Wondering whether Caesars Entertainment at around US$28.03 is a bargain or a value trap? This article walks you through what the current price could imply.
The stock has posted returns of 1.4% over the last 7 days, 8.4% over the last 30 days and 19.0% year to date, while the 1 year return sits at a slight 0.1% decline and the 3 and 5 year returns are declines of 39.7% and 71.1% respectively.
Recent news coverage has focused on Caesars Entertainment as one of the larger names in US gaming and hospitality, with attention on how its scale and brand position it within the sector. Commentators have also highlighted ongoing interest in casino and resort operators generally, which helps frame how investors are reacting to the stock’s mixed return profile.
Simply Wall St currently gives Caesars Entertainment a valuation score of 5 out of 6. The next sections will break down the different valuation methods behind that score and will point you to an additional way to think about value at the end of the article.
Approach 1: Caesars Entertainment Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis
A Discounted Cash Flow model projects a company’s future cash flows and then discounts them back to today’s dollars, aiming to estimate what the entire business could be worth right now.
For Caesars Entertainment, the model used is a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity approach. The latest twelve month free cash flow is about $157.4 million, and analysts have supplied forecasts that feed into a ten year projection path. These projections step up to an estimated free cash flow of roughly $1.63 billion in 2035, with intermediate years such as 2026 and 2027 at $865.1 million and $1.00 billion respectively. Beyond the explicit analyst horizon, Simply Wall St extrapolates the remaining years to complete the model.
Discounting all those projected cash flows back to today gives an estimated intrinsic value of about $62.33 per share in this DCF framework. Compared with the recent share price around $28.03, this indicates an intrinsic discount of roughly 55.0%. Within this framework, the shares appear to be materially undervalued.
For companies where earnings can be uneven or influenced by accounting items, the P/S ratio often gives a clearer sense of what you are paying for each dollar of revenue. Investors usually look for a “normal” or “fair” P/S that reflects expectations for growth and the level of business risk, with faster growth or lower perceived risk often supporting a higher multiple.
Caesars Entertainment currently trades on a P/S of 0.50x. That sits below both the Hospitality industry average P/S of 1.64x and a peer average of 2.10x, which indicates the market is valuing its sales at a lower level than many comparable names.
Simply Wall St also calculates a proprietary “Fair Ratio” for the preferred multiple. For Caesars Entertainment, this Fair P/S is 1.36x, based on factors such as earnings growth, profit margins, industry, market cap and specific risks. Because it blends these company specific inputs, the Fair Ratio can provide a more tailored reference point than a simple comparison against peers or the industry alone.
Comparing the Fair Ratio of 1.36x with the current P/S of 0.50x shows that the shares trade below that tailored reference level on this metric.
Upgrade Your Decision Making: Choose your Caesars Entertainment Narrative
Earlier it was mentioned that there is an even better way to think about value. On Simply Wall St that means using Narratives, which let you set out your own story for Caesars Entertainment, link that story to specific forecasts for revenue, earnings and margins, and see a resulting fair value that you can compare with the current share price around US$28.03. All of this is available within an easy tool on the Community page that millions of investors already use. For example, one investor might build a bullish Caesars Narrative around digital growth, margin improvement and a fair value closer to US$41.00, while another might focus on debt, Las Vegas softness and a fair value nearer US$22.00. As news or earnings arrive, the Narrative updates so you can quickly see whether your fair value still supports holding, adding or reducing exposure.
For Caesars Entertainment however we will make it really easy for you with previews of two leading Caesars Entertainment narratives:
🐂 Caesars Entertainment Bull Case
Fair value in this bullish narrative: US$32.57 per share
Implied discount to that fair value at the recent price of US$28.03: about 13.9%
Analyst revenue growth assumption used in this narrative: 2.38% per year
Identifies Caesars’ digital operations and Caesars Rewards as key drivers of recurring revenue, better customer retention and steadier margins over time.
Assumes property upgrades, room remodels and amenity additions support higher revenue and improved free cash flow if returns on this spending stay attractive.
Accepts ongoing debt, promotional intensity, remodeling needs and labor costs as risks, but treats them as manageable within the analysts’ forecasts and discount rate used to reach the US$32.57 fair value.
🐻 Caesars Entertainment Bear Case
Fair value in this bearish narrative: US$22.00 per share
Implied premium to that fair value at the recent price of US$28.03: about 27.4%
Analyst revenue growth assumption used in this narrative: 1.30% per year
Frames digital gaming growth and changing customer preferences as a risk for Caesars’ traditional casino properties, with concerns around visitation, margins and free cash flow resilience.
Emphasizes high leverage, aging properties, limited international exposure and ongoing capital needs as constraints that could limit future margin expansion.
Accepts that digital and group segments, cost control and property investments may support earnings, but still treats the shares as close to fairly priced against a lower US$22.00 fair value in this more cautious scenario.
If you want the full story behind each of these cases and how other investors are framing Caesars Entertainment, you can use the range of community views as a cross check alongside your own expectations for revenue, margins and valuation multiples before making any decision.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.