• Smashing guitars — but not over each other’s noggins — James Packer and Lawrence Ho christened City of Dreams. The younger Ho downplayed expectations of foot traffic, saying his $2.4 billion megaresort could get by on far fewer visitors than the nearby (and comparably expensive) Venetian Macao, which draws 70K visitors daily.
• After a record-setting opening, Sands Bethlehem fell into fourth place during last week’s casino action in Pennsylvania. Not surprisingly, Philadelphia Park and Harrah’s Chester led the state.
• Beau Rivage is safe. Although MGM Mirage was peddling several of its regional casinos, J.P. Morgan reports that “we have heard from some bidders that this process is close to dead, so we don’t expect to hear asset sales chatter in the near to medium term.”
• While yours truly was critical of staffing cuts at Ameristar Casinos, they appear to be paying off. The company projects flat revenue comparisons in 2009 but better cash-flow margins, pegging the savings as $40 million-$48 million, annualized.
• When in doubt, Penn National Gaming falls back on what it knows: racinos. It’s angling for the Laurel Park concession left on the table when Magna Entertainment collapsed. Both Penn and rival David Cordish appear to be trying to chisel a loophole into Maryland‘s slot-parlor law, which limits companies to one slot house apiece. Penn is already committed to Cecil County but wants Laurel Park … as does Cordish, who has a pre-standing commitment to the Arundel Mills area. The latter project has run into serious opposition. Expect a nip-and-tuck fight for Laurel Park.
• Penn is evidently getting cold feet in Ohio, however.
• Casino expansion in Iowa will have to wait until 2010, at the earliest. This delay is a disguised blessing. The Hawkeye State market has been holding its own during the recession but the timing for diluting the market with four new casinos could scarcely be worse.
• If wishes were horses, Harrah’s Entertainment would be galloping along the shores of the Yangtze River this very minute. Seriously, would you lend Harrah’s more money? Would you give an alcoholic the keys to your wine cellar? Well, you might get the empties back so you could redeem the deposit on the bottle.
