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Question of the Day - 04 June 2024

Q:

After reading today’s QOD about presidents and casino gambling, I’m wondering if Donald Trump ever came close to entering the Las Vegas market back when he still owned casinos in Atlantic City.

A:

Well … yes and no. It depends on how serious he really was about making inroads in Sin City and only Donald Trump knows that for sure.

In September 1986, Donald Trump bought a 4.9% position in Holiday Corp., which owned casinos in Atlantic City and Nevada. However, it appears to have been a speculative move, as he cashed out at a profit two months later. Trump used the proceeds to buy into Bally’s Corporation.

He subsequently made overtures about obtaining a gaming license, but didn't get very far. Nevada regulators could see that the Taj Majal, Trump's piece de resistance in Atlantic City, was in trouble before it even opened (in April 1990, then defaulted on interest payments to bondholders six months later; in July 1991, the Taj filed for bankruptcy). The chairman of the Nevada Gaming Commission suggested at the time that Trump might be a "greenmailer," meaning someone who acquires large quantities of stock, then threatens a takeover, forcing the company to buy back the shares at a premium in order to maintain control.

The Trump camp rejected the implication and no further activity took place until 2004 when, in another speculative move, Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts purchased 358,000 shares of Riviera stock. The buy put the companies over the 10% threshold in Nevada, requiring Trump to be licensed. 

According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, the licensing process went pretty smoothly. “Members of the Control Board asked Trump and his executives about problems with minors gaining entry to his New Jersey properties, but Chief Operating Officer Mark Brown said the company is making every effort to control the problem.”

“Trump has talked for years about moving into the Las Vegas casino industry, but his expected licensing by the end of the month will make it much easier to put deals together,” reported the R-J

Even then, Trump cashed out of his Riviera stock without incident and made few, if any, forays into Sin City gambling afterwards.

The lone exception was some loose talk about going in with his friend Phil Ruffin on redeveloping the site of the New Frontier. Trouble was, Ruffin and Trump had dueling concepts on what kind of megaresort to build in its place. The duo agreed on a non-gaming development, erecting Trump International, a $1 billion condo tower, using part of the old New Frontier site.

One last gasp of a possibility surfaced in 2016 when Trump had already been running for the White House for nine months. Ruffin announced that he was "hoping to build a casino" adjacent to Trump International. According to the Wall Street Journal, Ruffin planned to split the casino 50/50 with the Trump Organization. Eric Trump added “that various possible expansion plans have been discussed, including the casino and a new convention space.” 

Again, nothing came of it. Did it mark the end of Donald Trump's personal ambitions to enter the Las Vegas casino market? We'd say probably. But what the Trump Organization might do in the future is anyone's guess. 

 

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Comments

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  • Kevin Lewis Jun-04-2024
    No chance
    Casino regulators as well as the general public were, by then, quite familiar with Trumpenomics--buy up properties, run them into the ground, don't pay any bills, and then scamper away, leaving creditors holding the bag. No one in the casino industry (which is synonymous with the casino "regulators") wanted to bring a serial grifter onto the Vegas stage at a time when Vegas casinos were striving to put up a more "wholesome" facade.

  • RickZ Jun-04-2024
    coincidence?
    Just wondering if the person who submitted the QoD is the same as the one who commented first?  Nah.

  • Hoppy Jun-04-2024
    Re: RickZ
    Nah. Is right. One is factual. The other is fiction. 

  • steve crouse Jun-04-2024
    Hmmmm
    Which one RickZ

  • DeltaEagle Jun-04-2024
    Felon
    Assume the 34 felony convictions renders this moot even if overturned on appeal. 

  • Gene Brown Jun-04-2024
    Fact or Fiction?
    #45 will become #47? What’s the line on it in Vegas today? Who is wagering  on that $64K question up in here? Never mind on my second thought! LoL

  • sunny78 Jun-04-2024
    seriously? 
    Pardon the french, but for F'sake LVA, really? You guys whine about this thread going political and this is the kind of QOD you bring up during a contentious election year? Perhaps this is the goal here to spark debate but this is one of the few places I can read just non-partisan about las vegas, nothing to do with anything in the political realm. And I would think you should know better there's one lunatic especially here that goes off on anything remotely trump this-that so why feed that?

  • Mike Jun-04-2024
    Remember when.....
    The position of President was a well-respected person who most Americans revered and treated in a church-like manner.  Now both Biden and Trump remind me of when you would turn on Saturday morning cartoons back in the day for silly kids' entertainment.  But I still like to gamble and here are your current odds for next President. (Trump -120 Biden +130)  Who are we betting on?  

  • Kenneth Mytinger Jun-04-2024
    Going Political
    Commenters should go back and more carefully read the QOD.  The answer was thorough and complete, and the question asked about Trump.  Let's keep politics out of this.

  • O2bnVegas Jun-07-2024
    not political
    This is a late reply, probably won't be read.
    
    IMO the "Question" was no more about 'politics' than one asking about Steve Wynn or other notable persons with a Las Vegas connection.
    
    The reply was similar, just facts.  Neither the Question nor the answer addressed political side, preference, good or bad.
    
    I'll say it:  Kevin Lewis' reply wasn't so different, again, from something about any other Vegas-related person, character, etc.  Those who subsequently replied turned it into an attack on Kevin, and most know that I don't often post in defense of Kevin's words.  Whether he was right or wrong regarding what the regulators would do, that's what the QoD was about.  
    
    I thought LVA kept the reply clean of any political slant.
    
    As I said, JMHO.
    
    Candy

  • Llew Jun-12-2024
    Kevin…
    …described exactly what Trump did in Atlantic City.