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Killing spree on Strip; Tilman’s newest erection revealed

Alas, today’s top story is of the “If it bleeds, it leads” variety and is written out of sheer necessity, not desire. A thirty-something Latino man, Yoni Barrios, is in custody after going on a knife-wielding spree in front of Wynncore. It seems that the individual, who was packing a large kitchen knife, didn’t take well to being spurned in his request to have his photo taken with a group of showgirls. The latter, who were employed as Wynn Resorts greeters, were among the eight people who were subsequently stabbed, two fatally. Several tourists also fell victim to this Sin City iteration of Jack the Ripper, who fled the scene only to captured in front of Venelazzo, slashing one person during his attempted getaway. The assailant’s sleeves were coated in blood, so he’ll have a hard time explaining that away in court. We thought we’d seen the last of the Las Vegas Strip as a lawless frontier once tourists starting returning en masse but evidently not. And with that … words fail us.

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Station goes off its meds; Hochul names casino pickers

Richard Schuetz writes today that “the reality of casino company board rooms is that they are overwhelmed with way too much testosterone.” That certainly seems to be the case at Station Casinos, which has announced seven projects to be executed over the next seven years. Overreach much? A company that took 39 years to reach its present size intends to double it in less than eight. Company President Scott Kreeger told the Las Vegas Review-Journal, “There’s no one more bullish on Las Vegas than Station Casinos.” That much is obvious. And the economic auguries are positive, with credit card delinquencies in the Las Vegas Valley running very low, among other favorable economic indicators. The area population is 24% larger than it was before the Great Recession and gross gaming revenue is 15% higher than before the pandemic (but 8% lower than in 2007).

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Report from the shore; Cretins win in Alabama

While Bally’s Corp. may not be the laughingstock of the casino industry, it isn’t for want of trying. You would think that Bally’s Atlantic City (above) would want to pimp nearby Bally’s Dover Downs to its customers. Instead it sent a lengthy mailer touting all the great deals to be found … at Bally’s Vicksburg. We mean, if you’ve driven to Atlantic City regularly, what’s a quick little runout to Vicksburg, the vacation capital of Dixie? (Not.) Don’t get us wrong. We’ve been to Vicksburg. We like Vicksburg. But it’s not exactly the destination that Bally’s customer base is slavering to be incentivized towards. Actually, Bally’s apparently needs to induce players to stay in Atlantic City anyway. Through the end of the month it’s offering room rates starting at $19 a night, though one wag suggested that was $15 too much (and yes, he’s stayed there).

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Strip buoyant, locals flat

Casinos on the Las Vegas Strip won $660 million last month, a 5% bump over last year, as business continues to trend well into 2023. (It was also up a whopping 27% over 2019.) Strip numbers also benefited—although locals ones did not—from July having ended on a Sunday, meaning last-minute slot winnings were rolled into August. Strip slot win, $381 million, rose 6% on 11% more coin-in on an 8% hold. Table games yielded $186.5 million, also up 6% despite 5.5% lower wagering. Baccarat play eked up 2% for 1% more house win. Locals play stayed on an even keel ($250 million) with the year before, but was a sky-high +41% over pre-pandemic 2019.

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Steve Wynn is so busted; Murder at Ocean Resort

Angry Florida man Steve Wynn will have to face the consequences of carrying the ChiComms’ water. Having spurned a settlement in the Justice Department’s lawsuit for failing to register as a foreign agent, he could very well find himself a defendant in a courtroom (well, we can certainly hope). As you may recall, Wynn tried to get then-president Donald Trump to return Chinese defector and dissident Guo Wengui to the clutches of Xi Jinping. We can well imagine what would have happened to Guo and it’s nothing good. The Justice Department’s position is that Wynn was nakedly doing Beijing‘s dirty work in order to protect his Macao casino concession, which was coming due.

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Voyage to Vegas, Part Two

Today we conclude our review of Deutsche Bank analyst Carlo Santarelli‘s recent field trip to Las Vegas. We resume with Station Casinos, which seems to be accelerating its development timetable. Once it gets Durango Station up and running, it will proceed with both Inspirada and Skye Canyon, both of which are currently in the design phase. They enjoy favorable demographics, with Skye Canyon having been named one of the top 10 master-planned residential communities in the country. No word on what Station plans for the 100-acre Wild Wild West site, although Santarelli said the land gives the company “valuable optionality as the Strip continues to expand.” (Is that code for ‘flip’? It would be out of character for Station.)

Durango seems to be moving toward an early 2024 opening, although the timeline is kind of hazy, but it’s on budget and will be in an area that has 50 adults per gaming position, double the number surrounding Red Rock Resort—a Strip-caliber property stranded out in the ‘burbs. Household income in the Durango Station area is also only 8% below that in Summerlin, yet another positive harbinger. Santarelli doesn’t expect staffing of the new casino to be “problematic,” for several reasons, including Station’s status as a preferred employer in town. The company told him it is fully staffed at present and “Management noted that it has adapted a more disciplined approach to cost control via hourly wage management, given wage inflation.”

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Voyage to Vegas, Part One

Not us. We’re in Vermont, vacationing. But Deutsche Bank analyst Carlo Santarelli trekked to Sin City and met with representatives of eight companies. We’ll start with MGM Resorts International, which waxed pretty darn upbeat. In Las Vegas, MGM’s strength lies in its higher-end properties (The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, Aria, Bellagio and to some extent MGM Grand). Also, the Vegas event calendar is looking good through the rest of the year and into next. Integration of the Cosmo is going “better than expected,” in part because exiting managers have been “seamlessly” replaced by career MGM execs. Also, Cosmo slot play is better than MGM anticipated and the property’s alliance with Marriott is proving an asset, one that “in our view, makes sense to potentially expand further, given the benefits relative to a traditional OTA channel.”

Another encouraging development is that not only is international travel increasing but stay habits are changing, with more customers staying over Sunday nights. While remote-meeting trends are impinging somewhat on the convention business, group biz is picking up steam. Staffing levels were described as “appropriate.” We’ll see what the Culinary Union has to say about that next year.

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Weekend edition

Internet gambling produced more than Detroit‘s casinos did for Michigan last month, $131 million to $104.5 million. Unsurprisingly, BetMGM was dominant with $49 million. Thence came DraftKings ($26.5 million) and FanDuel ($19 million). Smaller fry included BetRivers ($9 million), Caesars Entertainment ($6 million), and WynnBet and Barstool Sports at $4 million apiece. Sports betting was not nearly so lucrative, with $24 million realized on $218 million in handle. A third of that went right back out in the form of promotions, with Barstool engaging in significantly less promo activity than its rivals, per Penn Entertainment CEO Jay Snowden‘s rationale for buying Barstool in the first place. As for revenue, FanDuel (32% of market share) outdueled DraftKings (21%), while BetMGM was close behind at 21%. Caesars and Barstool each accreted 7%.

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Wynn: Make mine Manhattan; Votes for sale; Mega-Jottings

There will be at least one serious push for a casino in the heart of New York City, now that Wynn Resorts has thrown in with Related Cos. on “an exposed and sunken rail yard” that some see as a gaming gold mine. The project would be near and dear to Gov. Kathy Hochul‘s heart, so Hochul + Wynn = momentum. “Wynn New York,” or whatever it would be called, would anchor a $25 billion, 28-acre mixed-use development, giving the project much needed sex appeal. On the plus side is proximity to the Jacob Javits Convention Center. Less thrilling is the fact that the casino would have to be built on a mega-platform over some train tracks. (Nothing says “the glamour of gaming” like the subterranean rumble of trains.)

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