
Inflation and depleted discretionary income seem finally to have caught up with the Las Vegas Strip. July’s gambling win was 2.5% from the year previous (while locals casinos slipped 3%). The diñero, especially on the Strip, is so elevated from banner year 2019 that last month’s slight decline may not be cause for worry except for those on Wall Street who can’t see beyond one quarter to the next. But a heated (overheated?) casino recovery is definitely cooling if the Strip is off its 2021 pace. In dollar terms, Strip casinos booked $773.5 million while locals ones racked up $233 million. Strip slot revenue ($391 million) dipped 4.5% despite 1.5% more coin-in while table games ($247 million) gained 9% on 6% less wagering. Baccarat was off 14%, bringing in $135.5 million on a lower hold percentage. Locals simply didn’t have as much stomach for gambling, losing $191.5 million at the slots (-3%) on lower coin-in (-4%), while table play was down 1.5%, bringing in $41.5 million (-4.5%).
Continue reading Strip slows in July, Downtown flops; Mega-Jottings








