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The Trop heist that wasn't

Posted At : June 26, 2009 12:49 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Donald Trump,Herbst Gaming,North Las Vegas,Boyd Gaming,Neil Bluhm,Pennsylvania,Transportation,Politics,Atlantic City,Sheldon Adelson,The Strip,Taxes,Kansas,Entertainment,Harrah's,Golden Gaming,Singapore

"An improvident indictment." That's what New Jersey officials are calling a case that was quietly quashed in May. Sacked Borgata veep John Conklin and two other men had been charged with plundering the Tropicana Atlantic City's database when they were in the Trop's employ (and when the Trop was still owned by Aztar Corp.).

Closer examination revealed that nothing had been purloined and the data in question was not particularly sensitive, either. All three indictees have been exonerated ... but where does John Conklin go to get his career back?

Phantom redux: Defying the odds, the Venetian's production of Phantom of the Opera celebrated its third anniversary Wednesday night. I jotted down a few observations for CityLife. (Tina Walsh fans, take note.) Having seen the Broadway production -- albeit many years ago -- I'll be the first to allow that it actually improves on the original in a respect or two. Oh, and my CityBlog entry misspells choreographer Gillian Lynne's last name. My apologies.

Two titans of American popular music "played Vegas" last weekend. Actually, Loretta Lynn was in North Las Vegas and Aretha Franklin all the way out in Primm ... not remotely near the Strip. What's wrong with this picture? Or this one ...

Midnight Jim: taking down Big Oil

It's summer and gas prices are -- like, duh! -- on the increase. Gov. Jim Gibbons doth suspect that dark, foul, untoward schemes are afoot. But Midnight Jim assures us he is on the case. I feel safer already.

Gay cowboys. They're queer, they're here and they're at The Rio specifically. A straight-gay coalition turned out in force last night to celebrate its victory over Midnight Jim's benighted opposition to domestic partnerships. (Because that's not how he rolls, y'see.) Speakers included Harrah's Entertainment Vice President Jan Jones, who led the charge on Carson City.

For all the failings of CEO Gary Loveman's stewardship of Harrah's, on his watch the company has expanded its already-enlightened attitude on social issues. It's not just a question of being gay-friendly; it's good business.

Worth -$23 million?

Isle of Blight. Is the woebegone Greek Isles casino-hotel worth less than nothing? In a sense, yes, since it owes $67 million on a book value of $44 million. Even a resale price at book value seems wishful thinking, considering the Isles' chequered history.

Asserts the Las Vegas Sun, "With its strategic location near the Las Vegas Strip and the Las Vegas Convention Center, the Greek Isles and its associated real estate are seen as having long-term value after the recession ends."

Yeah, but it's had that "strategic location" for as long as it's been in existence and the Isles' progress has been a steady one from Bad to Worse. I wouldn't give a plug nickel for the place -- not with Strip land prices in freefall and vast acreage there lying fallow.

Miracles are possible. Work on Marina Bay Sands is, believe or night, a fortnight ahead of schedule. Next step: Hold the line on that (already swollen) $5.4 billion budget.

The waiting continues in the great state of Kansas. Its lottery commission wants another two months to review applications for the Wichita and Kansas City markets. Considering the recent flurry of dropouts (including Vegas' own Golden Gaming), you'd think this would expedite the process. Instead, the coronation is six months away.

Squeeze play. No time is being wasted as Pennsylvania rushes toward expanding into Class III casinos. Two rival proposals to add table games are presently on the table. Casino lobbyist Steve Rittvo is forwarding a plan that would tax new games at 12%. This is projected to generate $165 million for the Keystone State (assuming that slot play concurrently increases sufficiently to generate a $61 million impost).

House Whip William DeWeese (D) counters with a 21% tax, combined with a one-time $10 million/casino fee, for a potential Year One windfall in excess of $300 million. I wish Rittvo luck but fear that solons will -- as they so often do -- gravitate toward the bigger dollar sign. It's an institutional failing.

Neil Bluhm, Philadelphia's Sugar[House] daddy

On a happier note, Neil Bluhm's revised design for his Sugarhouse Casino, on the Philadelphia waterfront, has received the green light from the City of Brotherly Love. Barring further legal mischief by sore loser Donald Trump, this means the project can finally move ahead, with a temporary, 1,700-slot casino slated for a Spring 2010 opening. Hallelujah!

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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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Kansas heats up again

Posted At : April 2, 2009 11:57 AM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Golden Gaming,Penn National,Tribal,Regulation,Harrah's,Current,Kansas

It's always either feast or famine for the casino industry's prospects in the Sunflower State. A week ago, there was one in-progress project, Butler National's low-cost Dodge City casino and almost nothing else. Now, with the window of opportunity slamming shut (again) for Wyandotte County, a slew of applicants has skittered over the sill.

First in was Cordish Co., making good on its promise to be back with a downsized proposal for the Kansas Speedway. A $390 million Hard Rock-branded casino will be the entirety of Phase One, with the hotel and all other amenities to emerge at an unspecified future point. Yesterday, Penn National Gaming got back into the act, pitching a $500 million iteration of its Hollywood Casino brand. It'd be a full-service product (hence the higher price tag) but Penn's noblesse oblige attitude and its abrogation of a casino development it had been awarded in Cherokee County may still rankle the Kansas Lottery Commission. It blanked Penn in the previous round of bidding.

Hard on Penn's heels comes Las Vegas-based Golden Gaming, which lost to Cordish by one vote last time around. Its proposal is Cordish-like in terms of proposing a $360 million casino (with restaurants and entertainment venues) to be eventually followed by another $300 million in augmentations. These would include an expansion of the casino from 2,000 slots to 2,500 and from 65 table games to 98. Also promised are "a 300-room hotel, spa, restaurants, retail shops, convention and meeting space, an 18-hole championship Tom Watson golf course, 60-lane bowling alley, entertainment venues and more."

(Boy, $660 million sure goes a lot farther in Kansas than it does in Vegas. Here, all it gets you is Aliante Station.)

Golden's would-be project, to be sited along I-70 near Edwardsville, is Cordish-like but arguably Cordish Lite, too. Allying itself with the speedway and sublicensing the Hard Rock brand gives Cordish two sharp arrows in its quiver. It'll take some pretty strong argumentation by Golden to persuade Lottery commissioners to reverse their earlier preference for the Baltimore-based developer, which can now also point to the early success of its Indiana Live! racino as further evidence of its suitability. In Round One, last year, the vote between Cordish, Golden and Penn went 4-3-0 in Cordish's favor. It's the latter's game to lose.

Over in Sumner County, previous applicant Equity Ventures has been pawing the ground for a while now. It's hedging its bet by optioning two sites but one of them is entangled in litigation due to the City of Mulvane's attempt to grab, er, annex it. (Way to improve that tax base, guys!) Jilted partner of Harrah's Entertainment, which retreated from Kansas last year, Equity's profile got higher this week when former Mandalay Resort Group CEO Mike Ensign turned up at the helm.

After a bit of hemming and hawing, Foxwoods Development is returning to the fray, too. It's making the argument that it can get a casino on line quickly and inexpensively, probably in the $225 million neighborhood. Squeaking in just under the wire is Lakes Entertainment, coming off a rebuff by Ohio voters last November. Like the Ensign group, Lakes is opting for a parlay of sites, one of them in Wellington.

The state ought to have fun sorting out what are, in effect, five proposals. Equity has the theoretical advantage of representing the core of the joint venture that won the bidding last year (presuming that Harrah's defection hasn't left a sour aftertaste). Foxwoods, despite recent economic misfortunes in Connecticut, still owns the longest and strongest track record. Promising an operational casino lickety-split is music to tax-starved bureaucrats' ears, too. Lakes has the site (Wellington) that's been bruited as the Lottery's Sumner County Commission's location of preference. This one's impossible to call.

That leaves orphaned Cherokee County, where bidding remains open for another three weeks. Anybody ... anybody at all? Don't everyone jump up at once, now ...

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Kansas, Round 2: It's Cordish!

Posted At : September 19, 2008 12:59 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories: Pinnacle Entertainment,Penn National,Tropicana Entertainment,Kansas,Atlantic City,Tribal,Current,Sheldon Adelson,Mississippi,Columbia Sussex,Golden Gaming

OK, I was wrong. Incredibly wrong. As you'll hear on the next Vegas Gang podcast, I stuck by my prediction that Kansas' largest casino contract, the one for the greater Kansas City area, would go to Mohegan Sun. Why? Biggest budget, most amenities, a track record of large-scale casino development. At least I covered my butt by saying that Cordish Cos.' piggybacking of their proposed casino onto the Kansas Speedway gave them "dark horse" status. Also, franchising the casino under the Hard Rock brand was not to be gainsaid.

A racino of a different stripe

So when the winner was announced today, Cordish was it. While Mohegan Sun was willing to put a bigger investment ($740 million vs. Cordish's $680 million) on the table, Cordish's synergy with the Speedway appears to have done the trick. They'll whip up a temporary casino (2K slots, 75 tables) sometime next year, to get the cash flowing while the full-scale project rolls toward a 2011 debut.

Here's the real shocker: Mohegan Sun got zero votes, primarily because state consultants projected its revenues as the lowest of the three proposals remaining on the table. (Pinnacle Entertainment and Las Vegas Sands has already withdrawn from the fray. With a major project underway outside St. Louis, plus others in holding patterns in Atlantic City and Baton Rouge, Pinnacle's chances seemed remote. It's difficult to imagine Kansas being willing to take a place at the back of that queue.)

Which means that three of the seven votes went to -- surprise! -- Golden Gaming, a company whose chances I will freely admit to having severely undersold. It says a lot for CEO Blake Sartini's reputation and for Golden's presentation that it came within an ace of winning, despite having a relatively modest track record -- at least nothing remotely approaching the $662 million casino it proposed to build. With Penn National having sulked its way clear out of Cherokee County and the Kansas lottery board starting to display skepticism toward the Ford County bidders, Golden has at least one, maybe two more opportunities it could pursue in the Sunflower State.

Ten months ago, at the time its casino empire was starting to collapse, Columbia Sussex announced that it had sold the Horizon Vicksburg to casino investor Nevada Gold for $35 million. Seems now that it's yet another William J. Yung III transaction that's (pardon the pun) gone south, following the cancellation of the sale of Casino Aztar to Eldorado Resorts.

Juding from the language that ColSux successor Tropicana Entertainment "have been in discussions regarding a possible alternative transaction" without avail, it appears as though new CEO Scott Butera wants to hang onto the riverboat property (whose on-shore facilities are leased, not owned, by the way -- a common ColSux practice). "(N)o alternatives exist that are suitable to both parties" sounds like a nice way of saying that if any other TropEnt properties were worth having, then they weren't on the table. Then again, given Nevada Gold's current financial situation, it might have been the one getting cold feet, but the formal language doesn't encourage that interpretation.

Either way, Butera's been making some expansionist noises of late and pining for the return of the Atlantic City Tropicana. While Butera has operational experience in that market, from his days at Trump Entertainment Resorts, it's exceedingly difficult to imagine New Jersey regulators letting TropEnt back onto the property so long as Yung has one thin dime of equity in the company.

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