Massachusetts’ mixed message; Much ado about Circa

Even if Congress beats the odds and passes another megabuck stimulus bill before the election, it won’t provide more than a short-term shot in the arm for gaming, which saw a bubble of increased discretionary spending but is now backsliding. Take Massachusetts. Gaming receipts were down 12% last month for an unimpressive gross of $70.5 million, thanks in part to constraints on attendance (one-third of capacity). Most of the money—$43 million—was won by Encore Boston Harbor, with slot win up 7% on 12% higher coin-in (those punters beat the house). Slot win was $23.5 million, as Encore had a good month at the tables, too: $4,553 win/table/day compared to MGM Springfield‘s anemic $933. (Table numbers at both should improve this month with the reintroduction of roulette.) However, Encore narrowly ceded the slot win/pay crown to Plainridge Park‘s $276-per-slot vs. Encore’s $247, with MGM at a subpar $184. Have you noticed that we’ve not heard about Connecticut‘s planned Tribal Winds casino in a long time? Have Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun decided that MGM is a paper lion?

This entry was posted in Connecticut, Derek Stevens, DFS, Downtown, DraftKings, e-sports, Economy, Foxwoods, Harry Reid, Health, Massachusetts, MGM Resorts International, Mohegan Sun, Penn National, Security, Sports betting, TV, Wall Street, Wynn Resorts. Bookmark the permalink.