Wynn Palace Carried Macau This Quarter. Wynn Macau Didn't.
Wynn's combined Macau EBITDAR grew 10.9% to $279.4 million, but that headline hides a 16.2% decline at the older property while Wynn Palace surged 25.9%. The divergence tells you everything about where luxury gaming margin actually lives now.
$279.4 million in combined Macau Adjusted Property EBITDAR, up 10.9% year-over-year. That's the number Wynn reported for Q1 2026. It's also the number that obscures a two-property story moving in opposite directions.
Wynn Palace generated $203.8 million in EBITDAR, up 25.9%. Wynn Macau (the older property) generated $75.6 million, down 16.2%. Revenue at Wynn Macau was essentially flat at $329.9 million... the EBITDAR decline came from margin compression. VIP table win percentage collapsed to 0.39% against an expected range of 3.1% to 3.4%. Mass table win dropped from 18.7% to 15.1%. When your win rates fall that far below expected range on flat revenue, you're working harder for less. Wynn Palace is now generating 73% of total Macau property EBITDAR. That concentration should make anyone modeling the parent company uncomfortable.
The response from Wynn is instructive. They announced The Enclave at Wynn Palace, a 432-key all-suite tower estimated at $900 to $950 million, expanding Palace room count by roughly 25%. That's approximately $2.1 to $2.2 million per key for new-build luxury suites in Macau. The stated justification is that Wynn Palace regularly operates near 100% occupancy. The unstated reality is that Wynn is doubling down on the property that's performing and accepting that the older asset's best days may be structural, not cyclical. At the consolidated level, Wynn Resorts posted $1.86 billion in operating revenue (up from $1.70 billion) and $120.5 million in net income (up from $72.7 million). Those are good numbers. But total company Adjusted Property EBITDAR grew only 5.5% to $562.4 million, which means Macau outperformed the consolidated growth rate and Las Vegas margins were under pressure too.
JPMorgan forecasts Macau GGR growth slowing to 5% to 6% in 2026, with VIP declining mid-single digits. Analysts flagged 90 basis points of Macau EBITDAR margin compression year-over-year despite the revenue growth. That's the pattern I've seen in several luxury gaming portfolios over the past few cycles... revenue grows, promotional spending grows faster, and the margin story quietly deteriorates underneath the topline headline. Wynn's stock dipped 0.67% after hours following the report. The market saw the same thing I did.
The $900 million Enclave bet is the real story here. It's a conviction play on premium-mass Macau at a moment when VIP is structurally shrinking and competition for the mass segment is intensifying. If Palace maintains near-full occupancy at current EBITDAR margins through the 2029 opening, the math works. If Macau GGR growth decelerates further or promotional costs continue rising, Wynn is adding $950 million in capital to a market where margin compression is already visible in Q1 data. The buyer of WYNN shares at $107 is pricing in a lot of things going right simultaneously.
Here's the lesson for anyone managing or owning a multi-property portfolio, even at a fraction of Wynn's scale. When 73% of your regional EBITDAR comes from one asset, that's not diversification... that's concentration risk wearing a portfolio costume. I've seen this play out at ownership groups running four or five hotels where one flagship subsidizes the rest. Look at your own portfolio. If one property is carrying the EBITDAR for the group, stress-test what happens when that property has a bad quarter. Run a scenario where your best performer drops 15% and see if the portfolio still services its debt. Because that's what Wynn's investors should be doing right now, and it's what you should be doing with your own numbers. Don't wait for the downturn to discover your floor.