As Caesars and MGM struggle, Wynn is winning the Las Vegas casino battle
Summary
Wynn Resorts has outperformed fellow Las Vegas giants MGM and Caesars across a challenging 2025, driven largely by its focus on high-value customers and ownership of its Strip real estate. In Q3 Wynn’s Las Vegas casino revenue rose 11% year‑on‑year to $161.5m and the company is roughly 15% ahead of this time last year. Key gaming metrics — table game win, slot win and poker rake — were all up in the quarter and year‑to‑date.
By contrast, MGM reported a 5% decline in Las Vegas casino revenue in Q3 (with a mixed slot/table picture) and Caesars saw an 11.5% YoY fall. Stock performance mirrors those results: Wynn is up about 55% in 2025, MGM is down ~2.5% and Caesars down ~40%. Analysts point to Wynn’s high‑roller clientele, targeted luxury positioning, avoidance of sale‑leaseback deals and a tighter strategic focus (including exiting WynnBet and stepping back from the New York licence race) as reasons for its outperformance.
Key Points
- Wynn’s Las Vegas casino revenue rose 11% YoY to $161.5m in Q3; company is ~15% ahead year‑on‑year.
- Wynn saw gains across table game win (+11%), slot win (+10%) and poker rake (+11%) for Q3; all metrics are up at least 4% YTD.
- MGM’s Las Vegas casino revenue fell 5% in Q3; slot win up slightly but table game win down 6%.
- Caesars posted an 11.5% YoY decline in Las Vegas casino revenue in Q3, leaving it down ~4% YTD for the market.
- Market valuations reflect performance: Wynn +55% YTD, MGM -2.5%, Caesars -40%.
- Wynn targets a luxury, high‑roller clientele less sensitive to tourism dips, while MGM and Caesars serve broader market segments.
- Wynn still owns its Las Vegas real estate and avoids hefty lease costs; MGM and Caesars sold assets and now face escalating lease expenses (notable Q4 and YTD lease figures reported by both).
- Strategic moves: Wynn exited online gaming (WynnBet) and withdrew from the New York licence race early, reducing exposure and potential write‑offs that hit competitors.
- Industry view: a relatively small number of very high‑value players (‘whales’) and volatile baccarat outcomes can materially swing results in one operator’s favour.
Why should I read this?
Quick and blunt — if you care about Vegas casinos, investor signals or where premium gaming money is going, this matters. Wynn’s doing what the others aren’t: doubling down on wealthy customers and owning the land, which right now is paying off big time. If you’re tracking stocks, casino strategy or who’ll survive a tourism slump, this piece saves you the legwork.