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Hell no, they won't; Penghu punk'd; Barbarians at the gates (again)

Posted At : September 28, 2009 05:12 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Harrah's,The Strip,Taxes,Horseracing,Tribal,Station Casinos,CityCenter,Fontainebleau,Sheldon Adelson,Alex Yemenidjian,Indiana,International,Wall Street,Riviera,MGM Mirage,Penn National,Boyd Gaming,Cordish Co.,Cosmopolitan,Steve Wynn

Pay taxes, that is. Two Indiana racinos are pushing back against a tax rate that averages 38%. Considering that the two tracks -- one run by Cordish Gaming -- are the newbies on the Hoosier State scene, one could fairly ask them, "Didn't you know what you were getting into?" As the article notes, neither Harrah's Entertainment and Boyd Gaming -- both which recently heavily reinvested in Indiana -- aren't whining about their tax rates.

But the racinos have a point. In states where the number of casinos is artificially capped by the Legislature, solons become the custodians of the industry's economic future, like it or not. And it only stands to reason that if the market is going be diluted, tax relief is in order. Considering that same-store revenues in Indiana have been nothing but down since the racinos opened, some push-back on the tax front was probably inevitable.

Hell no, they won't either. Allow casinos in Penghu, that is. Voters on the Taiwanese island voted against gambling expansion there, putting the issue off-limits for three years. The notion of planting mega-million-dollar casinos in remote, hard-to-reach parts of Taiwan never made that much sense to S&G, but big industry players like Sheldon Adelson and Gary Loveman have kicked Taiwanese tires in the recent past.

Did Adelson and Steve Wynn mistime their leap into the Hong Kong stock market? One Wall Street Journal columnist thinks so. Bad timing isn't the exclusive province of the public sector, though: A Washington State tribe borrowed $375 million on the strength [sic] of revenue forecasts that proved grossly over-optimistic. Percentage-wise, neither Harrah's nor Station Casinos missed the mark this badly.

Bob Stupak, R.I.P. The penultimate Vegas maverick is gone, having spent much of the last decade as a recluse. One especially thorough obit contains a quote by former Klondike owner John Woodrum that ought to be engraved on Stupak's gravestone (or at the base of that now-vanished Stupak statue): "If ever there was a guy beyond the rim of reality, there was Bob. But somehow he made reality happen."

Just what we don't need. They're baaaaack. Never mind the smoking wreckage they've made of Harrah's and Station, private-equity firms are rooting amidst the flotsam, looking to extend their morbid clamp on the casino industry. Leading the pack is Leon Black's inaptly named Apollo Management. Both indirectly (Planet Hollywood by way of Harrah's) and directly (Cosmopolitan, Fontainebleau), Black is reported to be scarfing up what few independent properties remain, raising the prospect of a Total Rewards oligopoly stretching from just above CityCenter to the southern frontier of the The Mirage.

There are also a few bottom-feeders in play. Hooters hardly seems worth buying unless Onex Corp. wants to do a tear-down and extend the Tropicana Las Vegas eastward. Current ownership of the Riviera is tapped out but the place still has prospects as a fixer-upper (not something that fits with Apollo's sack-and-pillage business model). If non-bottom-feeder Green Valley Ranch is really on the bubble of insolvency, then Penn National Gaming ought to quit chasing F'bleau, and try to drive a wedge betwixt Station and its Greenspun family partners. Penn would stand to inherit a beautiful property with far fewer problems than Big Bleau.

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Optimism in Macao, euphoria at CityCenter

Posted At : September 8, 2009 03:33 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Planet Hollywood,Entertainment,Indiana,Current,Boulder Strip,Architecture,The Strip,California,Station Casinos,CityCenter,IGT,Sheldon Adelson,Kansas,Technology,Pinnacle Entertainment,Economy,Atlantic City,Wall Street,Cordish Co.,MGM Mirage,Penn National,Boyd Gaming,WMS Industries,Ameristar,Macau,Bally Technologies

Relaxation of stringent visa restrictions from Guangdong Province came a full four months sooner than expected, starting Sept. 1. Now, residents will be able to visit Macao once a month instead of quarterly. While this has prompted J.P. Morgan to raise its price target on Las Vegas Sands stock, analysts also fret that Sands may overreact and go pedal to the metal on its unfinished Cotai Strip™ hotels.

Those same analysts are bullish on the manufacturing sector, though. They think casinos will be more willing to reinvest in the slot base as 2009 draws to a close. Also, the onward march of casino expansion means more jurisdictions and facilities to whom IGT, Bally and WMS can peddle their products. They're 'meh' on regional casino operators like Penn National, Ameristar Casinos and Pinnacle Entertainment, due to flattish performance. (Penn could catch a break in Kansas, though I still think Cordish Gaming has that sewn up.)

But that's a rave notice compared to the long face Morgan analysts pull when pondering Boyd Gaming's prospects. They cite the slow-to-recover, promo-driven locals-casino market in Las Vegas ("trickle-down" economics of the worst sort); Atlantic City's critical condition -- "the best-case scenario here is that [Borgata] would do less bad" than most of A.C. -- those blah regional metrics and new competition for the Blue Chip riverboat in Indiana, which had been looking like 2009's feel-good story.

Intriguingly, the prospect of a Strip acquistion is floated in lieu of a 'stalking horse' bid for floundering Station Casinos. Boyd's still got enough unused borrowing capacity it could even swing an acquisition of The Mirage (with money to spare), not to mention some of the lower-hanging fruit, which now includes Planet Hollywood. But if the J.P. Morgan guys are gun-shy concerning Boyd ...

They're over the moon about MGM Mirage's CityCenter: "we are increasingly under the belief that City Center will be a new must-see property for both domestic and international gamers/travelers that should drive solid visitation volumes to the Strip in 2010. We were impressed with the massive 18m-square-foot complex ... a new type of high-end product for the Strip that should garner increased trips. It has a very contemporary feel that is different than anything else on the Strip, with lots of natural light and high ceilings, interesting room product and, for a massive property, ease of getting around from one 'neighborhood' to the next."

More good news comes in the form of a press release from Commerce Casino (in Commerce, Calif.), which rolled out the welcome mat for a group of undoubtedly weary firefighters. A strike force of 30 Bay Area-based firemen is being housed in the casino's hotel, with the casino comping all meals and picking up most of the hotel tab. Let's hope that such civic-mindedness spreads through the industry like -- if you'll forgive the analogy -- wildfire.

In case it matters, "super-starlet" (yes, that's the official term) Holly Madison has been given a 12-month contract extension at Peepshow, so she's obviously earning her pay. Also, I've heard through the grapevine that she and incoming Aubrey O'Day do not get along, so the timing of the Madison announcement should make clear who's got the upper implant in this situation.

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Pinnacle meets karma

Posted At : August 27, 2009 11:30 AM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Pinnacle Entertainment,Penn National,Missouri,Kansas,Cordish Co.,Tribal,Sheldon Adelson,Florida,Ameristar,Regulation

Plans by Pinnacle Entertainment to move its President riverboat upriver just hit a big snag. Taking the view that the President's license is portable, Pinnacle hoped to use either the vessel itself or the license to jimmy open a new market niche along the Mississippi River.

Seems the Missouri Gaming Commission doesn't hold with Pinnacle's logic. Move the ship, they say, and it's open season on that 13th (and last) license in the Show-Me State. Right now, Pinnacle's keeping the President operational as a charity case -- thereby preserving the license -- but the Coast Guard is likely to shut her down in 10 months, so decrepit is the vessel.

Not that I wish ill for Pinnacle, one of the classier outfits in the industry, but this here is what's called "karma." Both Pinnacle and Ameristar Casinos pushed hard for legislation last year that uncapped the state's loss limits in return for capping the number of licensees. It was an anti-competitive move that was inveighed against in these pages.

Ameristar and Pinnacle tried to lock up what was an open territory. Now, with the President's license skittering about the field like a wet football, Pinnacle's going to find itself having to grapple with the very competitors it thought it had excluded from the game. Which is as it should be.

There can be only one. Two casino proposals from Cordish Gaming and Penn National have been forwarded to the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board (Uff da!) for final arbitration, Remember that the last time we went through this, Penn got a whopping zero votes (probably due to a series of peevish public pronouncements), but then Cordish wanted to resubmit its project in smaller form.

This time around, Penn execs have been playing well with others, rather than trying to dictate the process. They're promising a three-phase, $564 million casino-resort (subject to certain economic conditions). Cordish is choosing to under-promise, committing only to a $390 million casino, at least until bluer skies return. Partnership with the Kansas Speedway still gives Cordish an edge (as does the Hard Rock brand) ... but the Kansas-casino process has been long, tortuous and filled with reversals of fortune. (Mike Ensign, anyone?)

Speaking of Kansas ... shoo-in Foxwoods has announced that it's restructuring its debt and enlisting outside assistance, yet another victim of ill-timed expansion. Small wonder Foxwoods and Lakes Entertainment decided to pool their pennies on Chisholm Creek Casino (above) rather than duke it out for the Wichita market.

Compromise is near. Down in Florida, that is. A formula too complicated to summarize here would bring the Seminole Tribe and the Sunshine State's Lege into agreement. (The Seminoles took one look at the compact fashioned by the Lege last spring and spat it out like bad food.) In return for accepting some restrictions on game offerings at some casinos, the Seminoles get a complete exemption from paying taxes to the state -- if private-sector gambling spreads beyond Broward and Miami-Dade counties. And if existing non-tribal casinos get, say, blackjack the Seminoles' obligation to the state is halved.

So tell me, why does Sheldon Adelson seriously think Florida is a potential growth market?

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Meet the new Trop boss ...

Posted At : August 26, 2009 02:29 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Columbia Sussex,Regulation,Cordish Co.,Tropicana Entertainment,Current,The Strip,Atlantic City,Carl Icahn

 ... largely the same as the old boss. Tropicana Entertainment's diligent efforts to get back into the Tropicana Atlantic City have finally paid off. Thus (nearly) ends a prolonged interregnum during which no clearly superior alternativves emerged. Well ... there was an extended flirtation with Cordish Gaming but butterfingered trustee Justice Gary Stein fumbled that away.

Since Carl Icahn's stealthy buy-up of TropEnt stock extinguished Columbia Sussex CEO William J. Yung III's ownership rights, the era of Attila the Yung has finally ended. Also, getting Stein out and private ownership back in is a transition that can't happen soon enough.

On the downside, Trop property prexy Mark Giannantonio (a Yung appointee) remains at the helm. Also, TropEnt CEO Scott Butera and his lieutenants did an undistinguished job of running the Tropicana Las Vegas before selling it to Onex Corp. They still have a lot to prove in Atlantic City.

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Case Bets: Ohio, Trump, Fahrenkopfian outrage

Posted At : August 6, 2009 04:33 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Cordish Co.,Ohio,Donald Trump,Harrah's,Maryland,Atlantic City,Labor,Wall Street

With racinos a done deal in Ohio, a suddenly frisky Harrah's Entertainment is shopping around for a Cleveland-area track. If anything, I'm surprised competing companies haven't beaten Harrah's to the punch, but it seems to have sucker-punched its rivals. Good on it.

Donald Trump's fire-sale acquisition of Trump Entertainment Resorts is far from a done deal, according to the Wall Street Journal. Bondholders who stand to have $1.25 billion flushed away in the Trump/Mark Juliano sweetheart transaction may be able to throw in a spanner in the works.

Casinos spread the wealth -- or do they? A Journal of Economic Studies report queries the premise, saying casino expansion dilutes local wage bases. However, casino companies -- and some academic allies -- aren't taking this lying down. Both Penn National and Cordish Gaming are making vigorous arguments to the contrary, as is one Frank J. Fahrenkopf.

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Case Bets: Packer & Ho, Sands Bethlehem, MGM Mirage, Ameristar, Penn, Harrah's, etc.

Posted At : June 3, 2009 12:40 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Harrah's,Melco Crown Entertainment,Horseracing,Penn National,Current,Sheldon Adelson,Iowa,Regulation,Economy,Lawrence Ho,Pennsylvania,Wall Street,Cordish Co.,MGM Mirage,Election,Maryland,James Packer,Ameristar,Macau,Detroit

• Smashing guitars -- but not over each other's noggins -- James Packer and Lawrence Ho christened City of Dreams. The younger Ho downplayed expectations of foot traffic, saying his $2.4 billion megaresort could get by on far fewer visitors than the nearby (and comparably expensive) Venetian Macao, which draws 70K visitors daily.

• After a record-setting opening, Sands Bethlehem fell into fourth place during last week's casino action in Pennsylvania. Not surprisingly, Philadelphia Park and Harrah's Chester led the state.

Beau Rivage is safe. Although MGM Mirage was peddling several of its regional casinos, J.P. Morgan reports that "we have heard from some bidders that this process is close to dead, so we don’t expect to hear asset sales chatter in the near to medium term."

• While yours truly was critical of staffing cuts at Ameristar Casinos, they appear to be paying off. The company projects flat revenue comparisons in 2009 but better cash-flow margins, pegging the savings as $40 million-$48 million, annualized.

• When in doubt, Penn National Gaming falls back on what it knows: racinos. It's angling for the Laurel Park concession left on the table when Magna Entertainment collapsed. Both Penn and rival David Cordish appear to be trying to chisel a loophole into Maryland's slot-parlor law, which limits companies to one slot house apiece. Penn is already committed to Cecil County but wants Laurel Park ... as does Cordish, who has a pre-standing commitment to the Arundel Mills area. The latter project has run into serious opposition. Expect a nip-and-tuck fight for Laurel Park.

• Penn is evidently getting cold feet in Ohio, however.

• Casino expansion in Iowa will have to wait until 2010, at the earliest. This delay is a disguised blessing. The Hawkeye State market has been holding its own during the recession but the timing for diluting the market with four new casinos could scarcely be worse.

• If wishes were horses, Harrah's Entertainment would be galloping along the shores of the Yangtze River this very minute. Seriously, would you lend Harrah's more money? Would you give an alcoholic the keys to your wine cellar? Well, you might get the empties back so you could redeem the deposit on the bottle.

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"Another one bites the dust"

Posted At : May 15, 2009 09:15 AM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Harrah's,Wall Street,Penn National,Boyd Gaming,Isle of Capri,Kansas,Cordish Co.,Current,Ameristar,Regulation,Economy,Golden Gaming,Station Casinos

That's how a reader informed me of Las Vegas-based Golden Gaming's decision to bail on Wyandotte County in Kansas. Considering that you've got Harrah's Entertainment, Ameristar Casinos, etc. firmly entrenched across the state line in Kansas City, Mo., and Isle of Capri making a comeback over there, I don't blame Golden for its hesitation.

Penn National remains in the Wyandotte running but it found no support for its last bid and previous winner Cordish Co. withdrew amicably from its Kansas Speedway project so that it could be downsized. Casino-enabling legislation in the Sunflower State didn't allow Cordish to revise its proposal once it had been accepted by the Lottery Board. But Cordish promised it would be back, and it was.

Lottery Executive Director Ed Van Petten told media Golden wanted to conserve its assets, adding, "They are being conservative and playing it smart. I hate to see it, but I fully understand." Golden executive veep Rod Atamain's diplomatically phrased withdrawal alluded to preserving liquidity, among other motives:

"While we believe in the long-term viability and appeal of our site and project, we are not confident in making such a commitment on our own in the current environment." That's tantamount to an admission that Golden couldn't find lenders, especially considering Atamain's previous reference to "ongoing turmoil in the financial markets."

It would have been a tough call for Kansas. The Cordish and Golden projects were comparable in budget ($700 million vs. $662 million). As appealing as a Tom Watson golf course might be, Cordish's promise of a 50% larger slot base than Golden's would have been sweet music to state officials weathering a deep recession and counting the gambling receipts before even one handle is pulled.

In the meantime, Golden still has that liquidity it wants to preserve -- and its cash flow will improve this summer as liberalized casino rules in Colorado (Golden's primary market) take effect. It could always spend some of that dough close to home: Golden CEO Blake Sartini is the brother-in-law of Frank & Lorenzo Fertitta. What are the odds the Fertitta clan might try to spin off assets to Golden? It would enable Station Casinos to sweeten the offer it's making to bondholders and keep Boyd Gaming at bay, all in one fell swoop.

Just a thought.

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Chump change for Trop

Posted At : April 29, 2009 03:00 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Regulation,Cordish Co.,Tropicana Entertainment,Economy,Donald Trump,Atlantic City,Colony Capital

While there has been no shortage of bad decisions in the casino industry of late, the Dunce of the Year winner for 2008 and presumptive favorite for 2009 has got to be Tropicana Atlantic City conservator Gary Stein. This former member of the bench managed to turn what was intended to be a brief transitional process into a munificent 16-month sinecure ... which could stretch to 18 months or longer, depending on how soon the bankruptcy court acts. Not only was Stein's interminable tenure an unconscionable waste of money, if he made one good decision during that time, S&G must have nodded off for five seconds and missed it.

You will recall that, last spring, Stein scoffed that an $850 million bid by Colony Capital and an undisclosed one from Cordish Co. were "unreasonably low." What's more, he said the market for a distressed, mismanaged Atlantic City casino could only get better. (One of Stein's several miscalculations was to use the still-in-abeyance Trump Marina sale as an economic barometer.)

Reality was close behind with a swift kick in the ass, as the best Stein could manage was $545 million in cash (plus another $150 million or so in securities) from Cordish. And, as Stein's tortoise-powered negotiations crept onward, Cordish wanted to haggle the price down even further and eventually there was no deal to be had.

Which means that a casino that might have fetched over $800 million 11 months ago will now go on auction for a quarter of that amount, after a process that the Press of Atlantic City eventually characterized as "exceedingly slow." Worse still, since Icahn would gain the Trop via a credit bid, New Jersey won't have any sale proceeds to show for its year and a half of trouble. Since a parallel bankruptcy proceeding hasn't yet expunged Tropicana Entertainment owner William J. Yung III's equity stake, there's no way in hell the NJCCC would hand the Trop's keys to TropEnt CEO Scott Butera, no matter how pure his intentions.

Stein put the best spin he could on this fiasco, stating that "although like the entire industry our revenue and profits have been effected [sic] by the difficult economy, our financial position is solid and the only reason we are filing petition today is to be able to sell the casino assets free and clear of all liens." Somehow NBC40 was able to keep a straight face while reporting that the NJCCC believes "this 'stalking horse bid', will help them achieve the highest price possible in light of the current economic conditions facing the gaming industry."

True, starting the bidding at a rock-bottom $200 million might entice Cordish or someone else to pony up real money. But whatever the Trop eventually fetches is all but certain to be a shadow of what it could once have brought, had Stein performed his duty with alacrity. (And no potential bidder's position is nearly so advantageous as Icahn's.) It took an April 15 public yanking of Stein's leash by his NJCCC overseers just to get this much accomplished, threatening to send the Trop to bankruptcy court with no stalking horse bid.

While Stein strove for a victorious posture, The Associated Press cut through the crap. Its headline? "NJ OKs cut-price auction for Atlantic City casino." Reporter Wayne Parry even got Stein to concede there was no guarantee that $200 million wouldn't be the final price. If that's the ignominous conclusion to this saga, it may someday be known in the industry as "Bill Yung's Revenge."

What a screw-up.

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Case Bets: Kansas update, Cordish's push, Penn's prudence, taxing sex

Posted At : April 3, 2009 04:32 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Horseracing,MGM Mirage,Tropicana Entertainment,Taxes,Harrah's,Kansas,Cordish Co.

Details of Lakes Entertainment's just-under-the-wire entry into the Kansas casino derby are beginning to emerge -- and it looks a bit half-assed. Particularly non-confidence-inspiring was the admission, "We're going to go find the cash." If somebody as flush as Phil Ruffin can't scare up $175 million, what makes Lakes confident it can score $260 million? Demote this bid from "contender" to "also-ran" status.

Another Kansas applicant also is moving aggressively elsewhere. Cordish Co. is looking to snap up three tracks owned by bankrupt Magna Entertainment. Racino conversion, though is not on the agenda, according to Cordish.

No fools. It looks as though Penn National has sworn off the Strip and small wonder. If execs at Harrah's Entertainment or MGM Mirage say they want to deal but insist on 10X-12X cash flow as their asking price, they're not going to find takers. I presume that their rationale -- and it's hardly without merit -- is that if business returns to the levels it enjoyed four years ago those multiples will go down.

Whether that argument will fall upon receptive ears seems unlikely. But look on the bright side: You could pay 12 times EBITDA for the Tropicana Las Vegas and it would still only cost you $54 million.

Five bucks a f**k? Sure prostitution is legal in 10 counties of Nevada, a state whose economy is built on the perception of an anything-goes atmosphere. But tax bordellos by the lay? Horrors!

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