Icahn Capital, which purchased the Tropicana Atlantic City for $54 million, effectively, is projecting a conservative course for the property. Any sort of expansion is being ruled out for now, due to skepticism about “green shoots” of economic recovery.
Speaking of distrust, the New Jersey Casino Commission still needs to be convinced that Icahn’s preferred operator, Tropicana Entertainment, isn’t a stalking horse for Columbia Sussex CEO William J. Yung III. (Both companies employ the same corporate mouthpiece, for instance.) Besides, if ties between TropEnt and Icahn are severed, what becomes of the “Tropicana” name?
(Also, calling TropEnt’s eight raggle-taggle, non-Vegas/Atlantic City casinos an “empire” is pretty generous. A series of minor duchies and prinicipalities? Yeah, that’s more like it.)
It doesn’t look like a standalone A.C. Trop would have ownership of its name, as that remains with the “OpCo,” that “empire” under which all the miscellaneous former Aztar Corp. and ColSux casinos are bunched. Tropicana Las Vegas boss Alex Yemenidjian apparently didn’t read the fine print and may have to shell out $2 million a year to keep the name that is, along with its land, the LV Trop’s main equity.
Would a Trop by any other name be just as marketable? One highly doubts it.
The Wild, Wild Midwest. Back in Illinois, the guvmint continues to take a “Ready, Fire, Aim!” approach to its management of the casino business. In his zeal to get slot routes up and running, Gov. Pat Quinn didn’t appropriate extra moolah or manpower to ride herd on the influx of new gambling devices.
So, if you’re a bar owner in the Land of Lincoln, it’s a free for all. The state’s casino owners, meanwhile, will probably have to wait until at least early next year before any financial relief makes its way through the Lege. Illinois isn’t just killing the golden goose; it’s serving it for lunch at the governor’s mansion.
Suing the Chairman. One of the many interesting revelations in the Terrance K. Watanabe lawsuit is that Harrah’s Entertainment created a special “Chairman” tier of players in his honor. (Take that, you Seven Stars members!) Watanabe’s counterfilings against Harrah’s also allege confidential agreements between the company and the high roller whereby he had a two-month (or greater) window of time to make good on his markers.
The documents further allege that Harrah’s violated the agreement by cashing in the markers early. It sounds more and more like Watanabe has Harrah’s CEO Gary Loveman by the short hairs. If the covenants can be substantiated, then Harrah’s made a loan — which is unenforceable — and may have been in breach of contract. The company better get ready to eat $14.75 million. Compared to the nearly $300 million Loveman just wrote off, that’s walking-around money.
Not that Watanabe is a pitiable victim in this drama. Seems he was rather a prima donna, dictating which employees would and would not dance attendance upon him. He was also able to have gambling tables and slot machines moved into special curtained alcoves, the bettter to squander his wealth in seclusion. To paraphrase Fitzgerald and Hemingway, the rich are not like you and I; they have more neuroses.
