
What will prompt recovery in gaming? Stimulus money, yes, but we got a strong indicator of something else out of Maryland last weekend. Overall, casino revenues were down 16.5% but the story is more complicated than that. At facilities restricted to 25% of capacity (MGM National Harbor, Maryland Live and Horseshoe Baltimore), the decline was 18%. But at (smaller) facilities bumped up to 50% of capacity, revenues grew 8%. So are capacity constraints keeping players at home? Based on the Maryland numbers one would have to say yes. The statewide gross was $126 million, with MGM reporting 15% less slot revenue and 19% less win at the tables. National Harbor held the top spot with 40% market share compared to Maryland Live’s 35.5%. Horseshoe has fallen so low that JP Morgan analyst Joseph Greff no longer breaks out its market share.
Speaking of Horseshoe, it eked out $14 million, a 20% decrease. MGM booked $51 million, -17%, and Maryland Live won $45 million (-18%). Nobody was revenue-positive but Ocean Downs‘ $6 million was only a 3% dip. Rocky Gap Resort made $4 million (-17%) and Hollywood Perryville was good for $6 million, down 5.5%. Over in West Virginia, revenues slid 34%, with Hollywood Charles Town tumbling 39%, thanks in large part to a -50% wipeout at the tables. (Slots were -35%, almost on par with statewide average.)
Continue reading Maryland: More gamblers = more money; Illinois improving







