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Question of the Day - 24 October 2021

Q:

Do casinos own their slot and video poker machines outright, or do they lease from the manufacturer?

A:

Both.

According to Global Gaming Business magazine, domestically, 85% of slot machines are owned by the casinos, while the other 15% are leased.

The lease idea goes back to the first Megabucks wide-area-progressive machines, in which the casinos and slot manufacturers shared in the profits earned from the networked machines, as well as the liability of paying out the big jackpots.

That evolved to encompass slots with lower jackpots, but expensive themes. Licensing costs for hot intellectual-property machine themes, starting with Wheel of Fortune, continue to go higher and higher. The cost of the machines themselves, plus the amortized licensing fees, would catapult the price to buy them out of reach of most casinos. So those slots are now leased by the casinos.

We understand from our research that one arrangement is a 50-50 split of revenues between the manufacturer and the casino, minus whatever royalty percentage goes to the licensee (the brand owner). This also allows the manufacturer to offer smaller advances to licensees in exchange for a long-term payment schedule. And like the wide-area progressives, the manufacturer and casinos share the costs, risks, and paydays.

Some slot makers take a 20% cut of a casino's winnings on a leased machine; the percentage is higher on slots with higher licensing fees.

Some casinos, like the Mohegan Sun, pay a fixed fee for leased machines, up to $75 per day per machine. (The Mohegan has more than 6,000 slot machines on the casino floor and the figure we saw was $15 million a year for its leased slots.)

The other advantage of leasing is that if a new slot theme proves unpopular, the machines can be returned to the manufacturer to be replaced by better earners. After all, at a retail cost of $14,000 to $25,000 per, that’s a sizable investment if a purchased machine turns out to be a dud.

Still, as noted, 85% of slot machines are owned by the casinos. These are the workhouses that earn day in and day out, year in and year out, unlike the leased slots, which can earn up to twice as much as the casino average, but flame out and need to be replaced more often, especially since most leased slots have a higher hold percentage than casino-owned slots (again due to the high licensing fees).

“By all accounts,” according to an article in The New York Times about leased versus owned slots, “slot floor directors are never shy about giving the boot, even after just a few weeks, to games that fail to earn considerably more than their cheaper counterparts.”

 

 

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Comments

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  • Donzack Oct-24-2021
    Video poker 
    I’ve read that individual games on Vp machines can be leased or purchased. Probably for the same reasons. I’ve also read that individual Vp games are taxed by the state. 

  • Kevin Lewis Oct-24-2021
    Therefore...
    If you're playing some fancy-ass themed slot like Exploding Monster Truck Rally or Zombies Attack Salt Lake City, you're playing the worst game in the house. Particularly if the theme is tied to a movie or TV show. I'll pass on the Game of Thrones Horrible Murder slot, even though the bonus game lets you see a graphic, grisly death scene.

  • rokgpsman Oct-24-2021
    Pick your casino poison carefully
    According to casino legend slot machines were created to give wives/girlfriends something to do while the men did real gambling. All gambling can be a form of entertainment, slot machines put a stronger emphasis on fun than games like craps and blackjack do. But slot machines have a much higher casino edge than craps/blackjack/sports bets. You might have fun playing a slot machine but over time your losses will be greater than the few good wins you get, it's mathematical and guaranteed. Video poker is not the same as a slot machine, even though it's a machine. You can use your brain when playing vp, but on a slot machine it's all random luck and an untrained chimp can do as well as Einstein.

  • Roy Furukawa Oct-24-2021
    Sucker Written All Over Me
    I love to try out new slots when I visit, which means I look like a walking lollipop the minute I hit the casino floor. No wonder those fishing slots appeal to me, I swallow the hook. :D

  • Kevin Lewis Oct-24-2021
    Roy, one consolation...
    The casinos often set the payback of the newest fancy-ass slots to the highest available percentage...for the first week or two they're on the floor. Then, of course, once they've gotten people interested, they dial it back to 88% or whatever horrible payback is the worst possible. You see this most often when the bonus game (there's always one) used to hit very often but now, all of a sudden, it hardly ever comes up.
    
    So if you see a brand new slot and you're sure it wasn't there a week ago, go ahead and play it for a bit. Especially if it's got a lot of glitz/cool graphics, a popular theme, etc. Just be on the lookout for that machine to have turned to shit next time you visit.