Posted on Leave a comment

Optimism in Las Vegas; Bluhm bombs in Chicago

On his way home from Black Hawk, Colorado, gaming analyst Barry Jonas of Truist Securities popped into Las Vegas. He met with various and sundry publicly traded companies, even MGM Resorts International, for which he feels little love. He also sat down with executives from Caesars Entertainment, Station Casinos, Boyd Gaming, International Game Technology, Light & Wonder and Everi. His conclusion? “Start your engines.” What did Jonas mean by that? As he explained, “We left incrementally positive on Vegas’s outlook post-Omicron. The Strip and Locals markets appear healthy with each month since January seeing [sequential] improvement, and a full return of group/convention business pending but increasingly visible.” He also noted that slot manufacturers were seeing “increasing demand” due to “strong content,” ratifying other reports that game-buying is going to pick up well in advance of Global Gaming Expo, the normal starting gun for product purchases.

Continue reading Optimism in Las Vegas; Bluhm bombs in Chicago
Posted on 1 Comment

Philadelphia Dead

Cordish Gaming, we have a problem. Not only does it turn out to have been a bad idea to site a casino in Philadelphia‘s stadium district, it was an even worse mistake by state regulators to saturate the greater City of Brotherly Love area with a fifth casino. Philadelphia Live‘s best days came at the beginning, as the inevitable curiosity factor drove business, mainly at the expense of Rivers Philadelphia. But Cordish has been steadily losing market share ever since and in February came in fourth in the market, behind even Harrah’s Philadelphia, hardly the ritziest casino in town (although the closest to a prison, we’ll give you that).

Continue reading Philadelphia Dead
Posted on 1 Comment

Chicago tips its hand; Wynn loses; Thunder Down Under

Would somebody clue in Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D) that Neil Bluhm‘s Rush Street Gaming is no longer the majority owner of Rivers Casino Des Plaines? That honor goes to Churchill Downs. But Lightfoot is using Des Plaines as a stick with which to beat Bluhm’s (admittedly underwhelming) Chicago casino proposal, Rivers 78. Although the Chicago Sun-Times argues that Bluhm “combines real estate development skills with knowledge of gambling, and his political and business contacts here are peerless,” Lightfoot has not-so-subtly let it be known that her preference is for Bally’s Corp., whose riverfront proposal is shown above.

Bluhm is penalized by his presence, however vestigial, in the suburbs and Hard Rock International is doubly dinged by A) Hard Rock Northern Indiana in Gary and B) the “complex” air-rights negotiations inherent in its proposal. That leaves Bally’s Tribune, as it is presently called, which has conveniently predicted the highest revenue numbers, music to Lightfoot’s ears. “Bally’s is the only bidder that does not already have a property in the Chicagoland market and, therefore, is more likely to operate with independence in maximizing revenues for the Chicago casino,” her minions said. It’s also the project whose temporary casino could go up the soonest (Bluhm’s would be last) and has sweetened the pot with the pledge of $25 million, maybe more, in upfront money. It also enjoys the support of Walter Burnett, its local alderman.

Continue reading Chicago tips its hand; Wynn loses; Thunder Down Under
Posted on Leave a comment

Make theirs Manhattan: Hochul plays hardball

Representatives of New York City‘s ritziest borough have made it abundantly clear that they don’t want a casino in Manhattan. But it appears that Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) is going to impose one on them, public appetite be damned. Perhaps the most in-your-face idea being floated is a casino atop Saks Fifth Avenuedirectly opposite St. Patrick’s Cathedral. In what’s no April Fool’s joke, the state budget would be approved tomorrow and with it three downstate casinos at a license fee of $1 billion each. Big Gaming has spent $300,000 on lobbying Albany and it would appear that money talks loudly up thataway. Hochul is also indebted for election dollars to the Hotel & Gaming Trades Council, whose position on the issue you can guess.

“These are jobs that pay $36 an hour, have free family health care and have a pension plan. So they are in dire straits because many of them have been out of work for two years without any immediate prospect of comparable employment,” said union President Richard Maroko. Other receptive ears include New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D), who’s on board with the casino-in-Manhattan concept and has been dickering with Las Vegas Sands. (Adams is no stranger to Monaco, by the way.) The high-roller pitch for Saks flipped the allegiance of state Sen. Liz Krueger (D), who says a casino is now okey-dokey with her as long as it’s soaking the upper class rather than the working man. “There may be support in some parts of the city for siting a casino,” she backpedaled. “I’m not so sure that my district in Manhattan [the Upper East Side] would be open to one.”

Continue reading Make theirs Manhattan: Hochul plays hardball
Posted on Leave a comment

Baccarat constrains Strip; Sports betting tsunami ahead

Withered baccarat numbers meant that the Las Vegas Strip had a muted February, only a percentage point above 2019. Players dropped $599 million (-44.5%) of which the house won just $62 million (-52%). That offset a bonny month at the slots, where Strip casinos kept $336.5 million (+26.5%) on coin-in of $4.3 billion (up 32%). Non-baccarat table games gained only modestly (3.5%) to $200.5 million on 25% more wagering. By contrast with this near-stagnation, albeit at high levels of play, on the Strip, locals casinos shot 19.5% past their 2019 mark to $223 million. Downtown hopped 19% to $69 million (remember, this is a comparison to a pre-Circa era) and Reno leapt 37% to $62 million. Passenger loads into and out of Las Vegas, by the way, finally caught up with pre-Covid demand, hitting 107% of last year’s mark. While barely 100,000 of them were international travelers, that latter metric was an exponential increase.

Continue reading Baccarat constrains Strip; Sports betting tsunami ahead
Posted on Leave a comment

Up and down the Boardwalk

Since we’re heavily engaged bringing the next issue of Casino Life Magazine into safely harbor, we’re reaching out to our East Coast bureau for another Atlantic City photo essay. Above, business looks pretty good at Hard Rock Atlantic City. Note the distinctive “guitar pick” inlay on the tiling.

Despite very pleasant weather outside, Ocean Casino Resort evidently had no trouble luring players to its gaming floor.

Continue reading Up and down the Boardwalk
Posted on Leave a comment

Barley’s leaves a bad taste; Woe is Star; Mega-Jottings

When a casino is named Barley’s Brewing Co. you’d expect to get a decent glass of suds there. Not so. Las Vegan Lon Enwright is $8 million richer—but physically damaged beyond price—after being served cleaning fluids instead of beer (the taps were in the process of being flushed and the facts are not in dispute; there is even a hint of employee malice). The former Strip wine steward has lost his sense of taste, suffers from stomach and esophageal ulcers, and is at increased of risk of cancer as a result. Literally adding insult to injury, Barley’s owner Station Casinos offered Enwright a piddling $300,000 settlement. A Las Vegas jury thought differently and awarded the plaintiff $8 million in damages. Station hasn’t said what it will do but if it’s got any decency it will pay up. However, given its “contumacious” character, we’re not hopeful but appeal to the better angels of CEO Frank Fertitta III‘s nature.

Star Entertainment is feeling the heat Down Under. CEO Matt Bekier has resigned as the government continues to investigate alleged breaches of anti-money-laundering and anti-terrorism laws. Australia has had somewhat of an anything-goes approach to the casino biz, so Bekier falling on his sword represents an inevitable reaction to this over-lenience. Last week, Crown Resorts was deemed “unfit” to operate Crown Perth (shown) but allowed to run it for the next two years under state oversight. As always, Aussie regulators know how to send a mixed message to offending casinos.

Continue reading Barley’s leaves a bad taste; Woe is Star; Mega-Jottings
Posted on 1 Comment

Chicago: Then there were three … ; Leaner, meaner Boyd

Enjoy these images of Rivers McCormick while you can because you’ll never see them again. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot has nixed McCormick Place as a potential site for a casino, setting Bally’s Corp. and especially Rush Street Gaming down a peg but not out of the game entirely. At the same time, Lightfoot kicked the casino-selection deadline into “early summer,” which flies in the face of her stated goal of having a Windy City casino up and running by 2025. “We have spent countless hours analyzing each proposal for Chicago’s casino license and have determined Bally’s Tribune, Hard Rock Chicago, and Rivers 78 best fit the core goals we want to achieve for the City’s first integrated casino-resort,” said Lightfoot, giving the short-answer version of her decision.

“Each proposal offers economic, employment, and equity-focused opportunities for Chicago, while simultaneously enhancing the City’s cultural, entertainment and architectural scenes with world-class amenities and design. Our teams look forward to heading into discussions with the finalists and getting one step closer to bringing this decades-long project to fruition.”

Continue reading Chicago: Then there were three … ; Leaner, meaner Boyd
Posted on Leave a comment

Mulligan in Virginia; Caesars makes peace; Labor strife in Vegas

Richmond Mayor LeVar Stoney (D) is going to get his dearest wish: an electoral do-over for the Urban One casino proposal, which voters narrowly nixed at the ballot box last November. A year later, the electorate will get a chance to revisit the issue, now that a local judge has ordered it placed on the 2022 ballot. While the referendum question only specifies the location of the casino, we know darn well who will benefit from a win. Interestingly, opposition to the casino includes the local chapter of Unite-Here, which is skeptical that Urban One is going to provide good jobs, salaries and benefits. Union lobbyist Sam Epps said his constituents are “disproportionately affected by income inequality and bad jobs. Workers need to understand how they will benefit from new casino development before it moves forward.”

Continue reading Mulligan in Virginia; Caesars makes peace; Labor strife in Vegas
Posted on 1 Comment

Sunday Special: Coming down the Oscar stretch

With one week until the Academy Awards, you still have time to get your money down in New Jersey and Indiana. (Why not Nevada, we ask?) Although its odds have narrowed significantly, The Power of the Dog (DraftKings -280/BetMGM -250) is still the picture to beat. If you feel like playing long shots (and we’re not talking about hopelessly out-of-it ones like +8,000 Nightmare Alley), there’s a serious chance the Academy could go with predictable CODA (+400/+450), which has usurped Belfast‘s feel-good mojo, moving way, way up from +2,500 (Belfast: +650/+600).

“Apple: Television for Oscars”

Proudly mediocre, CODA is the best Lifetime Channel Original Movie ever made but Oscar voters could split the ticket much as they did when they anointed mushy The Green Book over Best Director/Best International Film winner Roma. At this point, Power of the Dog writer/director Jane Campion remains a prohibitive (-3,500/-3,000) favorite to take home the Best Director prize, besting Belfast‘s Kenneth Branagh (+1,400/+1,400) and sentimental choice Steven Spielberg (+2,000/+1,200), who’s forsaking cinemas for streaming services after West Side Story. If there’s any movement toward an upset in this category it’s Licorice Pizza helmer Paul Thomas Anderson, tiptoeing up to +2,000/+3,300.

Continue reading Sunday Special: Coming down the Oscar stretch