, and approve risks beyond management’s discretion.
The Enterprise Risk Management Framework sets the Board’s expectations for the Group’s risk management approach
and key elements including the systems, governance, and accountabilities. The f ramework is supported by policies and
standards that set out how the Group identifies, assesses, manages and reports on material risks. The f ramework is
underpinned by SkyCity’s Code of Conduct which sets the guiding principles for how our people do things at SkyCity. The
Code connects SkyCity’s purpose, values and behaviours with key policies and the “should we?” test to help deliver fair and
ethical outcomes for SkyCity’s customers and community.
A multi-year risk transformation programme established in 2024 continues to make good progress in maturing risk
practices and addressing the identified root causes however the work to fully implement and embed will take some years.
MATERIAL RISKS
SkyCity’s risk profile establishes a common understanding of material risks, the target residual risk position and the actions
necessary to manage risk within risk appetite. Details of SkyCity’s material risk types are outlined below:
Financial Crime Risk encompasses money laundering, terrorism financing, sanctions, bribery and corruption. SkyCity is
delivering a multi-year programme to strengthen financial crime compliance and operational capabilities. Regular independent
audits review control effectiveness and findings identified have management action plans under active management. See pages
52 - 53 of this report for more information.
Regulation and Licensing Risk covers breaches of laws, regulations, licence conditions and regulatory policies (not covered
by other risk types). SkyCity values its regulatory relationships, engaging openly and transparently. Governance and risk
f rameworks in place provide regular monitoring and oversight.
Host Responsibility and Conduct Risk addresses unfair business practices, problem gambling and responsible alcohol service.
Carded play strengthens SkyCity’s control environment through automation and works alongside the multi-year programme to uplift
compliance and operational processes. Regular mystery shopping and independent audits review control effectiveness and findings
identified have management action plans under active management. See pages 50 - 51 for more information on these risks.
Gaming Risk involves financial loss f rom gaming uncertainties and outcome unpredictability. The Group maintains
governance, systems and processes detecting gaming integrity risks, ensuring fair game conduct adhering to approved
rules. Regular staff training, reporting and escalation protocols address irregularities. Gaming risk is managed through
table differentials, ongoing monitoring and industry best practice technology solutions.
Risk Management
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CHAD BARTON
Chair of the Audit Committee
JULIAN COOK
Chair of the SkyCity Board
Climate Statements
ABOUT THESE CLIMATE STATEMENTS
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited (SkyCity) is a Climate Reporting Entity (CRE) under the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013
(FMCA). SkyCity is pleased to provide its FY25 Climate Statements, comprising our second year of Climate-Related Disclosures
(CRD), covering the period 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025.
These CRD have been prepared in accordance with the requirements of the FMCA and the Aotearoa New Zealand Climate
Standards (NZ CS) 1, 2 and 3 issued by the External Reporting Board (XRB) across the four thematic areas of Governance, Strategy,
Risk Management and Metrics and Targets. The FY25 organisational boundary for these disclosures has been set with reference
to the methodology described in the Greenhouse Gas Protocol. SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited has full operational control
of the entities listed on page 87 of this FY25 Annual Report. In preparing these CRD we have opted to take the operational control
consolidation approach. SkyCity Online Casino (Malta based) has been excluded f rom the emissions inventory and disclosures as
it has been assessed as not material for FY25.
Through our disclosures, we seek to provide primary users with a better understanding of how SkyCity identifies, assesses and
manages the physical and transitional climate-related risks and opportunities that may affect SkyCity over the short, medium and
long term, as well as our approach to addressing the resulting impacts. The disclosures are designed to help primary users make
decisions about SkyCity. Primary users are defined in the NZ CS as existing and potential investors, lenders and other creditors.
This year, SkyCity has produced its CRD in a stand-alone Climate Statements section in its FY25 Annual Report, rather than fully
integrating the CRD in the Annual Report as it did in FY24. This change reflects an ongoing transition, and we anticipate that
next year the CRD may be presented as a separate, standalone report. This approach supports clearer reporting, aligns with the
regulatory regime, and ensures stakeholders have direct access to relevant climate-related information.
1. SkyCity’s FY25 GHG Inventory Management Report (available on our website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com), prepared by Toitū
Envirocare, reports the same Scope 3 sources as in prior years. These disclosures do not form part of SkyCity’s CRD and have not been subject
to assurance.
STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE
ADOPTION PROVISIONS
SkyCity has elected to use the following second year adoption provisions available under NZ CS 2:
•Adoption provision 2: Anticipated financial impacts
This adoption provision provides an exemption f rom disclosing the anticipated financial impacts of climate-related risks and
opportunities reasonably expected by the entity in the first and second reporting years.
Accordingly, these CRD do not disclose the anticipated financial impacts of climate-related risks and opportunities. SkyCity
will work towards providing these disclosures in future reporting periods, as required by the NZ CS, once the relevant data,
methodologies, and internal processes have further matured.
•Adoption provision 4: Scope 3 GHG emissions
This adoption provision provides an exemption f rom disclosing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions: gross emissions in metric
tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO
2
e) classified as Scope 3.
SkyCity has made disclosure in respect of some of its Scope 3 emissions in past annual reports, and other corporate
documents. SkyCity’s business travel and waste-related emissions were included in its annual reports since FY18, with a FY15
base year. Additional Scope 3 emission sources, such as transmission and distribution losses, were also published annually in
SkyCity’s GHG Inventory Management Report, prepared by Toitū Envirocare
1
. This year, we have changed how we present our
GHG disclosures, with all the disclosures required by NZ CS being presented within these CRD.
For clarity, this year we have elected to use adoption provision 4 for all Scope 3 emissions sources and have not disclosed any
Scope 3 categories as part of these CRD. Full Scope 3 reporting will be included as part of SkyCity’s FY26 CRD, noting that this
adoption provision will not be available for the FY26 year.
•Adoption provision 6: Comparatives for metrics
This adoption provision allows entities in their second year of reporting to provide one year of comparative information for
metrics disclosed, instead of the two years otherwise required by NZ CS 2. While more than three years of Scope 1 and 2
emissions data are available, capital expenditure metrics with climate-related benefits have only been captured for FY24 and
FY25. Accordingly we have only disclosed one comparative period. Disclosures in this area will be further enhanced in future
reporting periods.
•Adoption provision 7: Analysis of trends
This adoption provision provides an exemption f rom disclosing an analysis of the main trends evident f rom a comparison of
each metric f rom previous reporting periods to the current reporting period in an entity’s first reporting period and second
reporting period.
Whilst SkyCity relies on this adoption provision, it has provided some trend analysis for selected metrics where data allows for
meaningful comparison between previous and current financial years.
With these adoption provisions applied, SkyCity’s CRD comply with the mandatory requirements of the NZ CS.
This Climate Statement was approved by the Board of Directors of SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited (the Board)
on 29 September 2025.
For and on behalf of SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited.
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Climate Statements
Climate Statements (continued)
IMPORTANT NOTE
These Climate Statements contain SkyCity’s second annual CRD, prepared in accordance with the NZ CS. The information
presented reflects SkyCity’s current understanding of climate-related risks, opportunities, impacts, and strategies as at the date
of publication. These disclosures are based on evolving assessments, early-stage methodologies, and SkyCity’s judgements,
opinions, and assumptions - many of which rely on incomplete, estimated, or developing data.
SkyCity acknowledges that climate-related risk management is an emerging discipline, and the methodologies for measuring
greenhouse gas emissions, assessing risks, and modelling future scenarios are subject to ongoing refinement and uncertainty.
SkyCity’s CRD, including forward-looking statements about targets, scenarios, ambitions, transition planning, risks, and
opportunities, are not guarantees of future performance and are subject to significant risks, uncertainties, and assumptions.
Actual outcomes may differ materially f rom those described due to changes in data quality, regulatory developments,
economic conditions, technological advancements, and other factors outside SkyCity’s control. We have sought to provide
accurate information, but we caution reliance being placed on representations that are necessarily subject to significant risks,
uncertainties and/or assumptions.
SkyCity is committed to continuously improving the quality and completeness of its data, methodologies, and reporting
practices as climate-related practices evolve. SkyCity may revise, update, or restate information in these Climate Statements
in future reports as its understanding and capabilities develop. We have based those statements and opinions on reasonable
information we know at the date of publication. We do not:
•represent that those statements and opinions will not change or will remain correct after publishing this report, or
•promise to revise or update those statements and opinions if events or circumstances change or unanticipated events happen
after publishing this report.
This disclaimer should be read in conjunction with the explanations of methodologies, assumptions, and limitations set out
elsewhere in this report. These CRD do not constitute an offer, invitation, or recommendation to invest in SkyCity or any of its
securities, nor do they provide legal, financial, tax, or other professional advice.
SkyCity (including its directors, officers, and employees) does not accept any liability for loss arising directly or indirectly f rom
reliance on the information contained in this section, to the fullest extent permitted by law. For detailed information on SkyCity’s
financial performance and risk management, please refer to the rest of SkyCity’s Annual Report.
GOVERNANCE OVERSIGHT OF CLIMATE RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES
IDENTITY OF GOVERNANCE BODY AND GOVERNANCE OVERSIGHT
The SkyCity Board oversees and is ultimately responsible for setting SkyCity’s strategy, risk management and governance
f rameworks. This includes the governance of Group-wide risks and opportunities relating to climate change. The Board
operates under a written Charter outlining its roles and responsibilities and setting out the relationship between the Board and
management. In FY25 the Board resolved to amend its Charter to expressly reflect its role in climate governance, and the role
that the Audit Committee has in supporting the Board in approval of our CRD.
Our governance f ramework facilitates consideration of climate matters through established processes and accountabilities. The
Board delegates certain functions to various Board Committees. It has delegated oversight and management of climate-related
risks and opportunities as part of our enterprise risk f ramework to the Risk & Compliance Committee. In addition, the Board has
delegated reviewing, and recommending the approval of, SkyCity’s CRD to the Audit Committee.
Refer to SkyCity’s Board Committees on page 68 of the FY25 Annual Report for the membership of each committee.
The following figure shows the organisational structure as it relates to the oversight and management of climate-related risks
and opportunities.
MANAGEMENT
SKYCITY BOARD
Ultimate responsibility for oversight and implementation of SkyCity’s sustainability strategy,
including ESG risks and opportunities
SUSTAINABILITY TEAM
Supports the above management groups with the identification, assessment and management of
climate-related risks and opportunities
OUR WORKFORCE
Proactively identifying, assessing and managing ESG risks and opportunities
AUDIT COMMITTEE
(STANDING COMMITTEE)
Assists the Board in fulfilling its responsibilities
relating to reporting
RISK & COMPLIANCE COMMITTEE
(STANDING COMMITTEE)
Assists the Board in fulfilling its responsibilities relating to
risk assessment, management and monitoring, along with
ongoing regulatory and other legal compliance
BOARD COMMITTEES
ESG GOVERNANCE GROUP
Assists the SLT in environmental
and social matters, responsible for
embedding ESG considerations into
SkyCity’s business processes and
decision making
SENIOR LEADERSHIP TEAM (SLT)
Promotes and champions
environmental considerations
through its business decisions
and actions
SENIOR MANAGEMENT
RISK COMMITTEE
Execution of SkyCity’s risk
management strategy, leading the
management and oversight of ESG
risk as one of the material risks
across SkyCity
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Climate Statements
CLIMATE REPORTING PROCESS AND FREQUENCY
The Board meets at least six times per year, or more f requently as required. In FY25, climate-related matters were considered at five
Board meetings. This included providing the Board with an update on SkyCity’s CRD strategy and its FY25 sustainability focus areas in
October 2024 and subsequently reporting to the Board as part of the CEO’s Report in December 2024, February 2025 and April 2025.
In June 2025 a separate Board paper on the FY25 CRD was prepared and a Board climate-related disclosure education session was
held as part of the Board meeting in June 2025. The education session was delivered by Chapman Tripp and provided a ref resh on the
climate-related disclosure regime, potential liability and anticipated reforms.
As noted on page 95, the Audit Committee assists the Board to discharge its governance role by having primary responsibility for
ensuring compliance of SkyCity’s CRD with the legislation and the NZ CS..
The Board Risk & Compliance Committee also supports the Board in its governance of risk. The Risk & Compliance
Committee provides governance oversight of overarching Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) risk management.
This committee reviewed and provided feedback on the draft Risk Appetite Statement (which included ESG risk) in February
2025, prior to its approval by the Board in April 2025. It is anticipated that in FY26 as part of our sustainability strategy review, a
broader range of reporting on climate risks and opportunities will be provided to this Committee, reflecting ongoing maturity
of ESG risk management.
BOARD SKILLS AND COMPETENCIES
SkyCity uses a skills matrix to ensure its Board and, by extension its committees, has an appropriate range of skills and
competencies to govern SkyCity and to identify any areas for upskilling. Skills and competencies that SkyCity considers relevant
to ensuring appropriate oversight of climate-related risks and opportunities for our business include financial and legal expertise,
governance, regulatory and property experience.
The skills matrix is included at page 66 of our FY25 Annual Report. For FY25 we have included Climate Governance as a
competency that each Board member has self-assessed themselves against. The results of this self-assessment are included on
page 66 of this FY25 Annual Report. Given the increasing focus on climate change management, the Board continues to build
its sustainability and climate expertise through ongoing education, climate-related training sessions with external experts as
well as receiving and discussing sustainability updates with management. This is in addition to the Board’s broader skills and
competencies across related disciplines including governance, regulation and property.
Formal internal climate-related training was undertaken by SkyCity directors in FY25, focused on a ref resh of the climate-related
disclosure regime and areas of future reform. In addition to the regular CEO updates that include sustainability, two board
papers were provided with further background information and building up broader capability on climate-related disclosures
and transition planning.
CONSIDERATION OF CLIMATE-RELATED RISKS IN STRATEGY
The Board incorporates material risks into its strategic oversight and planning through the Enterprise Risk Management
process. At a high level, this has included an annual update on climate-related risks and opportunities, as part of the overall ESG
risk. However, besides reporting on the need for emissions reduction as part of SkyCity’s Sustainability Implementation Plan
FY23 -FY25, detailed climate-related risks and opportunities have not been discussed during FY25. The Environmental pillar of
our Sustainability Implementation Plan FY23 - FY25 is provided on page 61 of our FY25 Annual Report. As noted on page 44 of
our FY25 Annual Report, the sustainability strategy will be ref reshed in FY26 and presented to the Board for its endorsement. It
is anticipated that this ref resh will include consideration of climate-related risks.
One of the strategic pillars of our FY25 strategy includes core business optimisation. SkyCity implemented a decarbonisation
strategy in 2022 – using the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) f ramework – prior to the introduction
of the climate-related disclosure f ramework. This strategy reflects our commitment to environmental stewardship. As such it
responds to climate risks and opportunities faced by SkyCity – although it was not developed within the current climate-related
disclosure f ramework. This decarbonisation strategy is an input into our consideration of asset optimisation.
Climate Statements (continued)
SETTING AND OVERSEEING CLIMATE METRICS AND TARGETS
The current Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) certified Scope 1 and 2 emissions reduction targets were developed by
management in FY18 and noted by the Board at that time. These targets were incorporated in the Environmental pillar of the
SkyCity Sustainability Implementation Plan FY23-FY25, found on page 61 of our FY25 Annual Report. The SkyCity Board approves
the Sustainability Implementation Plan, whilst management is responsible for its execution.
Monitoring progress against the targets and recording metric data is currently delegated to the GM Finance NZ, reporting to the
CFO. The GM Finance NZ also reports to the ESG Governance Group on progress against approved targets. This progress is also
reported to the Board via the CEO Report.
In April 2025 our Sustainability Manager, who reported to the GM Finance NZ, resigned. Furthermore, a newly created executive
role the Chief Legal, Governance and External Relations Officer was created, with this role being filled at the beginning of
March 2025. These changes prompted the CEO to consider the placement of the sustainability portfolio, with a decision taken
that sustainability responsibilities will transition to the Chief Legal, Governance and External Relations Officer. A sustainability
strategic ref resh, including considering climate metrics and targets will be undertaken in FY26, under this changed leadership. A
GM Sustainability has been recruited to lead this work and will commence in November 2025.
Climate-related metrics and targets are not currently linked to executive performance or remuneration.
MANAGEMENT’S ROLE IN CLIMATE-RELATED RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES
The Board delegates management responsibility for SkyCity’s risks and implementing its strategy to the CEO. The CEO further
assigns responsibility to relevant members of the executive through the Senior Leadership Team, being the group responsible for
promoting and championing environmental considerations through its business decisions and actions. The Senior Leadership
Team and other relevant senior business leaders also participated in the Transition Plan workshop in Q4 2025, which focused on
reviewing the FY25 climate-related risks and opportunities, and relevant high priority transition planning areas.
In addition to the Senior Leadership Team, there are two further management groups involved in assessing and managing
climate-related risks and opportunities.
First, the ESG Governance Group chaired by the GM Finance NZ and comprised of the Senior Leadership Team, the Sustainability
Manager and additional personnel f rom the risk management team. In FY25 the ESG Governance Group has been operating
under draft Terms of Reference, which are intended to be formalised in FY26.
The ESG Governance Group is responsible for embedding environmental and social considerations into SkyCity’s business
processes and decision making, identifying and assessing risk, setting environmental and social priorities, and tracking
and reporting progress against these to the Senior Management Risk Committee and Board Audit Committee, with these
Committees reporting through to the Board.
The ESG Governance Group aims to meet four times a year and provides updates to the CEO and to Board committees as
required. In FY25 the ESG Governance Group met three times and provided input into Board papers in November 2024,
March 2025 and May 2025.
Second, the Senior Management Risk Committee, chaired by the Chief Risk Officer, and comprised of the Senior Leadership
team, is tasked with overseeing the effectiveness and implementation of the Enterprise Risk Management Framework, execution
of the risk management strategy, leading the management and oversight of material risks across SkyCity and shaping and
promoting strong risk culture.
Leveraging SkyCity’s Risk Taxonomy, a material risk review is conducted annually by the executive owner of each risk, in
conjunction with the risk management team. This includes review of the ESG risk. Updates of this review are provided to the
Senior Management Risk Committee and Board Risk & Compliance Committee.
The management groups outlined above are also supported by the Sustainability Team, led by the GM Finance NZ. The
Sustainability Team assists with the identification and management of more specific climate-related risks within the SkyCity
business. As noted above, a new GM Sustainability has been recruited to lead a sustainability strategic ref resh at SkyCity for
FY26. They will commence their role in November 2025.
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Climate Statements
STRATEGY
BUSINESS MODEL AND STRATEGIC PILLARS
SkyCity operates integrated entertainment precincts in New Zealand and Australia, comprising casinos, hotels, restaurants,
bars, and online gaming platforms. SkyCity’s business model is designed to deliver vibrant, customer-centric experiences while
maintaining operational excellence and resilience.
Our FY25 strategy has been to learn f rom the past, make the most of now and position ourselves for the future. At the heart of
this FY25 strategy are three key priorities (Strategic Plays), supported by three strategic enablers (Critical Enablers) that have
guided our focus and decision-making during FY25:
STRATEGIC PLAYS
Core Business Optimisation
Make the most of our existing assets
to help grow market share and invest
in our future
Customer Focus
Engage our customers with amazing
experiences, driving preference
and loyalty
Online Gaming
Use our land-based presence to
become the online local hero
CRITICAL ENABLERS
Risk Transformation
We act with integrity in all aspects of
our business and are leaders in host
responsibility and preventing
financial crime
People & Culture
We bring our best every day, fostering
an inclusive culture and creating
meaningful experiences for our
customers, people, and communities
Digital Transformation
Our systems and platforms support
a clear view of our customer, are
seamless, fast and efficient
Further detail on SkyCity’s strategy can be found in the Strategy section on page 22 of the FY25 Annual Report.
The work undertaken in sustainability, particularly in identifying and managing climate-related risks and opportunities,
supports these strategic objectives by ensuring long-term value creation, regulatory compliance, and resilience in a changing
environment. These risks and opportunities are particularly relevant to our Core Business Optimisation and Customer Focus
Strategic Plays.
INTEGRATION OF CLIMATE-RELATED RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES
In the last few years, SkyCity’s approach to climate-related risks and opportunities has primarily been considered as part of its
sustainability strategy, rather than being part of its overall corporate strategy formation process. While SkyCity has implemented
a decarbonisation strategy and pursued initiatives to reduce environmental harm, including energy efficiency upgrades,
waste minimisation, and emissions reduction, these actions have been driven primarily by a commitment to environmental
stewardship, rather than a systematic assessment of climate-related risks and opportunities.
Although climate-related risks have been recognised in the Risk Taxonomy as a material risk under the ESG risk category,
climate-related risks and opportunities have not yet been fully integrated into SkyCity’s core risk management and strategic
planning processes. This financial year, as part of the transition planning workshop, senior leadership assessed SkyCity’s climate
risks (including transition and physical risks) and climate-related opportunities in alignment with evolving regulatory and
stakeholder expectations.
In FY25, SkyCity completed a high-level review of its key New Zealand assets, including decarbonisation risks and opportunities,
to inform long term capital investment planning. The results of this analysis are still in the process of being finalised and
accordingly have not yet been integrated into SkyCity’s capital investment planning process. It is intended that this will be
refined in FY26. SkyCity Adelaide is also completing this process in FY26.
Climate Statements (continued)
As the current sustainability strategy ends at the close of FY25, the SkyCity Senior Leadership Team is planning a sustainability
strategy review for FY26 and will work to strengthen the integration of climate-related risks and opportunities by:
•Deepening scenario analysis and undertaking a renewed materiality assessment;
•Further implementing climate-related risk management practices into business unit activities;
•Considering opportunities that climate change presents and how these might be considered as part of our strategic
planning processes;
•Improving the alignment of decarbonisation and sustainability initiatives with climate risks, ensuring that actions taken are
informed by both environmental impact and the potential financial, operational, and strategic implications of climate change;
and
•Refining our transition plan which connects climate-related risks and opportunities directly to business strategy, capital
allocation, and long-term resilience.
This shift will ensure that climate-related risks and opportunities are not only a component of SkyCity’s sustainability agenda but
are also systematically managed as business risks and value drivers across all lines of business and management tiers, in line with
best practice and regulatory requirements.
SCENARIO ANALYSIS
Overview
For FY25 the scenarios remain consistent with those published in FY24, ensuring a stable f ramework for ongoing assessment
and strategic alignment.
As such, SkyCity’s scenario analysis continues to use the same three distinct pathways to assess climate-related risks and
opportunities as were identified last year. SkyCity has used the climate scenarios developed for the New Zealand tourism sector
by the Aotearoa Circle – the Tourism Sector Climate Change Scenarios (available at www.theaotearoacircle.nz/focus-areas/climate/
climate-scenarios). The process followed for selecting these scenarios was set out in pages 75 and 76 of SkyCity’s FY24 Annual
Report (available in the Investor Centre section of the company’s website at www.skycityentertainmentgroup.com). SkyCity still
considers this f ramework appropriate on the basis that its business relies on the success and sustainability of the New Zealand
tourism sector, both domestically and internationally.
The Tourism Sector Climate Change Scenarios developed by the Aotearoa Circle consist of:
•Hiahia/Orderly 1.5°C: Coordinated global policy action limiting warming to 1.5°C, featuring rapid decarbonisation, stable
regulations and accelerated green technology adoption. (Aotearoa Circle: Tourism Sector Climate Change Scenario page 24 – 28)
•Pokanoa/Disorderly 2°C: Delayed/f ragmented policy responses causing volatile market shifts, supply chain disruptions and
abrupt regulatory changes. (Aotearoa Circle: Tourism Sector Climate Change Scenario page 29 – 33)
•Wharewera/Hot House >3°C: Minimal climate action leading to severe physical impacts (e.g., extreme weather, resource
scarcity) and systemic economic instability. (Aotearoa Circle: Tourism Sector Climate Change Scenario page 34 – 38)
Each scenario presents detailed narratives and quantitative assumptions about operational scope, policy development,
macroeconomic and energy trends, afforestation, nature-based solutions, and technological assumptions, fulfilling all the
climate scenario disclosure and pathway description criteria set out under NZ CS 3 and XRB guidance. This detail is provided on
the Aotearoa Circle website linked above at the pinpoint references provided.
Climate scenarios process
Over the past year, SkyCity has continued to develop its approach to scenario analysis as part of its climate strategy. Building on
the work undertaken in FY24, the Senior Leadership Team, including the Managing Director for Adelaide, attended a workshop
where SkyCity’s chosen climate scenarios were reviewed. Whilst the scenario analysis process was not integrated within SkyCity’s
broader strategic planning process, this activity reinforced leadership’s understanding of the potential physical and transition
risks outlined in the scenarios and provided an opportunity to identify additional climate-related risks and opportunities that had
not previously been considered. The Audit Committee also reviews SkyCity’s scenarios as part of its review of the CRD.
As a result, SkyCity has expanded its risk and opportunity mapping to better reflect the evolving climate context, including
emerging regulatory, operational, and reputational considerations. The insights gained f rom this scenario analysis have also
been integrated into the early stages of SkyCity’s approach to transition planning, serving as a critical data point for shaping
SkyCity’s response to climate change. Despite this, we acknowledge that more work is needed in this area, in particular to tailor
the Aotearoa Circle’s Tourism Sector Climate Change Scenario’s more specifically to each of SkyCity’s New Zealand businesses.
SkyCity is also yet to conduct a scenario analysis specific to its Adelaide business and is planning to complete this in conjunction
with the compliance obligations arising in respect of the Australian Climate Standards reporting requirements.
With significant business changes on the horizon, in particular the anticipated opening of the New Zealand International
Convention Centre (NZICC), these scenario-driven insights will be required to further inform both short-term resilience measures
and the refinement of a longer-term transition plan. It is expected that this will be finalised in the coming financial year as part of
the overall sustainability strategy review.
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Climate Statements
TIME HORIZONS
Introduction
SkyCity recognises that climate change presents a broad range of risks and opportunities for its business, customers, and
communities. In FY25, SkyCity has expanded its assessment of climate-related risks and opportunities, incorporating new insights
f rom senior leadership discussions, scenario analysis and feedback f rom internal resource. This updated disclosure reflects a
clearer approach to time horizons (short, medium, long term), scenario alignment and the integration of newly identified risks,
including those related to climate migration, geopolitical conflict, economic resilience and regional vulnerabilities, and aligned
with the operational realities of the casino industry.
DEFINITION OF TIME HORIZONS
Short term: 1 – 5 years:
Up to 2030
This horizon aligns with immediate
business planning and SkyCity’s recent
approach to sustainability strategy
cycles (e.g., the last sustainability
strategy was set for a 3-year term). It
allows the company to assess risks and
opportunities that are immediately
actionable and relevant to current
business planning, enabling rapid
response to emerging regulatory,
market, or operational changes
Medium Term: 5 – 10 years:
2030 - 2035
This period covers most business
cycles, major investment and
regulatory shifts. It is appropriate for
assessing risks and opportunities that
may take several years to materialise
but are still within the scope of current
strategic planning and asset lifecycles
Long Term: 10 – 60 years:
2035 - 2085
Aligns with the duration of casino
licences and the expected operational
life of key assets. Ensures that long-
term physical and transition risks
are considered in line with SkyCity’s
legal right to operate
SkyCity’s approach to defining Long
Term time horizons for climate-related
risk and opportunity assessment is
aligned with the duration of its land-
based casino licences f rom the date
of issuance, and any renewals as
appropriate. This reflects the periods
over which SkyCity has the legal right to
operate its venues and make long-term
investments. The current licence expiry
dates for each casino site can be found
in the Year in Review section (pages
12 - 16) of our FY25 Annual Report
The time horizons set out above ensure that both immediate and emerging climate risks and opportunities are considered in
short, medium and long-term business decisions. It also aligns with the concept that physical risks (e.g., chronic climate impacts)
often require a longer-term analysis (10+ years), while transition risks (e.g., policy changes, market shifts) are typically more
relevant in the short to medium term. These risks may not be fully evident in the short or medium term but are critical for long-
term resilience and value creation and are expected to become articulated in more detail as part of the strategic review in FY26.
Climate Statements (continued)
CURRENT CLIMATE-RELATED IMPACTS
Physical Climate–Related Impacts
SkyCity did not experience any material physical climate-related impacts during FY25. Our operations and assets were not
materially affected by extreme weather events or other acute physical climate risks.
While not considered material, recent significant weather events have contributed to industry-wide pressure on insurance
premiums. In FY25, SkyCity experienced minor adjustments in insurance premiums and policy conditions, but the financial
impact remained immaterial. SkyCity continues to monitor evolving insurance market dynamics and their potential implications
for its property portfolio and operational resilience.
Accordingly, there are no material current financial impacts to disclose in relation to physical climate risks for the current
reporting period.
This assessment is based on:
•Daily monitoring of our locations using climate alerts f rom weather providers;
•Ongoing insurance premium review; and
•Materiality threshold: >~$6.4m or ~5% of earnings and in accordance with the NZ CS.
Transitional Climate-Related Impacts
SkyCity acknowledges the importance of identifying and managing transitional climate-related impacts and ongoing risks. The
following are examples of core, transition impacts relevant to our operations identified in FY25. SkyCity has determined that, as
at the reporting date, the financial impacts of these transition impacts during FY25 were not material.
•Regulatory changes: SkyCity is exposed to evolving climate-related regulations, particularly those influencing the cost of
carbon in the future and operational compliance. The New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) remains a driver of
transition risk, with ongoing reforms and adjustments to unit supply and pricing expected to increase carbon costs over time.
While SkyCity itself is not a direct participant required to surrender New Zealand ETS units, the scheme’s pricing mechanism
affects the businesses that provide energy, goods, and services to SkyCity—such as electricity generators, fuel suppliers, and
other vendors. There were no material financial impacts f rom regulatory changes during FY25.
•Market shifts: Shifts in consumer and stakeholder expectations, including demand for more sustainable products and services.
One example of this, within the events industry, and critical to NZICC’s success, is the growing demand for low-carbon event
design and sustainable catering. SkyCity is continuing to respond by integrating sustainability considerations into its venue
offerings and investing in initiatives that reduce its environmental footprint. These investments were not material in FY25 but
support SkyCity’s long-term alignment with market trends.
•Technological developments: The need to invest in new technologies or inf rastructure to reduce emissions and adapt to a
low-carbon economy. SkyCity has continued to advance its emission reduction plan throughout FY25. In FY25, the removal
of natural gas in the production kitchen marked a significant milestone in SkyCity’s decarbonisation strategy. This initiative
enhances operational efficiency and resilience while supporting broader sustainability goals. While the financial impact of
such investments was not material in FY25, they contribute to reducing SkyCity’s environmental footprint.
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Climate Statements
Risk ThemeTypeRisk/OpportunitySummary of Anticipated Impact for SkyCityMitigants (in place or planned)Relevant Time HorizonRelevant Climate Scenarios
Market RiskTransitionEconomic volatility due to climate
change (e.g., GDP growth, wealth
balance, migration)
Climate change may impact global and local economic growth,
affecting customer spending and tourism. Climate-induced
migration could increase population and customer base, but
also strain inf rastructure and resources.
Continued regular economic scenario planning; developing
flexible business models; continued community
engagement; improved market research.
Medium / LongHot House >3°C (high migration,
economic disruption)
Disorderly 2°C (volatile growth)
Climate-induced migration and
population change
Increased immigration due to climate-induced migration could
impact service demand and operational capacity.
Developing scalable service models; continued workforce
planning; continued community partnerships.
Medium / LongHot House >3°C (significant migration)
Disorderly 2°C (moderate migration)
Strategic
Risk
TransitionIncreased geopolitical conflict due
to climate change induced resource
scarcity and competition over food,
water and arable land
Indirect impact through supply chain disruption, economic
volatility, and customer sentiment, leading to operational
disruptions and increased cost.
Continued sourcing diversification; continued financial
resilience planning; planning more detailed scenario analysis.
Short / Medium / LongDisorderly 2°C (trade instability)
Hot House >3°C (global instability)
Impact on long-term business
viability and competitiveness
Climate change may require shifts in business models,
products, and services to remain viable and competitive
under new regulations and market conditions.
Continued strategic planning; considering innovation;
developing transition plans; monitoring emerging risks.
Medium / LongAll scenarios (varying degrees of
transformation required)
Operational
Risk
PhysicalExtreme weather (electrical storms,
flooding, seasonal shifts)
Disruption to operations, property damage, impact on
customer access and staff safety.
Enhancing disaster recovery and business continuity plans;
continuing property resilience upgrades; continuing staff
training; reviewing insurance coverage.
Short / Medium / LongHot House >3°C (increased
f requency / severity)
Disorderly 2°C (moderate increase)
TransitionFood supply chain disruption
(agricultural impacts)
Food & beverage shortages, vendor instability, staffing
challenges due to climate impacts on agriculture.
Diversifying supplier base; focusing on local sourcing;
building menu flexibility.
MediumHot House >3°C (severe disruption)
Disorderly 2°C (moderate disruption)
NZICC as Civil Emergency locationIncreased demand for emergency preparedness, staffing,
and reporting.
Disaster recovery planning; continuing staff training;
updating emergency protocols.
Medium / LongHot House >3°C (higher
emergency f requency)
Increased risk of water scarcity and
cost
Increased cost and operational disruption in critical functions
(e.g., hotel supply, laundry).
Implementing water efficiency measures; considering
in-house water supply options; continuing supplier
engagement.
Medium / LongHot House >3°C (water scarcity)
Disorderly 2°C (moderate risk)
Technological
Risk
TransitionInability to adopt or integrate
new technologies needed for
decarbonisation and
energy efficiency
With the pace of technological change accelerating, failure
to adopt new technologies could result in higher costs,
non-compliance with regulatory requirements, and lost
competitive advantage.
Ongoing technology assessment; reviewing investment
in R&D; building partnerships with technology providers;
monitoring of industry best practices.
Short / MediumHot House >3°C (rapid technology
change, high expectations)
Disorderly 2°C (volatile market, uncertain
adoption pace)
Regulatory
Risk
TransitionRegulatory and legislative changes
(carbon pricing, taxation, reporting)
Increased compliance costs, potential for new taxes, and
operational restrictions.
Regulatory monitoring; participating in policy advocacy; pursuing
compliance training; scenario-based financial modelling.
Short / Medium / LongOrderly 1.5°C (stable, predictable)
Disorderly 2°C (volatile, unpredictable)
PhysicalInsurance premiums and rising
associated costs
Increased costs as insurers respond to climate risk.Continue risk mitigation; reviewing alternative insurance
strategies and self-insurance options.
Medium / LongHot House >3°C (high premiums)
Disorderly 2°C (moderate increase)
Financial
Risk
TransitionIncreased cost of carbon (FY26+) as
governments globally introduce taxes,
trading schemes or additional fees
Potential introduction of carbon pricing increases operational
costs especially for carbon-intensive operations.
Continuing emissions reduction initiatives; reviewing
carbon offset strategies.
Medium / LongOrderly 1.5°C (early adoption)
Disorderly 2°C (volatile pricing)
Sudden volatile or potentially
uneven climate scenarios leading
to unexpected expenditure
Climate impacts may affect revenue, costs, and profitability,
requiring robust financial planning.
Continuing financial modelling; planning more detailed
scenario analysis; reviewing liquidity management.
Medium / LongAll scenarios (varying financial impacts)
OpportunityTransitionPro-actively accelerating the move to
renewable energy and more energy
efficient operations
Reduced emissions, cost savings, and enhanced
brand reputation.
Continuing Investment in energy-efficient technologies;
reviewing renewable energy procurement.
Short / Medium / LongOrderly 1.5°C (high return on
investment (ROI))
Disorderly 2°C (moderate ROI)
Improve sustainable building
performance and operations
Improved resilience, customer appeal, and
regulatory compliance.
Considering green building standards where appropriate;
continuing sustainable procurement; continuing
staff training.
Medium / LongOrderly 1.5°C (market leadership)
Disorderly 2°C (competitive advantage)
Prioritising strengthening
relationships with communities and
regulators focused on environmental
stewardship collaboration
Collective adaptation planning, increased community
engagement, resilience and leading to continued social
licence to operate.
Continuing community partnerships; continuing
transparent reporting; continuing stakeholder engagement.
Short / Medium / LongAll scenarios (enhanced reputation)
Innovation in food and beverage to
create more resilience
Adaptation to changing supply chains and
customer preferences.
Menu innovation; focusing on local sourcing; improving
sustainable practices.
Medium / LongHot House >3°C (necessity)
Disorderly 2°C (opportunity)
CLIMATE-RELATED RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES
Building on last year’s disclosed climate-related risks and opportunities, and as part of the further review with the wider senior
executive team, SkyCity’s climate-related risks and opportunities have been updated and linked to the relevant climate scenarios
and time horizons.
Climate Statements (continued)
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Climate Statements
TRANSITION PLAN
Purpose and Scope
Our Transition Plan outlines the actions, milestones, and resources required to manage climate-related risks and opportunities,
in alignment with the NZ CS and the expectations of our stakeholders. In FY25 the focus has been to build on our Sustainability
Implementation Plan, expand our scenario analysis awareness and application and start to integrate transition planning into
our business. We acknowledge that SkyCity is in the early stages of this journey, and expect our climate initiatives to grow as our
organisation, executive team, and board mature in this area. It is also intended that this Transition Plan will be refined as part of
our FY26 sustainability strategy review.
Strategic Alignment
SkyCity’s transition is underpinned by our business strategy,
including operational excellence, sustainable operations,
and stakeholder value creation. SkyCity has been measuring
and reporting carbon emissions for ten years and was one
of the first companies in New Zealand to set GHG emissions
reduction targets.
SkyCity’s transition initiatives, including our long-standing
emission reduction plan, are executed through our established
capital deployment and funding processes, rather than
through a separate climate-specific investment f ramework.
In recent years, we have allocated dedicated financial
investment budgets to upgrade end of life inf rastructure.
Decarbonisation is a factor that is considered as part of these
projects. One example of this is the removal of natural gas
f rom our Auckland production kitchen in January 2025. These
investments have been prioritised within our standard capital
planning cycles, ensuring that climate-related transition
objectives are embedded in our broader business strategy.
In addition, we have implemented supplier engagement
programs, such as the use of EcoVadis, to influence and
monitor the sustainability performance of our supply chain.
In FY25 across New Zealand, SkyCity completed capital
projects worth $17.8 million that included climate-related
benefits. This compares to $7.5 million in FY24. The climate-
related benefits relate to energy, gas and water efficiency f rom
inf rastructure replacements.
The planned sustainability strategy review in FY26 will
further review how we can add climate assessments into our
investment pillars and strategy, ensuring that future capital
deployment is increasingly informed by our climate risk and
opportunity analysis.
Scenario-based Planning
SkyCity will periodically re-assess and identify the potential
impacts of climate scenarios on our operations, assets, and
supply chains over the short, medium, and long term. This
will be an integral part of our climate risks and opportunities
identification and management process, in line with the
risk management f ramework. These scenarios guide our
understanding of the potential impacts on our business
model, assets, supply chain, and customer base and help us
identify “no-regrets” actions that are robust across a range of
future outcomes. Please refer to the ‘Scenario Analysis’ section
on page 99 for detail on the scenarios used.
KEY MILESTONES IN SKYCITY’S HISTORY OF
ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP
FY15
First Carbon Emissions measurement and reporting
FY18
Second organisation in New Zealand to become
Toitū Net Carbon-Zero certified via offsetting all New
Zealand measured carbon emissions (not including
all Scope 3 carbon emissions)
FY19
SkyCity Adelaide is included, alongside the New Zealand
business, in SkyCity’s Toitū Net Carbon-Zero certification
via offsetting all measured carbon emissions (not
including all Scope 3 carbon emissions)
FY22
SkyCity moves away f rom offsetting to focused
investments into carbon reduction initiatives
FY24
SkyCity publishes its first Climate Statements under
the climate-related disclosure regime
Climate Statements (continued)
Key Transition Actions and Milestones Approach
This Transition Plan approach reflects SkyCity’s commitment to a robust, transparent, and realistic response to climate change,
in line with regulatory requirements. This plan will be further developed in FY26, alongside SkyCity’s overall business transition
planning and following our sustainability strategy review.
AreaFocus
Programme
focusTransition actionsStatus FY25
Time
Horizons
Risk/Opportunity
Addressed
Emissions
Reduction
and Energy
Transition
Scope 1 and
2 Emissions
Reduce
absolute
Scope 1 and
2 emissions
by 25% by
2025 (f rom a
2015 baseline),
with further
targets of 38%
reduction by
2030 and 73%
by 2050
Energy Efficiency: Implement
LED lighting upgrades, smart
HVAC systems, and improved
energy monitoring across all
precincts
OngoingShort
Regulatory and
legislative changes,
cost of carbon,
energy efficiency,
sustainable
building and
operations
Renewable Energy: Assess
feasibility of onsite solar PV and
procure renewable electricity
through power purchase
agreements
Feasibility study
completed for New
Zealand
Medium
Asset Decarbonisation: Phase
out gas-fired equipment and
transition to low-emission
alternatives in new and
refurbished buildings
Completion of several
projects, including
production kitchen
remodelling
in Auckland
Short /
Medium
Scope 3
Emissions
Establish
a baseline
for Scope 3
emissions in
FY26, with a
view to setting
reduction
targets by FY27
Engage key suppliers to
measure and reduce their
emissions
OngoingShort /
Medium
Regulatory and
legislative changes,
supply chain
disruption
Integrate climate considerations
into procurement
Ongoing.
Integrated into RFP and
contracting processes
Short
Operational
Resilience
and
Adaptation
Physical risk
mitigation
Disaster
recovery and
business
continuity
Enhance plans for extreme
weather events (e.g., flooding,
storms, power outages) and
ensure critical inf rastructure
resilience
Reviewed as part of
operational resilience
risk deep dive in FY25
Short
Extreme
weather
Water
management
Implement water-efficient
technologies and practices
to reduce consumption and
manage scarcity risks
Water saving devices
installed across
Auckland bathrooms
in FY25
Medium
Water scarcity
(consumption)
Supply chain
resilience
Diversify suppliers and
strengthen contingency
planning for climate-related
disruptions
OngoingShort
Supply chain
disruption
Adaptation
for NZICC
Civil
emergency
location
readiness
Investigate and plan for the
NZICC as a civil emergency
location, including staffing,
equipment, and emissions
management in
emergency scenarios
Planned as part of
NZICC opening
Short /
Medium
NZICC as civil
emergency location
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Climate Statements
AreaFocus
Programme
focusTransition actionsStatus FY25
Time
Horizons
Risk/Opportunity
Addressed
Sustainable
Products
and Services
Food and
beverage
Local and
sustainable
sourcing
Increase the proportion of
locally sourced, seasonal and
sustainably produced food
and beverage to build in more
resilience and contribute to
a lower food and beverage
footprint
OngoingOn-
going
Regulatory and
legislative changes,
cost of carbon,
energy efficiency,
food supply chain
disruption
Waste
reduction
Reduce single-use plastics by
10% year-on year, reduce waste
to landfill by 5% year-on year,
explore expanding commercial
composting and innovation to
reduce waste
Reduction of 4% in FY25
for single-use plastics
compared to FY24
(FY24: 10%)
Reduction of 43% in
FY25 for waste to landfill
compared to FY24, due
to improved reporting,
splitting actual waste to
landfill f rom recyclables
(FY24: 3.1%)
On-
going
Regulatory and
legislative changes,
sustainable
operations
Menu
innovation
Review menus to reflect
changing supply chain
dynamics and customer
preferences driven by
climate impacts
OngoingShort /
Medium
Innovation in food
and beverage
Stakeholder
engagement
and culture
Employee
engagement
and training
Culture of
environmental
responsibility
Deliver climate and sustainability
capability building sessions to all
permanent staff, fostering a culture
of environmental responsibility
Climate 101 training
provided to NZICC team
to inform their strategy
and processes planning
Short
Stakeholder
management,
community
engagement
Community
partnerships
Community
climate
resilience and
social licence
Collaborate with local
communities, iwi and other local
partners to enhance climate
resilience and social licence
OngoingShort /
Medium
Customer
awareness
Responsible
consumption
Communicate sustainability
initiatives to encourage
responsible consumption
OngoingShort
Monitoring,
Reporting
and ongoing
improvement
Metrics and
targets
Review
existing
targets
Regularly review and update
targets in line with evolving
expectations f rom science,
policy and stakeholders
FY26 sustainability
strategy review
ShortRegulatory and
legislative changes,
sustainable
operations
Assurance
and
transparency
Compliance
management
Monitor, report and
independently assure progress
against emissions reduction,
waste diversion and energy
efficiency targets ensuring trust
in data accuracy and compliance
Certification by Toitū
and limited assurance
by PwC for Scope 1 and
2 (location-based) FY25
GHG emissions
Ongoing
Regulatory and
legislative changes
Resource
allocation
and
governance
InvestmentClimate risk
integration
Allocate capital and
operational resources to
priority transition initiatives,
including energy efficiency,
renewable energy, and
resilience upgrades, ensuring
the Transition
Plan is achievable
Investment towards
energy efficiency was
$17.8 million NZD in
FY25
MediumUnexpected
expenditure under
volatile or uneven
climate scenarios,
pro-actively moving
to renewable
energy and energy
efficiency, insurance
premiums and
rising costs
GovernanceFormalise
climate
governance
Climate considerations are
integrated into the Enterprise Risk
Management Framework (ERMF)
and capital investment planning
Started.
To be further
integrated in FY26
Short
Regulatory and
legislative changes
Climate Statements (continued)
RISK MANAGEMENT
OVERVIEW
SkyCity recognises the importance of effectively identifying, assessing, and managing climate-related risks and opportunities. Below,
we set out the processes for climate-related risk management, encompassing both current practices and plans for further integration.
PROCESSES FOR IDENTIFYING AND ASSESSING CLIMATE-RELATED RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES
SkyCity’s Enterprise Risk Management Framework (ERMF) is designed to support organisation-wide identification, assessment,
management, and monitoring of material risks. SkyCity is continuing to mature its risk management practices, including in
relation to Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) Risk, and climate risks. SkyCity’s ERMF uses a Risk Taxonomy (the
Risk Taxonomy) to categorise risks as they are identified and assessed. Within the ERMF, SkyCity’s strategic risk profiling
and assessment activity is undertaken throughout the year (and no less than annually) and covers all 15 risk taxonomies that
are classified as level 1. ESG Risk is classified as a level 1 (aggregated) material risk and forms one of the 15 risk taxonomies.
‘Environmental sustainability’ (being the ‘risk of environmental harm caused by operations including the impacts of climate
change on the business’) is specified as a level 2 (specific) risk within the ESG taxonomy. The strategic risk profiling and
assessment activity is performed by the risk owner, with assistance f rom the Group Risk team who facilitate the management
of the ERMF f ramework. This occurred once during FY25. The ESG Risk was rated Medium and within risk appetite, and was
reported to senior management, via the Senior Management Risk Committee. It was subsequently reported to the Risk &
Compliance Committee.
The assessment provides a holistic review of the overall risk landscape, outlining exposures across each of the risks in SkyCity’s
Risk Taxonomy and how these align with risk appetite (broad and strategic). The assessment takes into account relevant key
controls, and related issues and incidents to derive an overall residual risk position and whether the risk is within or outside of
SkyCity’s accepted risk appetite. The rating process and scale for the risk assessment is codified in the SkyCity Risk Assessment
Standard and uses High, Medium or Low rating outcomes.
The Chief Financial Officer (in the case of the New Zealand operations) and the Managing Director, Adelaide (in respect of our
Adelaide operations) has accountability for oversight and management of the level 1 ESG taxonomy risk and its supporting level
2 risks. In New Zealand, this allocation will change in FY26 as the responsibility for the sustainability portfolio moves to the Chief
Legal, Governance and External Relations Officer. The risk management practice within SkyCity is led by the Chief Risk Officer
and comprises the Group risk management team who oversee the operation of the ERMF across the SkyCity Group.
Supporting the Chief Financial Officer and Managing Director, Adelaide to identify and manage the climate risks within the ESG
Taxonomy is the Sustainability Team, which has led SkyCity’s climate risk identification work since FY19. This work was initially
performed by the Sustainability Team in alignment with the recommendations of the TCFD under the direction of the then
existing Board Sustainability Committee. Initial risks and opportunities were identified at that time, and they have evolved since
(further detail is available in the Sustainability section of the FY19 Annual Report, pages 87–88). These risks are reviewed using
a stakeholder engagement methodology on an annual basis. For FY25, the Senior Leadership Team and other key business
stakeholders reviewed these climate-related risks and opportunities during the transition planning workshop facilitated by
external sustainability consultants and held in Q4 2025, which now consider time horizons and climate scenarios (“Orderly 1.5°C”,
“Disorderly 2°C”, “Hot House >3°C”) at a high level.
The more specific climate-related risks identified and managed by the Sustainability Team are kept under review by the ESG
Governance Group. The consideration of these specific climate-related risks and opportunities ultimately informs the overall
assessment as to whether the ESG level 1 risk is within Board risk tolerance as part of the ERMF.
Consideration as to whether the level 1 ESG risk needs ref raming, and whether more embedment within the ERMF of the
detailed climate risks and opportunities would be beneficial, will be undertaken as part of the FY26 sustainability strategy review.
PROCESSES FOR MANAGING CLIMATE-RELATED RISKS
The Sustainability Team reviews mitigations for climate risks, and their effectiveness, as part of their support for the accountable
Level 1 risk owner. This is reported via the ESG Governance Group, who collectively oversee the embedding of climate
considerations into select business processes and decisions.
As SkyCity’s ERMF continues to be more deeply embedded in the business it is anticipated that the risk management team will have
more of a role overseeing and challenging the effectiveness of the mitigations in place and control development for these risks.
Although there are processes for ESG and climate risk reviews and reporting to the relevant committees, Board-level integration
of identified climate-related risks and opportunities into strategic planning, capital decisions, and investment evaluation is
not yet fully complete. SkyCity intends to review and strengthen this integration through its upcoming FY26 sustainability
strategy review, after which it is expected that climate-related activities will be more formally and comprehensively managed in
accordance with the ERMF.
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Climate Statements
Scope 1 + 2 emissions by site (tCO
2
e) FY24
Queenstown
Hamilton
Auckland
Adelaide
564.41
149.27
6,288.175,472.17
Scope 1 + 2 emissions by site (tCO
2
e) FY25
Queenstown
Hamilton
Auckland
Adelaide
709.38
158.95
7,174.94
5,240.29
METRICS AND TARGETS
GHG INVENTORY AND EMISSIONS REDUCTION PROGRESS
2025 marks SkyCity’s tenth year of certified carbon footprint measurement under Toitū Envirocare’s Certified Emissions
Measurement and Reduction Scheme (CEMARS). In FY25, for the first time, limited assurance has been performed over our FY25
Scope 1 emissions (tonnes CO₂e) and FY25 Scope 2 emissions (tonnes CO₂e) by PwC. Other than as described as being subject to
assurance, no other disclosures in this CRD have been included in the assurance engagement and are not covered by the limited
assurance report issued. Please refer to PwC’s report, included on pages 110 to 112, which states the scope of PwC’s work and the
parts of this CRD to which its assurance applies.
While emissions had tracked downward for much of the past decade, FY25 saw an increase of almost 6.5% compared to the
previous year, driven by higher use of natural gas and electricity primarily due to Auckland’s Horizon by SkyCity Hotel being
operational for the year. Despite the increase in FY25, SkyCity has reduced absolute emissions for Scope 1 + 2 by 18.3% over the
last ten years.
SkyCity has an emissions intensity key performance indicator and measurement as part of Toitū Envirocare’s carbon reduce
programme focusing on emissions per million dollars of gross revenue (tCO₂e/$M). SkyCity’s baseline measurement in 2015 was
28.14 tCO₂e/$M and is 18.60 tCO₂e/$M in FY25 (17.67 tCO₂e/$M in FY24 and 19.88 tCO₂e/$M in FY23). A reduction in emissions
intensity of 9.54 tCO₂e/$M has been achieved since FY15.
The following graphics provide a summary of SkyCity’s GHG emissions performance data for Scope 1 and 2 since FY15.
Scope 1 and 2 Emissions (Tonnes CO
2
e) - Group
0
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
14000
16000
18000
FY15FY16FY17FY18FY19FY20FY21FY22FY23FY24FY25
Target Scope 1+2Scope 2Scope 1
Emissions in tCO2e
FY15 Actuals
(Baseline)
FY23
Actuals
Scope
1 + 2 FY23
Targets
FY24
Actuals
Scope
1 + 2 FY24
Targets
FY25 Actuals
(Subject to
assurance)
Scope 1 + 2
FY25 Targets
Scope 15,126.3 5,361.1 —5,071.6 —5,785.4 —
Scope 2 (location based)11,134.8 8,512.2 —7,402.4 —7,498.2—
Total of Scope 1 + 216,261.1 13,873.3 13,008.85 12,474.0 12,602.32 13,283.612,195.8
Climate Statements (continued)
GHG EMISSIONS METHODS, ASSUMPTIONS, ESTIMATION UNCERTAINTY AND CHANGES TO BASE YEAR
(SUBJECT TO ASSURANCE)
•SkyCity’s emissions have been prepared in accordance with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol: A Corporate Accounting and
Reporting Standard (World Resources Institute and World Business Council for Sustainable Development, 2004 (revised)).
•Organisational boundaries were set with reference to the methodology described in the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, using
an operational control approach and cover SkyCity’s land-based businesses, including the sites in Auckland, Hamilton,
Queenstown and Adelaide.
•SkyCity Online Casino (Malta based) has been excluded f rom the emission inventory and disclosures as it has been
assessed as not material for FY25.
•SkyCity uses activity-based methods to calculate emissions. Specifically, Scope 2 electricity based on KWH / Scope 1 mobile
combustion fuel in litres, stationary combustion ref rigerants based on top ups and gas volume. Activity data is measured
f rom actual consumption, which means other than uncertainty inherent in the emissions factors, there is no other significant
estimation uncertainty or assumptions in calculating emissions. Emissions were calculated using the Toitū emanage platform,
by multiplying activity data by emissions factors. Emission factors and Global Warming Potentials (GWPs) were sourced f rom
the Ministry for the Environment’s Measuring Emissions Guide 2025, the Australian National Greenhouse Factors for Individuals
and organisations estimating greenhouse gas emissions 2025 f rom the Australian Government Department of Climate
Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (https://www.dcceew.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/national-greenhouse-
account-factors-2025.pdf), the UK Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy: Government greenhouse gas
conversion factors for company reporting (2024 and 2025) and Toitū Envirocare – Emission factor derived internally – New
Zealand. GWPs f rom the IPCC fifth assessment report (AR5) are the preferred GWP conversion
1
. GHG quantification is subject
to inherent uncertainty because of incomplete scientific knowledge used to determine emissions factors and the values
needed to combine emissions of different gases.
CLIMATE-RELATED TARGETS
SkyCity has committed to reduce absolute Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions 38% by 2030 and 73% by 2050 f rom a 2015 base year.
SkyCity’s target as certified by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) is aligned to a well-below 2°C global warming pathway
and follows a linear trajectory. In addition to this target, SkyCity has committed to reduce absolute Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions
25% by 2025. This is intended to contribute to our SBTi target but was prepared separately to our SBTi validated target. SkyCity
does not intend to utilise offsets to achieve these targets.
The total figure for Scope 1 and 2 emissions provided for the FY15 baseline of 17,333 tonnes CO₂e included in the graph on page
80 in the FY24 Annual Report was incorrect and should have read 16,261 tonnes CO₂e. This was identified during FY25 and relates
to updated emissions factors in FY21 for electricity f rom MfE, changing the emissions for Scope 2 (purchased electricity) in FY15
f rom 12,207 tonnes CO₂e to 11,135 tonnes CO₂e. The emission figures in the narrative of the report were not affected. This only
applied to the baseline number in the graphic. No recalculations were done to the FY15 base year in FY25. This explanation of
changes to Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions in the baseline year FY15 has been subject to assurance.
While SkyCity has reduced emissions by 18.3% since FY15, we fell short of our first milestone this year (being a 25% reduction by
2025). As this target period concludes, a formal reassessment is planned for FY26, as part of the overall sustainability strategy review.
SkyCity published an additional 1.5°C-aligned target on page 74 of its FY24 Annual Report, which conflicted with the SBTi-
certified trajectory. SkyCity intended to move f rom the SBTi certified well-below 2°C global warming pathway to a 1.5°C pathway
(as is mentioned on page 24 of the FY24 Inventory Management Report), however, this was not executed, nor verified and the
1.5°C-aligned target in its FY24 Annual Report was published in error. It is not included here.
OTHER METRICS
At this stage, SkyCity has identified a range of climate-related physical and transition risks and opportunities and has
implemented qualitative assessments and scenario analysis. Quantitative metrics showing the vulnerability or exposure of
business activities and assets to these risks and opportunities (such as the proportion of assets exposed to physical or transition
risks, or those aligned with climate-related opportunities) are not yet comprehensively available. As a conservative estimate, all
SkyCity business activities are vulnerable to climate-related transition and physical risks to some degree in a Hot House scenario.
These include risks related to the transition to a low-emissions, climate-resilient global and domestic economy such as policy,
legal, technology, market and reputation changes. Our current assessment also conservatively estimates that zero percent of our
assets specifically align with climate-related opportunities. SkyCity is in the process of enhancing its data collection and analysis
capabilities and expects to enhance these metrics through the FY26 sustainability strategy review. This is the first time SkyCity
has disclosed metrics regarding vulnerability to physical and transition climate-related risks and alignment with climate-related
opportunities. Accordingly, no comparative information for these metrics is provided.
As disclosed on page 104 above, in FY25 across New Zealand, SkyCity completed capital projects worth $17.8 million that included
climate-related benefits. This compares to $7.5 million in FY24. The climate-related benefits related to energy, gas and water
efficiency f rom inf rastructure replacements.
As in FY24, SkyCity has not developed performance metrics aligned with industry benchmarks, does not tie management pay
to climate risks or opportunities, nor does it use an internal CO2 emissions price. SkyCity will be reviewing metrics and targets as
part of the FY26 sustainability strategy review.
1. If emission factors have been derived f rom recognised publications approved by the programme, which still use earlier GWPs,
the emission factors have not been altered f rom those as published.
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Climate Statements
Independent Assurance Report
PricewaterhouseCoopers, PwC Tower, 15 Customs Street West,
Private Bag 92162, Auckland 1142, New Zealand
T: +64 9 355 8000
pwc.co.nz
Independent Assurance Report
To the Directors of SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited
Limited Assurance Report on SkyCity Entertainment Group
Limited’s Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Disclosures
Our conclusion
We have undertaken a limited assurance engagement on the gross GHG emissions, additional required disclosures
of gross GHG emissions, and gross GHG emissions methods, assumptions and estimation uncertainty (the GHG
Disclosures), as outlined within the Scope of our Limited Assurance Engagement section below, included in the
Climate Statements of SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited (the Company) and its subsidiaries (the Group) for
the year ended 30 June 2025.
Based on the procedures we have performed and the evidence we have obtained, nothing has come to our attention
that causes us to believe that the GHG Disclosures are not fairly presented and are not prepared, in all material
respects, in accordance with the Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standards (NZ CSs) issued by the External
Reporting Board (XRB), as explained on pages 92 to 93 of the Climate Statements.
Scope of our limited assurance engagement
We have undertaken a limited assurance engagement over the following GHG Disclosures on pages 108 to 109 of
the Climate Statements for the year ended 30 June 2025:
● gross GHG emissions:
- Scope 1 emissions of 5,785.4 tCO2e on page 108; and
- Scope 2 (location based) emissions of 7,498.2 tCO2e on page 108;
● additional required disclosures of gross GHG emissions on page 109; and
● gross GHG emissions methods, assumptions and estimation uncertainty on page 109.
Our assurance engagement does not extend to any other information included, or referred to, in the
Climate
Statements on pages 92 to 109 and 113 to 115 or the Annual Report on pages 1 to 91 and 116 to 167. We have not
performed any procedures with respect to the excluded information and, therefore, no conclusion is expressed on it.
The comparative information for the years ended 30 June 2024, 30 June 2023, and 30 June 2015 disclosed in the
Group’s Climate Statements is not covered by the assurance conclusion expressed in this report.
Other matter - comparative information
The comparative GHG Disclosures (that is, GHG Disclosures for the years ended 30 June 2024, 30 June 2023 and
30 June 2015) have not been subject to assurance. As such, these disclosures are not covered by our assurance
conclusion.
PwC
Directors’ responsibilities
The Directors of the Company are responsible on behalf of the Company for the preparation and fair presentation of
the GHG Disclosures in accordance with NZ CSs. This responsibility includes the design, implementation and
maintenance of internal controls relevant to the preparation of GHG Disclosures that are free from material
misstatement whether due to fraud or error.
Inherent Uncertainty in preparing GHG Disclosures
As discussed on page 109 of the Climate Statements, the GHG quantification is subject to inherent uncertainty
because of incomplete scientific knowledge used to determine emissions factors and the values needed to combine
emissions of different gases.
Our independence and quality management
This assurance engagement was undertaken in accordance with New Zealand Standard on Assurance Engagements
1 Assurance Engagements over Greenhouse Gas Emissions Disclosures, issued by the External Reporting Board
(XRB) (NZ SAE 1). NZ SAE 1 is founded on the fundamental principles of independence, integrity, objectivity,
professional competence and due care, confidentiality and professional behaviour.
We have also complied with the following professional and ethical standards and accreditation body requirements:
● Professional and Ethical Standard 1: International Code of Ethics for Assurance Practitioners (including
International Independence Standards) (New Zealand);
● Professional and Ethical Standard 3: Quality Management for Firms that Perform Audits or Reviews of
Financial Statements, or Other Assurance or Related Services Engagements; and
● Professional and Ethical Standard 4: Engagement Quality Reviews.
In our capacity as auditor and assurance practitioner, our firm also provides audit, review, agreed-upon procedures
and other services. Our firm carries out other assignments in the areas of tax compliance, tax advisory services and
other services relating to executive remuneration benchmarking. The firm has no other relationship with, or
interests in, the Group.
Assurance practitioner’s responsibilities
Our responsibility is to express a conclusion on the GHG Disclosures based on the procedures we have performed
and the evidence we have obtained. NZ SAE 1 requires us to plan and perform the engagement to obtain the
intended level of assurance about whether anything has come to our attention that causes us to believe that the
GHG Disclosures are not fairly presented and are not prepared, in all material respects, in accordance with NZ CSs,
whether due to fraud or error, and to report our conclusion to the Directors of the Company.
As we are engaged to form an independent conclusion on the GHG Disclosures prepared by management, we are
not permitted to be involved in the preparation of the GHG information as doing so may compromise our
independence.
Summary of work performed
Our limited assurance engagement was performed in accordance with NZ SAE 1, and ISAE (NZ) 3410 Assurance
Engagements on Greenhouse Gas Statements. This involves assessing the suitability in the circumstances of the
Group’s use of NZ CSs as the basis for the preparation of the GHG Disclosures, assessing the risks of material
misstatement of the GHG Disclosures whether due to fraud or error, responding to the assessed risks as necessary
in the circumstances, and evaluating the overall presentation of the GHG Disclosures.
A limited assurance engagement is substantially less in scope than a reasonable assurance engagement in relation
to both the risk assessment procedures, including an understanding of internal control, and the procedures
performed in response to the assessed risks.
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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Climate Statements
Independent Assurance Report (continued)
PwC
The procedures we performed were based on our professional judgement and included enquiries, observation of
processes performed, inspection of documents, analytical procedures, evaluating the appropriateness of
quantification methods and reporting policies, and agreeing or reconciling with underlying records. In undertaking
our limited assurance engagement on the GHG Disclosures, we:
● Evaluated management’s assessment of the Group’s organisational and operational boundaries;
● Obtained, through enquiries, an understanding of the Group’s control environment, processes and information
systems relevant to the preparation of the GHG Disclosures. We did not evaluate the design of particular
control activities, or obtain evidence about their implementation;
● Undertook site visits at the Group’s Auckland and Adelaide sites to assess the completeness of the emissions
sources applicable to the sites;
● Tested a limited number of items to, or from, supporting records, as appropriate;
● Assessed all of in-scope emission factor sources and reperformed a limited number of emissions calculations
for mathematical accuracy;
● Performed analytical procedures on particular emission categories by comparing the actual GHGs emitted on a
monthly and quarterly basis against a trend and made enquiries of management to obtain explanations for any
significant differences identified
● We enquired with management on the nature of the restatement to base year and read the supporting
documentation and calculations that we were provided with; and
● Considered the overall presentation and disclosure of the GHG disclosures.
The procedures performed in a limited assurance engagement vary in nature and timing from, and are less in extent
than for, a reasonable assurance engagement. Consequently, the level of assurance obtained in a limited assurance
engagement is substantially lower than the assurance that would have been obtained had we performed a
reasonable assurance engagement and does not enable us to obtain assurance that we would become aware of all
significant matters that we otherwise might identify. Accordingly, we do not express a reasonable assurance opinion
on these GHG Disclosures.
Inherent limitations
Because of the inherent limitations of an assurance engagement, together with the internal control structure, it is
possible that fraud, error or non-compliance may occur and not be detected.
Who we report to
This report is made solely to the Company’s Directors, as a body. Our work has been undertaken so that we might
state those matters which we are required to state to them in our assurance report and for no other purpose. To the
fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the Company and
the Company’s Directors, as a body, for our procedures, for this report, or for the conclusions we have formed.
The engagement partner on the engagement resulting in this independent assurance report is Victoria Ashplant.
For and on behalf of:
PricewaterhouseCoopers Auckland
29 September 2025
Climate-Related Disclosures Index
Disclosures
(NZ CS 1)Description
FY25 Annual
Report Pages
7(a)The identity of the governance body responsible for oversight of climate-related risks and
opportunities
95
7(b)Description of the governance body’s oversight of climate-related risks and opportunities95 - 97
7(c)Description of management’s role in assessing and managing climate-related risks and
opportunities
95 - 97
8(a)Processes and f requency by which the governance body is informed about climate-related risks and
opportunities
96
8(b)How the governance body ensures that the appropriate skills and competencies are available to
provide oversight of climate-related risks and opportunities
96
8(c)How the governance body considers climate-related risks and opportunities when developing and
overseeing implementation of the entity’s strategy
95 - 97
8(d)How the governance body sets, monitors progress against, and oversees achievement of metrics
and targets for managing climate-related risks and opportunities, including whether and if so how,
related performance metrics are incorporated into remuneration policies (see also paragraph 22(h))
97
9(a)How climate-related responsibilities are assigned to management-level positions or committees,
and the process and f requency by which management-level positions or committees engage with
the governance body
95 - 97
9(b)The related organisational structure(s) showing where these management-level positions and
committees lie
95
9(c)The processes and f requency by which management is informed about, makes decisions on, and
monitors, climate-related risks and opportunities
96 - 97
11(a)Description of the entity’s current climate-related impacts101
11(b)Description of the scenario analysis the entity has undertaken99
11(c)Description of the climate-related risks and opportunities the entity has identified over the short,
medium, and long term
102 - 103
11(d)Description of the anticipated impacts of climate-related risks and opportunities102 - 103
11(e)Description of how the entity will position itself as the global and domestic economy transitions
towards a low-emissions, climate-resilient future state
104 - 106
12(a)The entity’s current physical and transition impacts101
12(b)Current financial impacts of the entity’s physical and transition impacts identified in paragraph 11(a)101
12(c)If the entity is unable to disclose quantitative information for paragraph 11(b), an explanation of why
that is the case
101
13An entity must describe the scenario analysis it has undertaken to help identify its climate-related
risks and opportunities and better understand the resilience of its business model and strategy.
This must include a description of how an entity has analysed, at a minimum, a 1.5°C climate-
related scenario, a 3°C or greater climate-related scenario, and a third climate-related scenario (see
paragraph 11(b))
99
14(a)How the entity defines short, medium and long term and how the definitions are linked to its
strategic planning horizons and capital deployment plans
100
14(b)Whether the climate-related risks and opportunities identified are physical or transition risks or
opportunities, including, where relevant, their sector and geography
102 - 103
14(c)How climate-related risks and opportunities serve as an input to the entity’s internal capital
deployment and funding decision-making processes
98 - 99
15(a)Anticipated impacts of climate-related risks and opportunities reasonably expected by the entity102 - 103
15(b)Anticipated financial impacts of climate-related risks and opportunities reasonably expected by an
entity
93*
*Adoption provision under NZ CS 2 utilised
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Climate Statements
Climate-Related Disclosures Index (continued)
Disclosures
(NZ CS 1)Description
FY25 Annual
Report Pages
15(c)Description of the time horizons over which the anticipated financial impacts of climate-related risks
and opportunities could reasonably be expected to occur
93*
15(d)If the entity is unable to disclose quantitative information for paragraph 15(b), an explanation of why
that is the case
93*
16(a)Description of the entity’s current business model and strategy98
16(b)The transition plan aspects of the entity’s strategy, including how the entity’s business model and
strategy might change to address its climate-related risks and opportunities
104 - 106
16(c)The extent to which transition plan aspects of the entity’s strategy are aligned with the entity’s
internal capital deployment and funding decision making processes
104
18(a)An entity must disclose, for both transition risks and physical risks, its processes for identifying,
assessing, and managing climate-related risks
107
18(b)An entity must describe, for both transition risks and physical risks, how its processes for identifying,
assessing, and managing climate-related risks are integrated into its overall risk management
processes
98, 107
19(a)The tools and methods used to identify, and to assess the scope, size, and impact of, its identified
climate-related risks
107
19(b)The short-term, medium-term, and long-term time horizons considered, including specifying the
duration of each of these time horizons
100
19(c)Whether any parts of the value chain are excluded107
19(d)The f requency of assessment96, 97, 107
19(e)The entity’s processes for prioritising climate-related risks relative to other types of risks107
21(a)The metrics that are relevant to all entities regardless of industry and business model108
21(b)Industry-based metrics relevant to the entity’s industry or business model used to measure and
manage climate-related risks and opportunities
109
21(c)Any other key performance indicators used to measure and manage climate-related risks and
opportunities
108
21(d)Targets used to manage climate-related risks and opportunities and performance against those
targets
109
22(a)Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions: gross emissions in metric tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent
(CO₂e) classified as (i) scope 1, (ii) scope 2 (calculated using the location-based method) and (iii)
scope 3.
108, 93*
22(b)GHG emissions intensity108
22(c)Amount or percentage of assets or business activities vulnerable to transition risks109
22(d)Amount or percentage of assets or business activities vulnerable to physical risks109
22(e)Amount or percentage of assets, or business activities aligned with climate-related opportunities109
22(f)Amount of capital expenditure, financing, or investment deployed toward climate-related risks and
opportunities
109
22(g)Internal emissions price: price per metric tonne of CO₂e used internally by an entity109
22(h)Management remuneration linked to climate-related risks and opportunities in the current period,
expressed as a percentage, weighting, description or amount
109
23(a)The time f rame over which the target applies;109
23(b)Any associated interim targets109
Disclosures
(NZ CS 1)Description
FY25 Annual
Report Pages
23(c)Base year f rom which progress is measured109
23(d)Description of performance against the targets109
23(e)For each GHG emissions target:
(i) whether the target is an absolute target or intensity target;
(ii) the entity’s view as to how the target contributes to limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees
Celsius;
(iii) the entity’s basis for the view expressed in 23(e)(ii), including any reliance on the opinion or
methods provided by third parties; and
(iv) the extent to which the target relies on offsets, whether the offsets are verified or certified,
and if so, under which scheme or schemes
109
24An entity must disclose the following in relation to its GHG emissions (see paragraph 22(a))109
24(a)Statement describing the standard or standards that its GHG emissions have been measured in
accordance with
109
24(b)The GHG emissions consolidation approach used: equity share, financial control, or operational
control
109
24(c)The source of emission factors and the global warming potential (GWP) rates used or a reference to
the GWP source;
109
24(d)Summary of specific exclusions of sources, including facilities, operations or assets with a
justification for their exclusion
109
25Disclosure of the entity’s GHG emissions are the subject of an assurance engagement (at a
minimum a limited assurance engagement)
110 - 112
26The following information is subject to an assurance engagement:110 - 112
26(a)GHG emissions: gross emissions in metric tonnes of C02e classified as (i) scope 1, (ii) scope 2 and (iii)
scope 3 (see paragraph 22(a))
110 - 112
26(b)Additional requirements for the disclosure of GHG emissions (see paragraph 24)110 - 112
26(c)GHG emissions methods, assumptions and estimation uncertainty.110 - 112
*Adoption provision under NZ CS 2 utilised
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Climate Statements
Contents Page
Independent auditor’s review report 117
Consolidated financial statements
Income Statement
122
Statement of Comprehensive Income
123
Balance Sheet
124
Statement of Changes in Equity
125
Statement of Cash Flows
126
Notes to the financial statements
1 General Information
127
2 Basis of Preparation
127
3 Material Accounting Policies
128
4 Segment Information
129
5 Revenue
131
6 Other Income
131
7 Expenses
132
8 Earnings per Share
134
9 Dividends
134
10 Leases
135
11 Net Finance Costs
136
12 Non-current Liabilities – Interest Bearing Liabilities
136
13 Current Liabilities – Interest Bearing Liabilities
138
14 Net Debt Reconciliation
138
15 Investment Properties
139
16 Current Liabilities Deferred Licence Value
140
17 Non-current Liabilities – Deferred Licence Value 140
18 Income Tax Expense 141
19 Deferred Tax Assets 142
20 Deferred Tax Liabilities 143
21 Imputation and Franking Credits 143
22 Property, Plant and Equipment 144
23 Intangible Assets 146
24 Receivables and Prepayments 151
25 Cash and Cash Equivalents 151
26 Assets Held for Sale 151
27 Payables and Provisions 152
28 Share Capital 152
29 Reserves 153
30 Derivative Financial Instruments 154
31 Financial Risk Management 155
32 Share Based Payments 157
33 Related Party Transactions 160
34 Subsidiaries 161
35 Contingencies 162
36 Commitments 163
37 Reconciliation of Profit After Income Tax to Net Cash Inflow f rom Operating Activities 163
38 Events Occurring after the Reporting Date 163
Financial Statements and Notes
For year ended 30 June 2025
Independent auditor’s report
To the shareholders of SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited
Our opinion
In our opinion, the accompanying consolidated financial statements (the financial statements) of SkyCity
Entertainment Group Limited (the Company), including its subsidiaries (the Group), present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of the Group as at 30 June 2025, its financial performance, and its cash flows for the
year then ended in accordance with New Zealand Equivalents to International Financial Reporting Standards (NZ
IFRS) and International Financial Reporting Standards Accounting Standards (IFRS Accounting Standards).
What we have audited
The Group's financial statements comprise:
●the balance sheet as at 30 June 2025;
●the income statement for the year then ended;
●the statement of comprehensive income for the year then ended;
●the statement of changes in equity for the year then ended;
●the statement of cash flows for the year then ended; and
●the notes to the financial statements, comprising material accounting policy information and other explanatory
information.
Basis for opinion
We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (New Zealand) (ISAs (NZ)) and
International Standards on Auditing (ISAs). Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the
Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report.
We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.
Independence
We are independent of the Group in accordance with Professional and Ethical Standard 1 International Code of
Ethics for Assurance Practitioners (including International Independence Standards) (New Zealand) (PES 1)
issued by the New Zealand Auditing and Assurance Standards Board and the International Code of Ethics for
Professional Accountants (including International Independence Standards) issued by the International Ethics
Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA Code), and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in
accordance with these requirements.
In our capacity as auditor and assurance practitioner, our firm also provides review, other assurance, agreed-upon
procedures and other services. Our firm carries out other assignments in the areas of tax compliance, tax advisory
services and other services relating to executive remuneration benchmarking. The firm has no other relationship
with, or interests in, the Group.
PwC New Zealand, PwC Tower, 15 Customs Street West,
Private Bag 92162, Auckland 1142, New Zealand
T: +64 9 355 8000
© 2025 PricewaterhouseCoopers New Zealand. All rights reserved. ‘PwC’ and
‘PricewaterhouseCoopers’ refer to the New Zealand member firm, and may sometimes refer to the
PwC network. Each member firm is a separate legal entity. Please see www.pwc.com/structure for
further details.
These financial statements were signed on 20 August 2025 on behalf of the Board of directors of
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited by:
Julian Cook Chad Barton
Chair of the SkyCity Board Chair of the Audit Committee
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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Financial Statements
Key audit matters
Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance in our audit of
the financial statements of the current year. These matters were addressed in the context of our audit of the
financial statements as a whole, and in forming our opinion thereon, and we do not provide a separate opinion on
these matters.
Description of the key audit matter How our audit addressed the key audit matter
Accounting considerations in respect of
SkyCity Adelaide
Impairment testing of the SkyCity Adelaide
CGU
As disclosed in Note 23 of the financial statements,
the carrying amount of the SkyCity Adelaide cash
generating unit (CGU) was impaired by NZ$94.3
million in the prior period.
The SkyCity Adelaide casino licence has a finite
useful life and, as such, accounting standards
require the Group to assess at the end of each
reporting period whether there is any indication
that it may be impaired.
An impairment assessment was prepared by
management for the Adelaide CGU using the fair
value less costs of disposal (FVLCOD) method,
using a discount rate determined by an
independent expert. The impairment assessment
was prepared as the Group considered there are
indications that the CGU may be impaired,
including unfavourable economic conditions, the
impact of ongoing regulatory matters on the
business and planned future initiatives such as the
introduction of carded play planned for December
2026.
Management made a number of key assumptions
which impact the CGU’s estimated recoverable
amount. As described in Note 23, these
assumptions include the compound annual
Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBITDA) growth
rate of 5.7%, terminal growth rate of 2.5%, and
post-tax discount rate of 9.8%. In addition, the
forecasts assume no growth in gaming machine
market share together with corresponding cost
optimisation, and increased expenditure for the
Building a Better Business programme, financial
crime and host responsibility.
Management concluded that the valuation of the
CGU falls within a reasonable range, the midpoint
of which implies headroom of A$17.5 million as at
30 June 2025 (with the low end of the range
implying headroom of A$7.0 million, and the high
end of the range implying headroom of
A$26.8m).
Management has addressed the significant
uncertainty inherent in the forecast through
consideration of various sensitivities and
reasonably possible downside scenarios, and
determined on this basis that the CGU valuation
does not require any additional impairment to be
recognised, nor is a reversal of any previously
recorded impairment justified.
Our procedures in relation to the impairment of the
SkyCity Adelaide CGU included the following:
●Understood the process undertaken by management
to prepare the forecast cash flows;
●Compared the forecast cash flows used for the current
year impairment assessment to the Board-adopted
forecast;
●Considered the appropriateness and accuracy of the
ten-year forecast cash flows included in
management’s DCF model, as adopted by the Board,
by comparing historical performance against previous
budgets;
●Challenged key assumptions in the cash flow
forecasts, with reference to external evidence where
possible;
●Engaged our auditor’s valuation expert to:
−Review and challenge key assumptions, including
the post-tax discount and terminal growth rates
based on their experience and external market
evidence;
−Assess the reasonableness of the cost of disposal
assumption applied under the FVLCOD method
based on their experience and industry
knowledge; and
−Evaluate the final conclusions reached with
reference to external market evidence.
●In conjunction with our auditor’s valuation expert, we
assessed management’s model and considered key
sensitivities, including consideration of reasonably
possible downside scenarios to address the significant
uncertainty inherent in the cash flows; and
●Assessed the appropriateness of the associated
disclosures made in the financial statements with
reference to the requirements of NZ IAS 36, including
those for key assumptions and sensitivities.
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Recognition of deferred tax assets
As disclosed in Note 19 of the financial statements,
the Group has recognised a deferred tax asset of
$30.5 million as at 30 June 2025 (2024: $30.5
million) in relation to unused tax losses in
Australia. Under Australian tax legislation, tax
losses can be carried forward indefinitely, however
it must be probable that future taxable income will
become available in order to recognise a deferred
tax asset for the unused tax losses.
Management’s forecasts, including consideration
of key sensitivities, indicate that the Adelaide
business will generate future taxable income. On
this basis, the Group has considered it is probable
that sufficient future taxable income will be
generated to utilise the tax losses recognised.
There is an inherent level of uncertainty associated
with management’s forecasting and the continued
recognition of the deferred tax asset is a significant
area of judgement.
The impairment of the SkyCity Adelaide CGU and
recognition of deferred tax assets were key focus
areas of our audit and considered to be a key audit
matter due to the inherent estimation uncertainties
and significant judgement involved, including the
impact of future regulatory changes and planned
enhancements, such as carded play, on the
assumptions applied.
Our procedures in relation to the recognition of deferred
tax assets for the unused tax losses included performing
the following:
●Considered the forecast accuracy of the Board
adopted forecasts by comparing historical
performance against previous budgets;
●Assessed the forecasts to determine the expected
timing for future utilisation of tax losses in Australia,
and considered the impact of key sensitivities on this
assessment;
●Considered the impact of management’s future plans
and intentions on the forecast taxable income of
SkyCity Adelaide;
●Challenged management’s assessment of the
recoverability of the deferred tax asset with reference
to the recognition criteria in NZ IAS 12; and
●Assessed the appropriateness of the associated
disclosures made in the financial statements with
reference to the requirements of NZ IAS 12.
Contingent liabilities relating to legal and
regulatory matters
The Group operates in a highly regulated
environment. Given the extent of scrutiny by
regulators and the general nature of casino
operations across both New Zealand and
Australia, there remains a high degree of risk in
respect of legal and regulatory compliance.
As disclosed in Note 35 of the financial statements,
the Group is subject to ongoing legal and
regulatory matters, most notably the independent
review into the suitability of SkyCity Adelaide to
continue to hold its casino licence, and the
associated findings from the review report released
in August 2025. The assessment of these matters
involves complexity and uncertainty as to their
outcome and quantification of any associated
future economic outflows.
NZ IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and
Contingent Assets (NZ IAS 37) outlines the criteria
for the recognition of a provision or disclosure of a
contingent liability. The application of this standard
required judgement to be applied to determine if a
provision for these matters should be recognised
or a contingent liability disclosed, and the extent of
disclosures required.
Due to the significance of the matters disclosed in
Note 35, their subjective nature and the associated
uncertainties, any related assumptions have the
potential to be subject to management bias. This
was therefore considered to be an area of focus for
our audit and considered to be a key audit matter.
Our procedures included the following:
●Held meetings with management, including in-house
legal counsel, to obtain the most recent facts and
circumstances in relation to ongoing regulatory
matters;
●Assessed our obligations under auditing and ethical
standards and relevant legislation to determine
whether the matters are required to be reported to
third parties;
●Read meeting minutes from relevant committees to
identify and consider information relating to regulatory
matters;
●Discussed the matters with the Group’s external legal
counsel, where applicable, to corroborate the
information provided by management;
●Read correspondence between the Group and the
applicable regulatory bodies;
●Evaluated management’s assessment of whether the
various regulatory matters should be recognised as a
provision or disclosed as a contingent liability, against
the criteria in NZ IAS 37; and
●Assessed the appropriateness of the associated
disclosures in the financial statements with reference
to the requirements of NZ IAS 37.
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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Financial Statements
Our audit approach
Overview
Over all group materiality: $7.39 million, which represents approximately 0.9% of total
revenue.
We chose total revenue, which is a generally accepted benchmar k, as the benchmar k
because, in our v iew, it provides a mor e stable measure of the Group’s performance..
We selected transactions and balances to audit based on the over all group materiality to
SkyCity Entertainment Group rather than deter
min in g the scope of procedures to
perform by auditing only specific subsidiaries or entities.
As reported above, we have two key audit matters, being:
● Accounting considerations in respect of SkyCity Adelaide; and
● Contingent liabilities relating to legal and regulatory matters.
As part of designing our audit, we determin ed materiality and assessed the risks of material misstatement in the
fina
ncial statements. I n particular, we considered where management made subjective judgements; for example, in
respect of significant accounting estimates that involved makin g assumptions and considerin g future events that are
in herently uncertain. As in all of our audits, we also addressed the risk of management over ride of internal controls,
in cluding among other matters, consideration of whether t
here was evidence of bias that represented a risk of
material misstatement due to fraud.
Materiality
The scope of our audit was influenced by our application of materiality. An audit is designed to obtain reasonable
assurance about whether the financial statements are free from material misstatement. Misstatements may arise
due to fraud or error . T hey are considered material if, individually or in
the aggregate, they could reasonably be
expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of the financial statements.
Based on our professional judgement, we determin ed certain quantitative thresholds for materiality, including the
over all Group materiality for the financial statements as a whole as set out above. T hese, together with qualitative
considerations, helped us
to determin e the scope of our audit, the nature, timin g and extent of our audit
procedures, and to evaluate the effect of misstatements, both individually and in the aggregate, on the financial
statements as a whole.
How we tailored our group audit scope
We tailored the scope of our audit in order to perform sufficient work to enable us to provide an opinion on the
financial statements as a whole,
takin g into account the structure of the Group, the accounting processes and
controls, and the industry in which the Group operates.
Other information
The Directors are responsible for the other information. T he other information comprises the information included
in the Annual Report, but does not include the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. T he Annual
Report is expected to
be made available to us after the date of this auditor’s report.
Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and we will not express any form of
audit opinion or assurance conclusion thereon.
4 PwC
In connection with our audit of the financial statements, our responsibility is to read the other information and, in
doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our
knowledge obtained in the audit, or otherwise appears to be materially misstated.
When we read the other information not yet received, if we conclude that there is a material misstatement therein,
we are required to communicate the matter to the Directors and use our professional judgement to determine the
appropriate action to take.
Responsibilities of the Directors for the financial statements
The Directors are responsible, on behalf of the Company, for the preparation and fair presentation of the financial
statements in accordance with NZ IFRS and IFRS Accounting Standards, and for such internal control as the
Directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material
misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.
In preparing the financial statements, the Directors are responsible for assessing the Group’s ability to continue as a
going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern, and using the going concern basis of
accounting unless the Directors either intend to liquidate the Group or to cease operations, or have no realistic
alternative but to do so.
Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements
Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements, as a whole, are free from
material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion.
Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with
ISAs (NZ) and ISAs will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud
or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to
influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.
A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located at the External
Reporting Board’s website at:
https://www.xrb.govt.nz/standards/assurance-standards/auditors-responsibilities/audit-report-1-1/
This description forms part of our auditor’s report.
Who we report to
This report is made solely to the Company’s shareholders, as a body. Our audit work has been undertaken so that
we might state those matters which we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the Company
and the Company’s shareholders, as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.
The engagement partner on the audit resulting in this independent auditor’s report is Philippa (Pip) Cameron.
For and on behalf of
PricewaterhouseCoopers Auckland
20 August 2025
5 PwC
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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Financial Statements
Consolidated financial statements
INCOME STATEMENT
FOR YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2025
2025 2024
Notes $’000 $’000
Revenue 5 821,306 861,037
Other income 6 3,919 21,422
NZICC fire related income — 45,926
NZICC fire related expenses — (52,390)
Employee benefits expense (341,667) (314,714)
Asset impairments 7 — (94,326)
Other expenses 7 (117,054) (123,548)
Directors’ fees (1,351) (1,327)
Gaming taxes and levies (51,948) (64,354)
Direct consumables (62,684) (62,879)
Marketing and communications (22,379) (21,505)
Regulatory penalties — (41,300)
Community contributions, sponsorships and donations (9,685) (10,064)
Fair value loss on investment properties 15 (2,362) (3,979)
Share of profits f rom associate — 158
Earnings Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and Amortisation Expenses (EBITDA) 216,095 138,157
Depreciation and amortisation 7 (87,370) (85,601)
Depreciation on right-of-use assets 10 (6,843) (6,420)
Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBIT) 121,882 46,136
Net finance costs 11 (53,718) (15,996)
Profit Before Income Tax 68,164 30,140
Income tax expense 18 (38,930) (173,488)
Profit/(Loss) for the Year Attributable to Shareholders of the Company 29,234 (143,348)
Earnings per share for Profit Attributable to the Shareholders of the Company
Cents Cents
Basic and diluted earnings/(loss) per share 8 3.9 (18.9)
The above income statement should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2025
2025 2024
Notes $’000 $’000
Profit/(Loss) for the Year 29,234 (143,348)
Other Comprehensive Income
Items that may be subsequently reclassified to profit or loss
Foreign Currency Translation Reserve
Exchange differences on translation of overseas subsidiaries 29 (174) 214
Asset Revaluation Reserve
Asset revaluation reserve – revaluation on transfer to investment property 381 —
Cash Flow Hedge Reserve 29
Cash flow hedges – revaluations (22,795) (1,587)
Cash flow hedges – transfer to finance costs 17,417 1,628
Cash flow hedges – income tax 1,506 (11)
Cost of Hedging Reserve 29
Cost of hedging reserve – costs incurred/revaluations (1,103) 2,650
Cost of hedging reserve – transfer to finance costs 829 1,157
Cost of hedging reserve – income tax 77 (1,066)
Other Comprehensive Income for the Year, Net of Tax (3,862) 2,985
Total Comprehensive Income for the Year 25,372 (140,363)
The above statement of comprehensive income should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
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Financial Statements
BALANCE SHEET
AS AT 30 JUNE 2025
2025 2024
Notes $’000 $’000
Assets
Current Assets
Cash and cash equivalents 25 51,499 60,536
Receivables and prepayments 24 23,980 86,878
Inventories 8,111 8,375
Derivative financial instruments 30 165 17,913
Current tax receivables — 7
NZICC fire recoveries — 2,480
Assets held for sale 26 — 13,000
Total Current Assets 83,755 189,189
Non-current Assets
Deferred tax assets 19 48,751 52,350
Non-current receivables and prepayments 604 —
Derivative financial instruments 30 721 550
Investment properties 15 78,725 78,800
Property, plant and equipment 22 1,877,408 1,816,961
Intangible assets 23 555,813 544,607
Right-of-use assets 10 113,907 98,579
Total Non-current Assets 2,675,929 2,591,847
Total Assets 2,759,684 2,781,036
Liabilities
Current Liabilities
Payables and provisions 27 143,824 226,796
Interest bearing liabilities 13 — 241,116
Current tax liabilities 10,943 34,707
Derivative financial instruments 30 547 366
Lease liabilities 10 6,809 3,285
Deferred licence value 16 246,408 —
Total Current Liabilities 408,531 506,270
Non-current Liabilities
Interest bearing liabilities 12 666,484 368,381
Non-current payables 11,372 20,052
Derivative financial instruments 30 5,027 7,178
Deferred tax liabilities 20 207,692 210,739
Lease liabilities 10 130,154 118,147
Deferred licence value 17 — 246,408
Total Non-current Liabilities 1,020,729 970,905
Total Liabilities 1,429,260 1,477,175
Net Assets 1,330,424 1,303,861
Equity
Share capital 28 1,343,627 1,342,436
Reserves 29 (11,312) (7,450)
Retained earnings (1,891) (31,125)
Total Equity 1,330,424 1,303,861
The above balance sheet should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
Consolidated financial statements (continued)
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2025
Retained
Share capital Reserves Earnings Total Equity
Notes $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000
Balance as at 1 July 2023 1,343,027 (10,435) 197,605 1,530,197
Total comprehensive income — 2,985 (143,348) (140,363)
Dividends paid 9 — — (85,382) (85,382)
Shares issued under employee share schemes 28 (620) — — (620)
Net movement in treasury shares 28 29 — — 29
Balance as at 30 June 2024 1,342,436 (7,450) (31,125) 1,303,861
Balance as at 1 July 2024 1,342,436 (7,450) (31,125) 1,303,861
Total comprehensive income — (3,862) 29,234 25,372
Shares issued under employee share schemes 28 1,247 — — 1,247
Net movement in treasury shares 28 (56) — — (56)
Balance as at 30 June 2025 1,343,627 (11,312) (1,891) 1,330,424
The above statement of changes in equity should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
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Financial Statements
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2025
2025 2024
Notes $’000 $’000
Cash Flows from Operating Activities
Receipts f rom customers 829,703 858,009
Payments to suppliers and employees (548,881) (540,773)
Government grants received 304 475
Other insurance income received 2,480 —
Regulatory penalties paid (75,697) —
Casino duty interest paid (27,436) —
Gaming taxes and levies paid (75,144) (59,465)
Income taxes paid (60,167) (54,672)
Net Cash Inflow from Operating Activities 37 45,162 203,574
Cash Flows from Investing Activities
Disposal of associate 56,755 —
Purchases of property, plant and equipment (161,589) (303,689)
Investment property additions (1,287) (7,859)
Purchased intangible assets (2,256) (7,047)
Proceeds f rom disposal of assets held for sale 13,679 —
NZICC fire related costs — (817)
Net Cash Outflow from Investing Activities (94,698) (319,412)
Cash Flows from Financing Activities
Cash flows associated with net derivatives (590) 2,295
Proceeds f rom borrowings 365,664 110,000
Repayment of borrowings (295,380) (75,814)
Movement in treasury shares (56) 29
Dividends paid to company shareholders 9 — (85,382)
Interest paid (15,386) (9,118)
Lease interest paid (7,483) (6,523)
Repayment of lease liabilities (6,270) (4,126)
Net Cash Inflow/(Outflow) from Financing Activities 40,499 (68,639)
Net Decrease in Cash and Cash Equivalents 14 (9,037) (184,477)
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year 60,536 245,013
Cash and Cash Equivalents at the End of the Year 25 51,499 60,536
The above cash flow statement should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
Consolidated financial statements (continued)
1 GENERAL INFORMATION
SkyCity Entertainment Group Limited
(the Company) and its subsidiaries
(together, SkyCity or the Group) operate
in the gaming, entertainment, hotel,
convention, hospitality and tourism
sectors. The Group has operations in
New Zealand and Australia.
The Company is a limited liability
company incorporated and domiciled in
New Zealand. The Company is registered
under the Companies Act 1993 and is
an FMC reporting entity under Part 7 of
the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013.
The address of its registered office is
99 Albert Street, Auckland. The Company
is listed on the New Zealand stock
exchange and has a foreign exempt
listing on the Australian stock exchange
(NZX and ASX respectively).
These consolidated financial statements
were approved for issue by the Board of
Directors (Board) on 20 August 2025.
For the purposes of complying with
generally accepted accounting practice
in New Zealand (GAAP), the Group is a
for profit entity.
2 BASIS OF PREPARATION
The financial statements of the Group
have been prepared in accordance
with GAAP. They comply with New
Zealand Equivalents to International
Financial Reporting Standards (NZ IFRS),
International Financial Reporting
Standards Accounting Standards (IFRS
Accounting Standards), the requirements
of Part 7 of the Financial Markets Conduct
Act 2013 and the NZX Listing Rules.
The Group financial statements
incorporate the assets and liabilities
of all subsidiaries of the Group as at
30 June 2025 and the results of all
subsidiaries for the year then ended.
MEASUREMENT BASIS
These financial statements have
been prepared under the historical
cost convention, as modified by the
revaluation of certain assets and liabilities,
as identified in specific accounting
policies below and in the notes.
PRESENTATION CURRENCY
The financial statements are presented
in New Zealand dollars, which is the
Company’s functional currency. Amounts
are rounded to the nearest thousand
dollars, unless otherwise stated.
NON-GAAP FINANCIAL
INFORMATION
The Group’s standard profit measure
prepared under GAAP is profit for
the year. When discussing financial
performance, the Group also uses
non-GAAP financial information,
which is not prepared in accordance
with NZ IFRS and therefore may not
be comparable to similar financial
information presented by other entities.
The directors and management believe
that this non-GAAP financial information
provides useful information to readers of
the financial statements to assist them
in understanding the Group’s financial
performance and is consistent with the
information used internally to evaluate
the performance of business units.
Definitions of non-GAAP financial
information used in these financial
statements are:
•EBITDA: earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortisation; and
•EBIT: earnings before interest and tax.
GOING CONCERN
Our FY25 financial results reflect the
challenging operating environment
we have navigated during the year.
The delayed economic recovery in
New Zealand has led to reduced
discretionary spending, which has
impacted our business performance.
This has coincided with a period of
elevated investment, primarily focused
on regulatory system upgrades,
the Building a Better Business (B3)
programme, pre-opening costs for the
New Zealand International Convention
Centre (NZICC), and preparations for
the launch of regulated online casino
gaming in New Zealand.
As at 30 June 2025, the Group reported
a negative working capital position of
$324.8 million. This is primarily due to
the reclassification of $246.4 million
relating to the NZICC deferred licence
value f rom non-current to current
liabilities. This amount is expected to
be transferred to Property, Plant and
Equipment within the next 12 months
upon completion of the NZICC (refer to
note 16). Excluding this reclassification,
the Group’s adjusted working capital
deficit would be $78.4 million, largely
comprising liabilities associated with
employee benefits and accrued
expenses. The Group continues to
maintain access to undrawn banking
facilities totalling $225.0 million as at
balance date (refer to note 12).
Looking ahead to FY26, we expect
market conditions to remain challenging
and have revised our earnings outlook
accordingly. The ongoing delay in New
Zealand’s economic recovery coincides
with the introduction of carded play
across our New Zealand properties,
as well as continued elevated costs
associated with regulatory system
upgrades, the B3 programme, NZICC
pre-opening costs (ahead of its February
opening), and the launch of regulated
online casino gaming in the 3rd quarter
of calendar year 2026.
As a result of those current and expected
trading conditions, historical capital
demands, and ongoing investment
requirements, the Company’s Directors
have today approved an equity raising
of approximately $240 million to provide
resilience within the balance sheet and
support the execution of near-term
priorities. The proceeds are intended
to be used to repay debt and provide
ongoing support to ensure the Group’s
forecast ability to comply with its
debt covenants.
In addition, SkyCity is targeting a
number of asset monetisations
expected to release approximately
$200 million over the next 12–18 months.
Key assets identified for potential
divestment include a proposed
Auckland car park concession and the
99 Albert Street office building.
The Company’s Directors have assessed
the Group’s forecast cash flows and
considered the effectiveness of the
mitigation strategies in place. Based on
this assessment, they have concluded that
there are no material uncertainties that
may cast significant doubt on the Group’s
ability to continue as a going concern.
They are confident that the Group will
remain compliant with all debt covenants
and be able to meet its financial
obligations as they fall due. Accordingly,
these financial statements have been
prepared on a going concern basis.
CRITICAL ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
AND JUDGEMENTS
The preparation of financial statements
requires the use of certain critical
accounting estimates and the exercise
of judgement regarding the application
of accounting policies. The critical
estimates and judgements made
in the preparation of these financial
statements relate to the following:
•goodwill and casino licences that
have an indefinite useful life are
impairment tested annually, which
requires the use of key estimates.
Details of the estimates made are
provided in note 23;
Notes to the financial statements
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Financial Statements
•the SkyCity Adelaide Pty Ltd (SkyCity
Adelaide) casino licence, which has a
finite useful life, was impaired in prior
periods and consequently was tested
for impairment in the current period.
This impairment testing required
the use of key estimates, which are
discussed in note 23(C);
•while the NZICC is still under
construction the Group has used
judgement and estimations in
relation to the value of the NZICC car
parks in service (note 22(B));
•investment properties are carried at
fair value. Determining the fair value
of properties requires the use of
estimates and assumptions. Details of
the estimates and assumptions made
are provided in note 15(B);
•judgement and estimation are required
when determining the amount of
deferred tax assets to be recognised
in respect of SkyCity Adelaide’s tax
losses and the recent change in New
Zealand tax legislation which may
impact the reduction of building
structure depreciation as part of the
tax calculation. Further information is
provided in note 19 and note 20; and
•the Group has used judgement and
estimations in relation to the value of
amounts recognised as construction
work in progress that are expected
to ultimately be allocated to the
structure on completion of the
NZICC as at 30 June 2025, for use
in tax calculations (note 20).
3 MATERIAL ACCOUNTING
POLICIES
The principal accounting policies
adopted in the preparation of these
financial statements are set out below
and in the notes to the financial
statements. These policies have been
consistently applied to all periods
presented, unless otherwise stated.
A) PRINCIPLES OF
CONSOLIDATION
Subsidiaries are all entities over which
the Group has control. The Group
controls an entity when the Group
is exposed, or has rights, to variable
returns f rom its involvement with the
entity and has the ability to affect those
returns through its power over the entity.
Subsidiaries are fully consolidated f rom
the date on which control is transferred
to the Group. They are deconsolidated
f rom the date that control ceases.
Intercompany transactions, balances and
unrealised gains on transactions between
Group companies are eliminated in the
Group financial statements. Unrealised
losses are also eliminated. When necessary,
amounts reported by subsidiaries have
been adjusted to conform with the
Group’s accounting policies.
B) FOREIGN CURRENCY
TRANSLATION
i) Transactions and Balances
Items included in the financial
statements of each Group entity are
measured using that entity’s functional
currency (which is the currency that
best reflects the economic substance of
the events and circumstances relevant
to that operation).
Foreign currency transactions are
translated into the functional currency
using the exchange rates prevailing
at the dates of the transactions.
Foreign exchange gains and losses
resulting f rom the settlement of such
transactions and f rom the translation
at year end exchange rates of monetary
assets and liabilities denominated in
foreign currencies are recognised in
the Income Statement, except when
deferred in other comprehensive
income as qualifying cash flow hedges
and qualifying net investment hedges.
Translation differences on financial
assets and liabilities carried at fair value
through profit or loss are recognised in
the Income Statement as part of the fair
value gain or loss. Translation differences
on non-monetary financial assets such
as equity instruments classified at fair
value through other comprehensive
income are included in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
ii) Foreign Operations
The results and financial position of
foreign entities (none of which has the
currency of a hyperinflationary economy)
that have a functional currency different
f rom the presentation currency are
translated into the presentation currency
as outlined below:
•assets and liabilities for each Balance
Sheet presented are translated at
the closing rate at the date of that
Balance Sheet;
•income and expenses for each
Income Statement are translated at
average exchange rates; and
•all resulting exchange differences
are recognised in other
comprehensive income.
Exchange differences arising f rom the
translation of any net investment in
foreign entities, and of borrowings and
other currency instruments designated
as hedges of such investments, are
taken to shareholders’ equity.
C) GOODS AND SERVICES TAX (GST)
The Income Statement, Statement of
Comprehensive Income and Statement
of Changes in Equity have been
prepared so that all components are
stated exclusive of GST. All items in the
Balance Sheet are stated net of GST,
with the exception of receivables and
payables, which include GST invoiced.
D) STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
Cash flows associated with derivatives
that are part of a hedging relationship
are off-set against cash flows associated
with the hedged item.
E) IMPAIRMENT OF
NON-FINANCIAL ASSETS
Intangible assets, including goodwill,
that have an indefinite useful life are
tested for impairment annually (or
more f requently if events or changes
in circumstances indicate that the
asset might be impaired). Goodwill and
casino licences are allocated to cash
generating units (CGU) for the purpose
of impairment testing.
Intangible assets that have a finite
useful life, and items of property,
plant and equipment are assessed for
indicators of impairment annually and
tested for impairment if an indicator of
impairment is found.
Impairment testing is done by
comparing the carrying value of the
asset to its recoverable amount, which is
the higher of value in use and fair value
less costs of disposal. Any impairment
is recognised immediately as an
expense. Impairment on goodwill is not
subsequently reversed, but impairment
on other assets may be reversed.
F) FAIR VALUE HIERARCHY
Some of the items in the financial
statements are carried at fair value.
In addition, for some items carried
under a different measurement basis,
fair value is disclosed. Where a fair
value measurement is made, the
measurement is categorised as falling
within one of three levels on the fair
value hierarchy, with categorisation
based on the nature of the significant
inputs to the valuation:
•Level 1 – unadjusted quoted prices in
an active market for identical assets or
liabilities;
•Level 2 – inputs other than quoted
prices included within level 1 that are
observable for the asset or liability,
either directly (i.e. as prices) or
indirectly (i.e. as information derived
f rom prices); and
•Level 3 – inputs for the asset or liability
that are not based on observable
market data (i.e. unobservable inputs).
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
3 MATERIAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
G) NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADOPTED DURING THE YEAR
During the year ended 30 June 2025, the Group adopted the amendments to FRS 44 New Zealand Additional Disclosures,
effective for periods beginning on or after 1 January 2024.
These amendments require the disaggregation of fees paid to audit firms into categories including audit, assurance, tax, and
other services. The Group has updated its disclosures accordingly in note 7. As part of this update, prior period comparatives have
been restated to align with the new disclosure requirements. The adoption of these amendments did not have a material impact
on the financial position or performance of the Group but resulted in enhanced transparency of audit-related disclosures.
H) STANDARDS, AMENDMENTS AND INTERPRETATIONS TO EXISTING STANDARDS THAT ARE NOT YET EFFECTIVE
New or revised standards and interpretations that have been approved, but are not yet effective, have not been adopted by the
group for the year ended 30 June 2025:
•NZ IFRS 18, Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements, issued in May 2024, is effective for annual reporting
periods beginning on or after 1 January 2027, and entities can early adopt this accounting standard. NZ IFRS 18 sets out
requirements for the presentation and disclosure of information in general purpose financial statements to help ensure
they provide relevant information that faithfully represents an entity’s assets, liabilities, equity, income and expenses. The
Group is yet to assess NZ IFRS 18’s full impact. The Group intends to apply the standard when it becomes mandatory f rom
1 January 2027.
There are no other new or amended standards that are issued but not yet effective, that are expected to have a material impact
on the Group.
4 SEGMENT INFORMATION
Operating segments are reported in a manner consistent with the internal reports that the Chief Executive Officer, who is the
chief operating decision maker, uses to assess performance and allocate resources.
The prior year has been restated to align the presentation with the July 2024 IFRIC agenda decision on segment reporting.
Gaming revenue has been adjusted for player rebates to align internal reporting with the revenue treatment in the Income
Statement. Comparative information has been restated to reflect this change.
A) PRIMARY REPORTING FORMAT BUSINESS SEGMENTS
SkyCity Other NZ SkyCity Corporate/ 2025
Auckland Operations Adelaide Online Group Total
2025 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000
Gaming revenue 357,820 64,121 159,184 — — 581,125
Online revenue — — — 3,661 — 3,661
Non-gaming revenue 153,079 10,118 72,845 420 58 236,520
Other income 3,355 — — — 564 3,919
Total income 514,254 74,239 232,029 4,081 622 825,225
Employee benefits expense (174,451) (24,136) (115,700) (2,512) (24,868) (341,667)
Gaming taxes and levies (19,173) (3,783) (28,992) — — (51,948)
Other expenses (113,294) (12,668) (73,818) (1,778) (13,957) (215,515)
Total EBITDA 207,336 33,652 13,519 (209) (38,203) 216,095
Depreciation and amortisation (50,081) (5,539) (24,863) (432) (13,298) (94,213)
Segment profit/(loss) (EBIT) 157,255 28,113 (11,344) (641) (51,501) 121,882
Net finance costs (53,718)
Profit before income tax 68,164
Segment assets 2,078,095 97,736 400,172 5,098 178,583 2,759,684
Net additions to non-current assets
(other than financial assets
and deferred tax) 133,004 7,531 11,465 3,309 30,482 185,791
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Financial Statements
4 SEGMENT INFORMATION (CONTINUED)
SkyCity Other NZ SkyCity Corporate/ 2024
Restated Auckland Operations Adelaide Online Group Total
2024 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000
Gaming revenue 394,826 66,574 167,571 — — 628,971
Online revenue — — — 9,336 — 9,336
Non-gaming revenue 143,011 10,375 69,274 — 70 222,730
Other income 11,320 31 20 — 10,051 21,422
NZICC fire income 45,926 — — — — 45,926
Share of profit f rom associate — — — — 158 158
Total income 595,083 76,980 236,865 9,336 10,279 928,543
Employee benefit expenses (168,545) (23,363) (103,194) (1,332) (18,292) (314,726)
Gaming taxes and levies (20,842) (4,107) (39,405) — — (64,354)
Impairment — — (94,326) — — (94,326)
NZICC fire expenses (52,390) — — — — (52,390)
Other expenses (128,655) (14,501) (95,832) (3,833) (21,769) (264,590)
Total EBITDA 224,651 35,009 (95,892) 4,171 (29,782) 138,157
Depreciation and amortisation (40,678) (5,423) (32,157) — (13,763) (92,021)
Segment profit/(loss) (EBIT) 183,973 29,586 (128,049) 4,171 (43,545) 46,136
Net finance costs (15,996)
Profit before income tax 30,140
Segment assets 2,015,633 97,184 425,735 3,193 239,291 2,781,036
Net additions to non-current assets
(other than financial assets and deferred tax) 292,073 6,869 12,246 — 13,141 324,329
B) SECONDARY REPORTING FORMAT – GEOGRAPHICAL SEGMENTS
Total Revenue
Non-current Assets
Excluding Financial
Instruments and
Deferred Tax Assets
Restated
2025 2024 2025 2024
$’000 $’000 $’000 $’000
New Zealand 593,139 691,677 1,666,639 1,429,233
Australia 232,086 236,866 959,818 1,109,714
825,225 928,543 2,626,457 2,538,947
C) DESCRIPTION OF SEGMENTS
The Group is organised into the following main operating segments:
SkyCity Auckland
This segment consists of the Group’s Auckland operations and includes casino operations, hotels and conventions, including the
NZICC, food and beverage, the Sky Tower, investment properties and a number of other related activities.
Other NZ Operations
This segment consists of the Group’s operations at SkyCity Hamilton and SkyCity Queenstown and includes casino operations,
conventions, and food and beverage.
SkyCity Adelaide
This segment consists of the Group’s Adelaide operations, and includes casino operations, hotel and conventions and food and beverage.
Online
This segment consists of the Group’s online gaming operations.
Corporate/Group
This segment includes head office functions, funding entities. It is not considered an operating segment.
5 REVENUE
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Gaming revenues represent the net win to the Group’s land based casinos f rom gaming activities, being the difference between
amounts wagered and amounts won by casino patrons. Revenue is recognised at the conclusion of each game. Gaming rebates
are accounted for as a reduction in gaming revenue.
Revenue f rom the online casino is derived f rom gaming activities by New Zealand based players using an online platform
developed by Gaming Innovation Group (GiG) and operated under a Malta gaming licence held by Silvereye Entertainment
Limited (a subsidiary of GiG). GiG is therefore the principal transacting with the online casino customers (and not SkyCity).
Revenue is reported net of costs payable to GiG under contractual arrangements agreed with GiG.
Non-gaming revenues include revenues arising f rom hotels and conventions, food and beverage, the Sky Tower, car parking and
other sources. These revenues are recognised when the associated goods or services have been provided.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Gaming 581,125 628,971
Non-gaming 236,520 222,730
Online gaming 3,661 9,336
Total revenue 821,306 861,037
The Group provides complimentary hotel accommodation, food and beverage and other goods and services to certain groups of
customers. As the goods and services offered under these arrangements are tailored to meet the needs of individual customers,
it is not practical to allocate total revenue received to all of the goods and services provided. Consequently, this revenue is all
recognised as gaming revenue. The retail value of complimentary items provided in the current year was $29.9 million
(2024: $23.2 million).
2025 2024
Notes $’000 $’000
Reconciliation to the segment note
Total revenue 5 821,306 861,037
Other income 6 3,919 21,422
Share of profit f rom associate — 158
NZICC fire income — 45,926
Total income 825,225 928,543
6 OTHER INCOME
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Gain on disposal of property, plant and equipment 395 124
Dividend income 15 7
Rental income f rom investment properties 3,205 3,866
Government grants 304 475
Other insurance income — 2,480
Gain on sale of shares in associate — 9,633
Gain on termination of Car Park Concession Agreement — 4,837
Total other income 3,919 21,422
Government Grants
The New Zealand Government provides wage subsidies to assist people into employment. SkyCity received $0.3 million in
subsidies for the current financial year under those schemes (2024: $0.5 million).
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
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Financial Statements
7 EXPENSES
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Other Expenses
Utilities, insurance and rates 32,531 30,867
Onerous contract expense (relating to the Wharf Casino lease) — 1,264
Other property expenses 22,483 19,516
ICT related expenses 23,147 21,729
Professional fees 31,714 20,291
Other items 6,212 29,073
Expenses relating to short term leases 684 807
Impairment of receivables 283 1
117,054 123,548
Depreciation and Amortisation (excluding right-of-use assets)
Depreciation (note 22) 76,075 73,846
Casino licence amortisation (Adelaide) (note 23) 1,394 1,721
Computer software amortisation (note 23) 9,800 9,908
Gaming machine entitlements amortisation (note 23) 101 126
87,370 85,601
Impairment of property, plant and equipment (note 22) — 53,168
Impairment of intangible assets (note 23) — 17,963
Impairment of right-of-use assets (note 10) — 23,195
— 94,326
7 EXPENSES (CONTINUED)
Auditor’s Fees
During the year, the fees outlined in the table below were incurred for services provided by the Company’s auditor and its
related practices.
The Group engages PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) on assignments additional to its statutory audit duties where PwC’s
expertise and experience with the Group are important and auditor independence is not impaired. For other work, the Group’s
External Auditor Independence Policy requires advisors other than PwC to be engaged wherever practicable.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Audit and review of the financial statements
1
1,475 1,432
Audit or review related services
2
64 77
Other assurance services
3
57 —
Total fee for audit, other audit related and other assurance services 1,596 1,509
Taxation services
4
80 46
Other services
5
60 125
Total fees for taxation and other services 140 171
Total fees paid to auditors 1,736 1,680
1. Audit and review of the financial statements includes $94,400 (2024: $101,900) paid to other PwC network firms. The 2025 audit fee also
includes $52,000 of additional fees incurred in relation to the FY24 audit which were finalised during FY25.
2. Audit or review related services include specified reporting to the Supervisor of the Group’s retail bond of $9,360 (2024: $9,050) and agreed
upon procedure engagements of $55,120 (2024: $68,120) in relation to the Group’s allocation of revenue f rom the SkyCity Community Trusts,
assessment of the underlying results disclosed in the Annual Report, procedures in relation to the vote count at the Annual General Meeting,
and for 2024 only, verification procedures in relation to share based payment calculations.
3. Other assurance services include the limited assurance engagement performed over the Group’s greenhouse gas emissions disclosures
of $57,200 (2024: nil).
4. Taxation services include $46,750 (2024: $45,960) for tax compliance services, and $33,400 (2024: nil) for tax consulting services.
5. Other services includes $34,000 (2024: $75,000) in relation to executive remuneration benchmarking, and a preconditions assessment in
preparation for assurance of the Group’s greenhouse gas emissions disclosures of $26,000 (2024: nil). In 2024 only, these also included
$50,000 for a preliminary gap assessment performed in relation to climate reporting requirements.
The fee paid to PwC for the audit and review of the Group’s financial statements is split across the jurisdictions where there
are subsidiary entities that require an audit or are a significant component of the Group. Taxation services are performed
by PwC Australia.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
PwC New Zealand 1,562 1,532
Other PwC network firms 174 148
Total fees paid to auditors 1,736 1,680
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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Financial Statements
8 EARNINGS PER SHARE
ACCOUNTING POLICY
i) Basic Earnings per Share
Basic earnings per share is calculated by dividing the profit attributable to equity holders of the Company by the weighted
average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the financial year, adjusted for bonus elements in ordinary shares issued
during the year.
ii) Diluted Earnings per Share
Diluted earnings per share adjusts the figures used in the determination of basic earnings per share to take into account the
after income tax effect of interest and other financing costs associated with dilutive potential ordinary shares, and the weighted
average number of shares assumed to have been issued for no consideration in relation to dilutive potential ordinary shares.
There are no dilutive potential ordinary shares and therefore basic and diluted earnings per share are the same.
2025 2024
Basic earnings per share
Weighted average number of ordinary shares used as the denominator
in calculating basic and diluted earnings per share 759,218,929 758,733,593
Profit/(loss) f rom continuing operations attributable to the ordinary equity
holders of the company used in calculating basic and diluted earnings per share ($’000) 29,234 (143,348)
Basic and diluted earnings /(loss) (cents) per share 3.9 (18.9)
9 DIVIDENDS
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Dividends are recognised when declared.
Cents
per share $’000
Dividends paid
2023 final 6.00 45,541
2024 interim 5.25 39,841
30 June 2024 11.25 85,382
2024 final — —
2025 interim — —
30 June 2025 — —
During the prior year, supplementary dividends of $8.8 million were paid on shares held by non-resident shareholders, for which
the Group received an equivalent foreign investor tax credit entitlement. The foreign investor tax credit entitlement is included in
income taxes paid within the Statement of Cash Flows.
The Board has not declared a final dividend in respect of the financial year ended 30 June 2025.
10 LEASES
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Assets and liabilities arising f rom a lease are initially measured on a present value basis. Lease liabilities include the net present
value of the following lease payments:
•fixed payments (including in-substance fixed payments), less any lease incentives receivable;
•variable lease payments that are based on an index or a rate; and
•payments to be made under reasonably certain extension options.
The lease payments are discounted using the interest rate implicit in the lease. If, as is generally the case, that rate cannot be
readily determined, the Group’s incremental borrowing rate is used, being the rate that the Group would have to pay to borrow
the funds necessary to obtain an asset of similar value to the right-of-use asset in a similar economic environment with similar
terms, security and conditions. The incremental borrowing rate is calculated as follows:
•where possible, using recent third party financing received by the individual lessee as a starting point, adjusted to reflect
changes in financing conditions since the third party financing was received;
•using a build-up approach that starts with a risk f ree interest rate adjusted for credit risk; and
•making adjustments specific to the lease (e.g. term, country, currency and security).
The weighted average incremental borrowing rate for the Group’s leases is 5.5% (2024: 5.3%), with rates ranging f rom 3.3% to 6.5%
(2024: 3.3% to 6.0%).
Right-of-use assets are measured at cost comprising the following:
•the amount of the initial measurement of the lease liability;
•any lease payments made at or before the commencement date;
•any initial direct costs; and
•restoration costs.
Subsequent to initial recognition:
•lease liabilities increase as a result of interest charged at a constant rate on the balance outstanding and are reduced for lease
payments made; and
•right-of-use assets are amortised on a straight-line basis over the remaining term of the lease (or over the remaining economic
life of the asset if, rarely, this is judged to be shorter than the lease term).
A small number of short term leases have not been included in the calculation of lease liabilities or right-of-use assets. Payments
made in relation to these leases are recognised on a straight-line basis over the lease term.
Lease Arrangements
The Group has a small number of long term leases. Lease terms are negotiated on an individual basis and contain a wide range
of different terms and conditions. The lease agreements do not impose any covenants other than the security interests in the
leased assets that are held by the lessor. Leased assets may not be used as security for borrowing purposes.
Extension and termination options are included in a number of leases across the Group. These are used to maximise operational
flexibility in terms of managing the assets used in the Group’s operations. The majority of extension and termination options held
are exercisable only by the Group and not by the respective lessor.
The Balance Sheet shows the following amounts relating to leases:
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Right-of-use assets net book value
SkyCity Auckland – Subsoil 4,123 4,126
SkyCity Auckland – Airbridges 3,215 3,058
SkyCity Queenstown – Stratton House 299 986
SkyCity Adelaide – Railway Building and Extension 49,501 48,687
SkyCity Adelaide – Car Park 37,511 41,722
SkyCity Malta – Office 1,552 —
Carded Play Hardware 17,706 —
Total right-of-use assets 113,907 98,579
Lease liabilities
Current 6,809 3,285
Non-current 130,154 118,147
Total lease liabilities 136,963 121,432
During the current financial year, the Group entered into new lease agreements for office premises and equipment, resulting in
the recognition of additional right-of-use assets and corresponding lease liabilities.
The additions to right-of-use assets during the year amounted to NZ$20.7 million, comprising:
•Office premises: NZ$1.9 million; and
•Equipment: NZ$18.8 million.
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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Financial Statements
10 LEASES (CONTINUED)
The Income Statement shows the following amounts relating to leases:
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Depreciation of right-of-use assets 6,843 6,420
Impairment of right-of-use assets — 23,195
Interest expense on lease liabilities (part of net finance costs) 7,483 6,523
11 NET FINANCE COSTS
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Finance costs 52,926 47,739
Foreign exchange losses/(gains) 1,633 (241)
Interest income (895) (6,251)
Casino duty interest (note 27) 27,332 —
Capitalised interest (note 22) (27,278) (25,251)
Total net finance costs 53,718 15,996
12 NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES – INTEREST BEARING LIABILITIES
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Interest bearing liabilities are initially recognised at fair value, net of transaction costs incurred. They are subsequently carried at
amortised cost and any difference between the proceeds (net of transaction costs) and the redemption value is recognised in
the Income Statement over the period of the borrowings using the effective interest method. However, the interest margin on
US dollar denominated USPP notes maturing in March 2028, February 2030 and September 2031 are accounted for as a fair value
hedge and the carrying value of the borrowings is adjusted for fair value changes attributable to the risk being hedged.
Borrowings are only classified as non-current liabilities if the Group has an unconditional right to defer settlement of the liability
for at least 12 months after the reporting date.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Unsecured Interest Bearing Liabilities
USPP notes 444,513 195,924
Syndicated bank facility 50,000 —
New Zealand bonds 175,000 175,000
Deferred funding expenses (3,029) (2,543)
Total non-current interest bearing liabilities 666,484 368,381
12 NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES – INTEREST BEARING LIABILITIES (CONTINUED)
A) USPP NOTES
As at 30 June 2025, SkyCity had outstanding USPP debt of:
•A$65.4 million maturing on 15 March 2028;
•US$75.0 million maturing on 28 February 2030; and
•US$150.0 million maturing on 15 September 2031.
Movements in the carrying value of the outstanding balance in the current year relate to the issue of new USPP notes, the
repayment of USPP notes that matured in March 2025 and foreign exchange and interest rate movements.
The US dollar USPP notes have been hedged to NZ dollars by way of cross currency interest rate swaps (CCIRS) to eliminate
foreign exchange exposure to the US dollar. The offsetting changes in the value of the CCIRS are included within derivative
financial instruments (note 30).
The fair value of USPP debt is estimated at NZ$478.5 million (2024: NZ$371.9 million) compared to a carrying value of
NZ$444.5 million (2024: NZ$357.0 million). Fair value has been calculated based on the present value of future principal and interest
cash flows, using market interest rates and credit margins at balance date. This is a level 2 valuation in the fair value hierarchy.
All financial covenants were met at 30 June 2025.
B) SYNDICATED BANK FACILITY
The syndicated banking facility is provided by ANZ (New Zealand) and Westpac (New Zealand).
As at 30 June 2025, SkyCity had in place revolving credit facilities, totalling NZ$275.0 million, of:
•NZ$57.5 million maturing on 15 July 2027 (undrawn at the reporting date);
•NZ$80.0 million maturing on 15 September 2027 ($50.0 million drawn at the reporting date); and
•NZ$137.5 million maturing on 15 September 2028 (undrawn at the reporting date).
C) NEW ZEALAND BONDS
$175.0 million of six year unsubordinated, unsecured redeemable fixed rate bonds were issued on 21 May 2021.
The bonds are quoted on the NZDX. As at 30 June 2025, the closing price was $0.95687 (2024: $0.89546) per $1 bond. The bonds
are carried at amortised cost. The total fair value of the bonds is $167.5 million (2024: $156.7 million) which is a level 1 valuation in
the fair value hierarchy as they are listed securities.
D) NEGATIVE PLEDGE DEEDS
A negative pledge deed has been executed in relation to each of the funding facilities bank facilities, USPP notes and New
Zealand bonds. In each deed, there are requirements for minimum guaranteeing group participation and financial covenants. All
requirements of the negative pledge deeds have been met as at 30 June 2025.
E) WEIGHTED AVERAGE INTEREST RATE
2025 2025 2024 2024
% $’000 % $’000
Interest bearing liabilities 5.84% 806,476 5.59% 733,472
The weighted average debt interest rate includes lease liabilities and the impact of interest rate and foreign currency hedging.
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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Financial Statements
13 CURRENT LIABILITIES – INTEREST BEARING LIABILITIES
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Borrowings are classified as current liabilities unless the Group has an unconditional right to defer settlement of the liability for at
least 12 months f rom the reporting date.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Unsecured Interest Bearing Liabilities
Syndicated bank facility — 80,000
USPP notes — 161,116
Total current interest bearing borrowings — 241,116
Refer note 12(A) for details concerning the USPP notes and 12(B) for details concerning the syndicated bank facility.
14 NET DEBT RECONCILIATION
Cash and Cash Lease
Equivalents Borrowings Liabilities Total
$’000 $’000 $’000 $’000
Net debt as at 1 July 2023 (245,013) 571,480 119,885 446,352
Cash flows 184,477 34,186 (10,649) 208,014
Non-cash movements:
Changes in fair values — 3,231 — 3,231
Changes in FX rates — — 552 552
Other non-cash movements — 600 11,644 12,244
Net debt as at 30 June 2024 (60,536) 609,497 121,432 670,393
Cash flows 9,037 70,284 (13,753) 65,568
Non-cash movements:
Changes in fair values — 5,663 — 5,663
Changes in FX rates — (18,475) (1,830) (20,305)
Other non-cash movements — (485) 31,114 30,629
Net debt as at 30 June 2025 (51,499) 666,484 136,963 751,948
15 INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Investment property, principally comprising f reehold office buildings and display space, is held for long term rental yields.
Completed investment property is carried at fair value, which is based on active market prices, adjusted, if necessary, for any
difference in the nature, location or condition of the specific asset. If this information is not available, the Group uses alternative
valuation methods, such as recent prices in less active markets, or discounted cash flow projections which are level 3 valuations in
the fair value hierarchy. Changes in fair value are recorded in the Income Statement.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Opening balance at 1 July 78,800 108,803
Additions 1,287 7,859
Net loss f rom fair value adjustment (2,362) (3,979)
Transfer to property, plant and equipment – NZICC car parks (note 22) — (30,483)
Transfer f rom property, plant and equipment – 99 Albert Street (note 22) 7,400 —
Transfer to property, plant and equipment – 99 Albert Street (note 22) (6,400) (3,400)
Closing balance at 30 June 78,725 78,800
A) AMOUNTS RECOGNISED IN PROFIT OR LOSS FOR INVESTMENT PROPERTY
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Rental income 3,205 3,866
Direct operating expenses f rom property that generated rental income (3,604) (2,465)
Net loss f rom fair value adjustment (2,362) (3,979)
Total recognised in profit or loss (2,761) (2,578)
B) INVESTMENT PROPERTIES HELD AT 30 JUNE 2025
Investment properties were revalued to fair value on 30 June 2024 and 30 June 2025 by CBRE Ltd (CBRE), a registered valuer and
member of the New Zealand Institute of Valuers and the Property Institute of New Zealand that has recent experience in the
location and category of the property being valued.
At 30 June 2024, the fair value of these investment properties was $78.8 million. The significant assumptions used in the
valuation were:
•capitalisation rate – range f rom 5.38% to 7.50%; and
•passing yield (calculated as net rent divided by fair value) – range f rom 2.02% to 7.52%.
At 30 June 2025, the fair value of these investment properties was $78.7 million. The significant assumptions used in the valuation were:
•capitalisation rate – range f rom 5.25% to 7.50%; and
• passing yield (calculated as net rent divided by fair value) – range f rom 2.02% to 6.68%.
The 30 June 2024 and 30 June 2025 valuations are sensitive to movements in estimated capitalisation rate and passing yield.
If the assumed capitalisation rate is increased or the passing yield is decreased, the fair value would decrease.
99 Albert Street
During the current financial year, the Group reassessed the use of certain floors at 99 Albert Street which is a mixed-use building.
As a result two floors previously classified as investment property, with a carrying value of $6.4 million, were transferred to
property, plant and equipment due to a change in use, as they are now owner occupied. Simultaneously, two floors previously
classified under property, plant and equipment with a carrying value of $7.0 million, were transferred to investment property,
as they are now leased to third parties and held to earn rental income.
Immediately before reclassification the portion of property, plant and equipment was revalued and the resulting uplift in value of
$0.4 million has been transferred to the Asset Revaluation Reserve (note 29).
The net impact of these transfers resulted in:
•A net increase of $1.0 million in the carrying amount of investment property; and
•An amount of $0.4 million was transferred to the Asset Revaluation Reserve, reflecting the fair value gain on the reclassified assets.
The following were the significant assumptions f rom CBRE’s valuation used at the date of change in use:
•capitalisation rate of 7.0%; and
•passing yield (calculated as net rent divided by fair value) of 3.26%.
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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Financial Statements
16 CURRENT LIABILITIES – DEFERRED LICENCE VALUE
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Regulatory reforms granted which are specific to the Group are initially recognised at their fair value when it is probable that the
reforms will be received, and that the Group will comply with all conditions attached.
Regulatory reforms are recognised as an intangible asset (note 23) and included within the value of casino licences. Where a
regulatory reform is related to property, plant and equipment, once constructed the carrying value of that property, plant and
equipment is reduced by the value of the regulatory reforms. Prior to completion of the related property, plant and equipment,
the value of the regulatory reforms is accounted for as a deferred licence value.
Total
2025 $’000
Opening balance —
Transfer f rom non-current liabilities 246,408
Closing balance 246,408
Refer note 17 for details concerning the Auckland deferred licence value.
17 NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES – DEFERRED LICENCE VALUE
Total
2025 $’000
Opening balance at 1 July 246,408
Transferred to current liabilities (note 16) (246,408)
Closing balance at 30 June —
Total
2024 $’000
Opening balance 1 July 262,444
Adjustment to property, plant and equipment re NZICC car parks (note 22) (16,036)
Closing balance at 30 June 246,408
SKYCITY AUCKLAND
In 2016, SkyCity’s accounting for the granting of the NZICC Auckland casino licence enhancements resulted in the recognition
of a deferred licence value liability of $405.0 million. Based on the Group’s accounting policy, this amount was to be accounted
for as a reduction in the carrying value of the NZICC upon completion. Following the NZICC fire in October 2019, the damaged
portion of the NZICC was disposed of for financial reporting purposes. As a result of this disposal a portion of the deferred licence
was released to the Income Statement in the years ended 30 June 2020 to 30 June 2023.
In the prior financial year, as a result of NZICC car parks being in service, $16.0 million of the remaining balance was released
against the assets (note 22).
In the current financial year, the balance has been moved to current liabilities as it will be moved to Property, Plant and
Equipment within the next 12 months (note 16).
18 INCOME TAX EXPENSE
ACCOUNTING POLICY
The income tax expense for the year is the tax payable on the current year’s taxable income, based on the income tax rate for
each jurisdiction. This is then adjusted by changes in deferred tax assets and liabilities attributable to temporary differences
between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their carrying amounts in the financial statements.
Deferred income tax is recognised, using the liability method, on temporary differences arising between the tax bases of assets
and liabilities and their carrying amounts in the financial statements. However, deferred tax liabilities are not recognised if they
arise f rom the initial recognition of goodwill. Deferred income tax is not accounted for if it arises f rom initial recognition of an
asset or liability in a transaction other than a business combination that at the time of the transaction affects neither accounting
nor taxable profit or loss. Deferred income tax is determined using tax rates (and laws) that have been enacted or substantively
enacted by the reporting date and are expected to apply when the related deferred income tax asset is realised, or the deferred
income tax liability is settled.
Deferred income tax assets are recognised only to the extent that it is probable that future taxable profit will be available against
which the temporary differences can be utilised.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
a) Income Tax Expense
Current tax expense 36,795 46,684
Deferred tax expense (note 19 and 20) 2,135 126,804
Total income tax expense 38,930 173,488
b) Numerical Reconciliation of Income Tax Expense
to Prima Facie Tax Payable/(Receivable)
Profit f rom continuing operations before income tax expense 68,164 30,140
Prima facie income tax @ 28% 19,086 8,439
Tax effects of:
Australian tax group losses not recognised 12,488 4,004
Items non-deductible for tax purposes 11,326 (3,123)
Other 642 114
Investment property fair value adjustments 593 166
Non-assessable gain on sale (103) —
Items non-assessable for tax purposes (329) 2,793
Difference in overseas tax rates (1,037) (4,340)
Prior period adjustments (1,077) 2,172
Adjustment to New Zealand building tax depreciation (2,659) 129,599
Deferred tax impact of termination of Car Park Concession Agreement — 19,373
Non-deductible regulatory provision — 8,130
Adelaide impairment adjustments — 7,096
Non-deductible NZICC fire capital receipts/expenses — 1,810
Controlled foreign company regime — 1,342
Non-taxable gain on sale of associate shares — (2,697)
Non-deductible gain on Auckland car park buy back — (1,390)
Income tax expense 38,930 173,488
The weighted average applicable tax rate was 57.1% (2024: 575.6%). The weighted average tax rate has been significantly impacted by:
•Non-deductible expenditure;
•Adjustments to New Zealand building tax depreciation;
•Fair value adjustments; and
•Australian Group tax losses not recognised.
Excluding these items, the weighted average tax rate would have been 36.8% (2024: 27.4%).
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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Financial Statements
19 DEFERRED TAX ASSETS
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
The balance comprises temporary differences attributable to:
Provisions and accruals 6,146 9,928
Depreciation 3,859 3,561
Foreign exchange variances (79) 36
Lease liabilities 34,718 33,860
Right-of-use assets (26,265) (25,524)
Tax losses 30,489 30,489
Other (117) —
Net deferred tax assets 48,751 52,350
Movements:
Balance at beginning of the year 52,350 25,465
Foreign exchange differences — 127
Charged to the Income Statement (note 18) (3,599) 26,758
Closing balance at 30 June 48,751 52,350
Deferred tax assets relate to the Australian and other foreign operations (excluding Malta).
The Group has recognised a deferred tax asset of $48.8 million in relation to tax losses and other deductible timing differences.
A deferred tax asset has been recognised on tax losses of $100.9 million (A$93.7 million) (2024: $102.5 million, A$93.7 million) in
relation to Australia. The Group has a further $53.7 million (A$49.9 million) (2024: $13.3 million, A$12.2 million) of tax losses which
are not recognised as deferred tax assets because it has been assessed that it is not probable that future taxable profits will be
available in an appropriate time f rame against which the Group can utilise the tax losses. The tax losses have predominantly
arisen as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic impacting SkyCity Adelaide’s operations and South Australian tourism, with
the expanded SkyCity Adelaide property largely not able to operate at full capacity for the majority of time since opening in
December 2020. In addition, accelerated tax depreciation on the Adelaide property expansion and expenditure incurred in
relation to SkyCity Adelaide regulatory reviews have also contributed to the tax loss position.
It is possible to carry forward Australian tax losses indefinitely, subject to ownership and similar business tests, and these losses
do not have an expiry date.
The Group’s forecasts, taking into account the latest outlook for the business, indicate that the Adelaide business will generate
future taxable income. On this basis, the Group has considered it is probable that sufficient future taxable income will be
generated to utilise the tax losses recognised.
The Group reviews future loss utilisation at each reporting date.
20 DEFERRED TAX LIABILITIES
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
The balance comprises temporary differences attributable to:
Provisions and accruals (7,012) (8,175)
Depreciation 216,126 218,208
Lease liabilities (5,573) (2,398)
Right-of-use asset 5,608 2,288
Cash flow hedges (3,618) (1,105)
Asset revaluation reserve 1,921 1,921
Tax losses (90) —
Other 330 —
Net deferred tax liabilities 207,692 210,739
Movements:
Balance at the beginning of the year 210,739 56,100
Charged to the Income Statement (note 18) (1,464) 153,562
Tax (credited)/debited directly to other comprehensive income (note 29) (1,583) 1,077
Closing balance at 30 June 207,692 210,739
Deferred tax liabilities relate to the New Zealand and Malta operations.
On 28 March 2024, the New Zealand Government enacted changes to tax legislation which removed the ability to depreciate
buildings with a life over 50 years for tax purposes. For the Group the application of this taxation change under NZ IAS 12 Income
Taxes resulted in an increase to the deferred taxation liability of $129.6 million and a corresponding one off increase to tax expense
of $129.6 million as the tax base of New Zealand buildings was reduced to nil. The deferred taxation liability adjustment relates
to New Zealand buildings except for certain investment properties and also impacts building structure assets that are classified
as construction work-in-progress, including the Group’s NZICC and Horizon Hotel projects. As these projects were yet to be
completed at 30 June 2024, there was significant judgement involved in estimating the value of the building structure assets
for these projects. Due to the judgement involved, the final impact may differ materially f rom the amount included in these
financial statements.
During the current financial year, the Horizon Hotel commenced operations. The final cost allocation of the buildings was
determined by a quantity surveyor to differ f rom previously estimated. As a result a further impact of the 0% depreciation rules
was recorded. The Horizon Hotel is not eligible for the investment boost (discussed below).
On 22 May 2025 the Government introduced the investment boost initiative for new depreciable property first available for use
after that date. Any entitlement is subject to demonstrating compliance with the specific requirements of tax legislation. SkyCity
will consider the application and suitability of the investment boost on an asset-by-asset basis.
Recent law changes impacted deferred tax in the current year by an effective net increase to building tax depreciation of
$9.5 million.
21 IMPUTATION AND FRANKING CREDITS
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Balances available for use in subsequent reporting periods
Imputation credit account (New Zealand) 120,899 85,079
Franking credit account (Australia) (A$) 13,951 13,951
As required by the Income Tax Act 2007, the imputation credit account had a credit balance as at 31 March 2025. The continued
availability of imputation credits is subject to maintaining defined shareholder continuity rules with certain concessions for a
listed company.
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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Financial Statements
22 PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Property, plant and equipment are stated at historical cost less accumulated depreciation and accumulated impairment losses.
Historical cost includes expenditure that is directly attributable to the acquisition of the items. Cost may also include transfers
f rom equity of any gains/losses on qualifying cash flow hedges of foreign currency purchases of property, plant and equipment.
Land is not depreciated. Depreciation on other assets is calculated using the straight-line method to allocate their cost, net of
their residual values, over their estimated useful lives, as below:
•Buildings and fit out 5 – 75 years
•Plant, equipment and motor vehicles 2 – 75 years
•Fixtures and fittings 3 – 25 years
The assets’ residual values and useful lives are reviewed, and adjusted if appropriate, at each reporting date.
Plant
equipment Fixtures Capital
Buildings and motor and work in
Land and fitout vehicles fittings progress Total
$’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000
At 1 July 2023
Cost 179,602 999,241 420,326 147,236 735,471 2,481,876
Accumulated depreciation and impairment — (396,279) (322,553) (110,568) — (829,400)
Net book amount 179,602 602,962 97,773 36,668 735,471 1,652,476
Year ended 30 June 2024
Opening net book amount 179,602 602,962 97,773 36,668 735,471 1,652,476
Exchange differences — 908 106 28 12 1,054
Net additions/transfers/disposals 1,146 13,636 26,865 3,146 38,771 83,564
Car park asset additions — 186,612 1,480 — 13,942 202,034
Release f rom deferred licence (note 17) — (16,036) — — — (16,036)
Transfer to investment properties
99 Albert Street (note 15) 1,928 1,316 112 44 — 3,400
Transfer to investment properties –
NZICC car parks (note 15) — 30,483 — — — 30,483
Transfer to assets held for sale (note 26) (13,000) — — — — (13,000)
Depreciation charge — (32,225) (33,183) (8,438) — (73,846)
Impairment (note 7) — (43,913) (6,215) (3,040) — (53,168)
Closing net book amount 169,676 743,743 86,938 28,408 788,196 1,816,961
At 30 June 2024
Cost 169,676 1,197,072 376,109 139,047 788,196 2,670,100
Accumulated depreciation and impairment — (453,329) (289,171) (110,639) — (853,139)
Net book amount 169,676 743,743 86,938 28,408 788,196 1,816,961
22 PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT (CONTINUED)
Plant
equipment Fixtures Capital
Buildings and motor and work in
Land and fitout vehicles fittings progress Total
$’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000
Year ended 30 June 2025
Opening net book amount 169,676 743,743 86,938 28,408 788,196 1,816,961
Exchange differences — (2,571) (318) (167) (66) (3,122)
Net additions/transfers/disposals — 47,620 32,207 3,094 57,341 140,262
Horizon Hotel additions — 138,090 10,653 15,082 (163,825) —
Transfer to investment properties –
99 Albert Street (note 15) (4,028) (2,990) — — — (7,018)
Transfer f rom investment properties –
99 Albert Street (note 15) 3,484 2,916 — — — 6,400
Depreciation charge — (35,331) (31,589) (9,155) — (76,075)
Closing net book amount 169,132 891,477 97,891 37,262 681,646 1,877,408
At 30 June 2025
Cost 169,132 1,374,849 382,984 153,548 681,646 2,762,159
Accumulated depreciation and impairment — (483,372) (285,093) (116,286) — (884,751)
Net book amount 169,132 891,477 97,891 37,262 681,646 1,877,408
A) CAPITALISED BORROWING COSTS
Borrowing costs of $27.3 million have been capitalised in the current year relating to capital projects (2024: $25.3 million) using
the Group’s weighted average cost of debt of 5.84% across the year (2024: 5.59%).
B) NZICC CAR PARKS
In the prior year the car parks in the NZICC were capitalised to property, plant and equipment as they are now in service. As
the NZICC is still a construction site, and the information required to accurately assess the car park asset values will not be
received f rom FCC until following practical completion, significant judgment was required to estimate the asset value and asset
classification. The estimates were based on the building works contract and the cost of remediation post the fire in October 2019,
at the NZICC construction site. The most significant risk to the judgments and estimates used, relate to the final allocation of
costs once construction is complete. These judgements and estimates will continue to be reviewed as new information becomes
available and as a result may change materially.
C) ENCUMBRANCES
A memorandum of encumbrance is registered against the certificate of title for the Auckland casino in favour of Auckland
Council. Auckland Council requires prior written consent before any transfer, assignment or disposition of the land. The intent of
the covenant is to protect the Council’s rights under the resource consent, relating to the provision of the bus terminus, public
car park and public footpaths around the complex.
A further encumbrance records the Council’s interest in relation to the subsoil areas under Federal and Hobson Streets used by
SkyCity as car parking and a vehicle tunnel. The encumbrance is to notify any transferee of the Council’s interest as lessor of the
subsoil areas.
There are four encumbrances relating to the NZICC site land. One encumbrance protects the rights of the Crown under the
agreement between the Crown and the Group for the construction of the NZICC (NZICC Agreement), two relate to firewalls
between buildings that have now been demolished and the final encumbrance protects the underground vehicle entrance to
the car park on the main Auckland casino site. The NZICC site land is also subject to a covenant in favour of the Crown which
restricts the subdivision and use of the site to that permitted under the NZICC Agreement.
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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Financial Statements
23 INTANGIBLE ASSETS
ACCOUNTING POLICY
i) Goodwill
Goodwill represents the excess of the cost of an acquisition over the fair value of the Group’s share of the net identifiable assets of
the acquired business at the date of acquisition. Goodwill is included in intangible assets. Goodwill is not amortised but is instead
tested for impairment annually (or more f requently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that it might be impaired) and
is carried at cost less accumulated impairment losses.
ii) Acquired Software
Acquired computer software (other than that licensed under a software as a service arrangement) is capitalised at cost (which
includes acquisition cost and any costs incurred in bringing the software into use). Subsequent to initial recognition, it is carried
at cost less accumulated amortisation and accumulated impairment losses. Amortisation is calculated on a straight-line basis
over the useful life, which ranges f rom three to 15 years.
iii) Gaming Machine Entitlements
Gaming machine entitlements (GMEs) are required to operate gaming machines in South Australia. Each GME gives the licensee
the right to own and operate a single gaming machine at the licensee’s venue.
The number of GMEs held by a licensee cannot exceed the maximum number of gaming machines which have been approved
for the venue. SkyCity Adelaide currently owns 1,080 GMEs and is licensed to hold a maximum of 1,500.
GMEs can be purchased or sold during trading rounds by an eligible person via the South Australian Government’s approved
trading system. Trading rounds are usually held at least twice a year at the discretion of the South Australian Liquor and
Gambling Commissioner. The trading price of a GME is determined by a number of factors, including the number of sellers and
buyers and the minimum and maximum prices offered.
SkyCity Adelaide’s GMEs are carried at cost less accumulated amortisation and impairment losses. They are amortised over the
term of the exclusivity period (which is the period over which SkyCity Adelaide is exclusively permitted to provide casino gaming,
except for interactive gaming, in South Australia), which is to 30 June 2035.
iv) Casino Licences and Regulatory Reforms
The Group’s casino licences that have:
•a finite useful life are carried at cost less accumulated amortisation and accumulated impairment losses. Amortisation is
charged to profit or loss on a straight-line basis over the legal licence term; and
•an indefinite useful life are carried at cost less accumulated impairment losses.
Determining whether a casino licence has a finite or indefinite useful life is a key judgement and involves assessment of the
terms and conditions, and in particular the renewal terms, of the relevant licence.
Regulatory reforms granted by a government that are specific to the Group are accounted for as intangible assets arising f rom
a government grant and included within the value of casino licences. The reforms are initially recognised at their fair value when
there is reasonable assurance that the reforms will be received, and the Group will comply with all conditions attached to them.
Where a regulatory reform is related to property, plant and equipment, once constructed the carrying value of that property,
plant and equipment is reduced by the value of the regulatory reforms. Prior to completion of the related property, plant and
equipment, the value of the regulatory reforms is accounted for as deferred licence value.
23 INTANGIBLE ASSETS (CONTINUED)
Gaming
Casino Computer machine
Goodwill licenses software entitlements Total
$’000 $’000 $’000 $’000 $’000
At 1 July 2023
Cost 35,786 779,055 140,450 1,848 957,139
Accumulated amortisation and impairment — (286,864) (103,395) (327) (390,586)
Net book amount 35,786 492,191 37,055 1,521 566,553
Movements in the Year Ended 30 June 2024
Exchange differences — 398 4 6 408
Net additions/transfers/disposals — — 6,520 — 6,520
Car park asset additions — — 844 — 844
Impairment charge — (17,533) (144) (286) (17,963)
Amortisation charge — (1,721) (9,908) (126) (11,755)
Closing net book amount 35,786 473,335 34,371 1,115 544,607
At 30 June 2024
Cost 35,786 780,836 114,187 1,857 932,666
Accumulated amortisation and impairment — (307,501) (79,816) (742) (388,059)
Net book amount 35,786 473,335 34,371 1,115 544,607
Movements in the Year Ended 30 June 2025
Exchange differences — (1,066) (27) (16) (1,109)
Net additions/transfers/disposals — — 18,384 — 18,384
Horizon Hotel additions — — 5,226 — 5,226
Amortisation charge — (1,394) (9,800) (101) (11,295)
Closing net book amount 35,786 470,875 48,154 998 555,813
At 30 June 2025
Cost 35,786 774,866 118,412 1,828 930,892
Accumulated amortisation and impairment — (303,991) (70,258) (830) (375,079)
Net book amount 35,786 470,875 48,154 998 555,813
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
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Financial Statements
23 INTANGIBLE ASSETS (CONTINUED)
Casino LicenceContract Term
SkyCity Auckland
Casino (indefinite
useful life)
SkyCity Auckland Limited holds a casino premises licence for the Auckland premises.
The initial licence was granted in 1996 for nil consideration, and hence there was no associated initial
carrying value.
Pursuant to the terms of the NZICC Agreement, the initial term of the licence was extended to
30 June 2048.
The licence can be renewed for further periods of 15 years pursuant to section 138 of the
Gambling Act 2003 (NZ).
In addition to the licence extension, the casino premises licence was amended to: (a) permit the
implementation of account based cashless gaming and ticket in ticket out (TITO) gaming systems; (b)
permit an increase in the number of gaming machines, gaming tables and automated table games; and
(c) implement various other operational improvements. Under the NZICC Agreement, the Company has
agreed to construct the NZICC for a total cost of at least $430.0 million.
The reforms (a to c above) are exclusive to the Group and were recorded at fair value based on the
estimated incremental benefit over the life of the reforms. The fair value was determined using a
discounted cash flow model falling within level 3 of the fair value hierarchy over the life of the reforms.
The carrying amount of the casino licence is $405.0 million (2024: $405.0 million).
SkyCity Adelaide
Casino (finite
useful life)
The casino and associated operations are carried out by SkyCity Adelaide under a casino licence (the
Approved Licensing Agreement (ALA)) dated October 1999 (as amended). Unless terminated earlier,
the expiry date of the ALA is 30 June 2085. The term of the ALA can be renewed for a further fixed term
pursuant to section 9 of the Casino Act 1997 (SA). The carrying value of the casino licence is amortised
over the life of the ALA.
The casino licence and associated regulatory reforms asset are amortised over 20 years or 71 years
depending on whether the incremental benefit is associated with the exclusivity period (which is to
30 June 2035 and is the period over which SkyCity Adelaide is exclusively permitted to provide casino
gaming, except for interactive gaming, in South Australia) or the full licence period.
The carrying value of the casino licence is A$61.2 million, NZ$65.9 million (2024: A$62.4 million,
NZ$68.3 million).
SkyCity Hamilton
Casino (indefinite
useful life)
SkyCity Hamilton Limited holds a casino premises licence for the Hamilton premises. The casino
premises licence is for an initial 25 year term f rom 19 September 2002. The licence can be renewed for
further periods of 15 years pursuant to section 138 of the Gambling Act 2003 (NZ). As the licence was
initially granted for nil consideration, there is no associated carrying value.
SkyCity
Queenstown
Casino (indefinite
useful life)
SkyCity Queenstown Limited holds a casino premises licence for the Queenstown premises. The casino
premises licence is for an initial 25 year term f rom 7 December 2000. The licence can be renewed for
further periods of 15 years pursuant to section 138 of the Gambling Act 2003 (NZ). SkyCity Queenstown
Limited has applied to the Gambling Commission for a renewal of the licence, who has sought and
received feedback f rom various government agencies and the public on the renewal application. A
public hearing of the renewal application will be heard in November 2025. As the licence was initially
granted for nil consideration, there is no associated carrying value.
23 INTANGIBLE ASSETS (CONTINUED)
A) IMPAIRMENT TESTS FOR INTANGIBLES ASSETS WITH INDEFINITE USEFUL LIVES
Goodwill and the casino licences of SkyCity Auckland and SkyCity Hamilton have indefinite useful lives and consequently are
tested annually for impairment.
SkyCity SkyCity
Auckland Hamilton
1
Total
$’000 $’000 $’000
2025
Goodwill — 35,786 35,786
Casino licence 405,000 — 405,000
Total 405,000 35,786 440,786
2024
Goodwill — 35,786 35,786
Casino licence 405,000 — 405,000
Total 405,000 35,786 440,786
1. SkyCity Hamilton is included within the “Other NZ Operations” segment in note 4.
These intangible assets are tested for impairment in the CGU to which they belong. The recoverable amount of each CGU is
determined on the basis of fair value less costs of disposal (FVLCOD). These calculations use cash flow projections using updated
five-year forecasts for each site. The calculated FVLCOD of these CGU’s exceeds the carrying value.
The entire Auckland precinct is treated as a single CGU due to the close and interconnected relationship of the cash flows across
all of SkyCity’s Auckland businesses.
B) KEY ASSUMPTIONS USED FOR FAIR VALUE LESS COSTS OF DISPOSAL CALCULATIONS OF CASH GENERATING UNITS
Compound annual
EBITDA growth rate
Terminal
growth rate
Post-tax
discount Rate
2024
2025 2024 2025 2024 2025 restated
SkyCity Auckland 7.9% 6.7% 2.5% 2.5% 9.2% 9.6%
SkyCity Hamilton 3.3% 3.1% 2.5% 2.5% 9.2% 9.6%
Note: restated due to the use of pre‑tax in 2024.
During the current financial year, the Group revised the methodology used to determine the recoverable amount of its New
Zealand CGUs for impairment testing purposes. In prior years, recoverable amounts were determined using a Value in Use (VIU)
approach based on pre-tax discounted future cash flows.
For the current financial year, the Group adopted a FVLCOD approach, consistent with NZ IAS 36 Impairment of Assets.
This change reflects the availability of market based inputs and valuation evidence, which provide a more appropriate basis
for estimating recoverable amounts.
Key changes in methodology include:
•Adjustment for Disposal Costs: A deduction of 2% of Enterprise Value was applied to each CGU to reflect estimated costs of
disposal, aligning the DCF valuation with FVLCOD principles.
•Discount Rate: A post-tax Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) was applied. In prior years, the recoverable amount was
determined using a pre-tax discount rate, consistent with the VIU methodology previously applied. The shift to a post-tax rate
aligns with market participant assumptions under the FVLCOD approach.
•Corporate Cost Allocation: Unallocated corporate expenditure was allocated across the CGUs based on each CGU’s Enterprise
Value prior to allocation. This approach ensures a proportionate and economically justified distribution of shared costs.
Management believes these adjustments provide a more accurate and market aligned estimate of CGU recoverable amounts.
For each CGU, there is sufficient headroom between the FVLCOD of the CGU and the carrying value of the related CGU assets
that significant changes in the assumptions used would not require an impairment.
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceIntroductionYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
148149
Financial Statements
23 INTANGIBLE ASSETS (CONTINUED)
C) IMPAIRMENT REVIEW OF THE SKYCITY ADELAIDE CGU
At each reporting period, the Group undertakes a FVLCOD assessment of its Adelaide CGU to identify if any indicators of
impairment are identified and require adjustment.
In the previous financial year, Deloitte was engaged to undertake an indicative valuation of the SkyCity Adelaide GCU, using
the FVLCOD approach (with the valuation being a level 3 measurement in the fair value hierarchy). As a result of this valuation,
an impairment of A$86.2 million (NZ$94.3 million) was recognised and apportioned between property, plant and equipment
A$48.6 million (NZ$53.2 million), intangible assets A$16.4 million (NZ$17.9 million) and right-of-use assets A$21.2 million (NZ$23.2 million).
In the current financial year, Management undertook an enterprise valuation of the Adelaide CGU using a FVLCOD methodology
consistent with the previous years, utilising a SkyCity Adelaide ten-year model that is premised on casino license ownership continuity.
A number of significant assumptions and changes in SkyCity Adelaide’s outlook have been made since the previous valuation including:
•delay in introduction of Carded Play f rom February 2026 to December 2026 with no adoption by the rest of the South
Australian gaming machine market. The introduction of Carded Play is assumed to reduce uncarded revenue by 17.5%
(2024: 17.5%). This assumption has a significant level of uncertainty as it requires an estimation of the potential impact
on customer behaviour and Adelaide’s competitive positioning in the South Australian market, to estimate the financial
implications for Adelaide’s future revenue and cashflow generation;
•decrease in gaming machine market share growth f rom 12% in FY35 in the previous valuation to remain flat throughout
the forecast period;
•optimisation of variable capital and operating expenditure to align with gaming performance; and
•increase in B3 programme costs in FY26 and FY27 as well as business as usual financial crime
and host responsibility resources on an ongoing basis.
SkyCity Entertainment Group Directors adopted a ten-year model and the enterprise value for SkyCity Adelaide that falls within
the enterprise value range as determined by Management.
Due to the significant uncertainty inherent in these estimates several sensitivities on the ten-year outlook were undertaken and
analysed for consideration as part of the impairment assessment resulting in a range for the enterprise value of A$202.0 million
to A$221.8 million (2024: A$213.5 million to A$230.7 million) with resultant headroom of A$7.0 million to A$26.8 million.
The enterprise value prepared indicates that no impairment or reversal of a previous impairment is warranted premised on the
following financial assumptions:
•compound annual EBITDA (excluding B3 costs) growth rate f rom 2026 to 2035 of 5.7% (30 June 2024: 2025 to 2034 of 6.0%);
•terminal growth rate of 2.5 % (30 June 2024 of 2.5%); and
•post-tax discount rate of 9.8% (30 June 2024: 11.0% which included an upward risk adjustment to reflect uncertainties in the
underlying cash flow assumptions. This risk adjustment has been removed f rom the discount rate and reflected in the cash
flow forecasts themselves this year).
SkyCity has engaged Grant Samuel and Associates Limited to independently determine the post-tax discount rate.
The indicative enterprise value is highly sensitive to changes in its key assumptions and estimates. The sensitivities
below illustrate the range of the potential impact of +/- changes against the mid-point of the enterprise value:
•a Carded Play impact assumption change of +/- 2.5% results in an approximate change in enterprise value of
A$6.4 million/NZ$6.9 million (2024: A$11.0 million/NZ$12.0 million) with all other factors remaining unchanged;
•a terminal growth rate change of +/- 0.5% results in an approximate change in enterprise value in the range
of A$11.1 – $12.8 million/NZ$11.9 - $13.8 million (2024: A$7.0 - $8.0 million/NZ$8.0 – $9.0 million);
•a discount rate change of +/- 0.4% results in an approximate change in enterprise value in the range of
A$13.5 – $15.1 million/NZ$14.5 - $16.3 million (2024 at 0.5%: A$18.0 – $22.0 million/NZ$20.0 – $24.0 million);
•a cost inflator change on a fixed cost base of +/- 0.25% results in an approximate change in enterprise value of
A$20.7 million/NZ$22.3 million; and
•a change in resultant gaming machine share in FY35 of +/- 0.5% results in an approximate change in enterprise value
of A$27.1 – $29.5 million/NZ$29.2 – $31.8 million.
The Group will continue to complete annual impairment reviews of the SkyCity Adelaide GCU. Increases in the FVLCOD could
result in a partial reversal of impairment recognised to date. Decreases in the FVLCOD may result in the recognition of an
additional impairment charge.
24 RECEIVABLES AND PREPAYMENTS
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Trade receivables are recognised initially at transaction value and subsequently measured at amortised cost less impairment.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Net trade receivables
Trade receivables (gross) 5,483 8,143
Impairment (1,081) (1,052)
Trade receivables (net) 4,402 7,091
Other receivables 3,405 60,871
Prepayments 16,173 18,916
Total receivables and prepayments 23,980 86,878
Due to the short term nature of these receivables, and the fact that they are assessed for impairment, their carrying value
approximates fair value.
In the prior year $56.8 million was included in other receivables relating to the sale of the Group’s shareholding interest in
Gaming Innovation Group Inc.
25 CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Cash at bank 13,498 18,998
Cash in house 38,001 41,538
Total cash and cash equivalents 51,499 60,536
26 ASSETS HELD FOR SALE
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Non-current assets are classified as assets held for sale when their carrying amount is to be recovered principally through a
sale transaction and a sale is considered highly probable. They are stated at the lower of carrying amount and fair value less
costs to sell.
Non-current assets are not depreciated or amortised while they are classified as held for sale.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Land — 13,000
Total assets held for sale — 13,000
There are no assets held for sale at 30 June 2025. At the prior reporting date, the vacant land located in Franklin Road Queenstown
was subject to a sale and purchase agreement which had been entered into. In the current year, the purchase price was received,
title was transferred to the purchaser and the asset was derecognised.
Notes to the financial statements (continued)
PeopleStrategy5-year PerformanceIntroductionYear In ReviewOutputsCEO LetterChair LetterSustainabilityGovernanceClimate StatementsOtherRemuneration
SKYCITY ENTERTAINMENT GROUP I ANNUAL REPORT 2025
150151
Financial Statements
27 PAYABLES AND PROVISIONS
ACCOUNTING POLICY
Accounts payable are initially recognised at fair value, net of transaction costs, and thereafter carried at amortised cost.
A provision is recognised when the Group has a present legal or constructive obligation as a result of past events, it is probable
that an outflow of resources will be required to settle the obligation, and the amount can be reliably estimated. Provisions are
measured at the present value of management’s best estimate of the expenditure required to settle the present obligation at the
end of the reporting period. The discount rate used to determine the present value is a pre-tax rate that reflects current market
assessments of the time value of money and the risks specific to the liability.
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
Trade payables 35,673 20,846
Deferred income 12,483 18,216
Accrued expenses 44,930 116,400
Employee benefits 50,662 47,346
Provisions 76 14,469
Regulatory provisions — 9,519
Total payables and provisions 143,824 226,796
The carrying amounts of trade and other payables approximates their fair value, due to their short term nature.
In the prior year, provisions and accruals were recognised in connection with several legal and regulatory matters: the civil
penalty proceedings initiated by the Department of Internal Affairs against SkyCity Casino Management Limited; a longstanding
contractual dispute between SkyCity Adelaide and Revenue South Australia regarding the interpretation of the Casino Duty
Agreement for calculating casino duty; and a regulatory penalty imposed on SkyCity Adelaide by the Australian Transaction
Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC). These matters have now been resolved.
28 SHARE CAPITAL
2025 2024 2025 2024
Shares Shares $’000 $’000
Opening balance of ordinary shares issued 760,205,209 760,205,209 1,342,436 1,343,027
Share rights issued for employee services — — 1,247 (620)
Net issue of treasury shares — — (56) 29
Closing balance of ordinary shares issued 760,205,209 760,205,209 1,343,627 1,342,436
All ordinary shares rank equally, carry one vote per share and carry the right to dividends.
Included within the number of shares is 986,280 treasury shares (2024: 1,471,616) held by a third party in connection with the
Company’s employee share schemes. The movement in treasury shares during the year related to the issuance of shares under
the employee incentive plans, and the exercise of share rights/options.
29 RESERVES
2025 2024
$’000 $’000
a) Reserves
Asset revaluation reserve 13,151 12,770
Hedging reserve – cash flow hedges (7,201) (3,329)
Foreign currency translation reserve (16,634) (16,460)
Cost of hedging reserve (628) (431)
Total reserves (11,312) (7,450)
Movements:
Asset Revaluation Reserve
Opening balance 12,770 12,770
Revaluation on transfer to investment property 381 —
Closing balance
[TRUNCATED]
Data sourced from publicly available filings. Our datasets may not be complete. Automated analysis can produce errors. If you believe any data on this page is incorrect, please contact us at hello@nzxplorer.co.nz. For informational purposes only. Not investment advice.
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