Silly me. I had the Missouri numbers sitting in my "Inbox" all day yesterday and simply overlooked them amidst a typically frenetic day. A big "thank you" though to reader Bob Bradley, who provided the short and long versions (click on the "January 2009" link for a PDF). The mitigating factors cited in the sixth paragraph of the Post-Dispatch story (such as holidays and number of weekend days) should be taken into account when reading what follows.
The market was up 10% on the nose for January, validating not only Wall Street's renewed faith in regional gaming markets but also eradicating any remaining doubts that the state of Illinois is toxic to casinos. I admire Neil Bluhm's confidence in pursuing that 10th license but can't imagine why anyone would want to be in Illinois right now.
Pinnacle Entertainment's President riverboat has been a floating corpse for sometime now, so -43% comes as no surprise. An ever-so-slight decline at Harrah's Entertainment's Maryland Heights property is an unaccountable disappointment, though, given the liberalized rules that are driving revenue increases across the Show-Me State. Pinnacle's Lumiere Place, a distant third in St. Louis, still has a lot of catching up to do, even with Illinois practically shooing customers into its arms. Penn National, though, leapfrogged Harrah's in Kansas City, moving into the #2 spot. All three Isle of Capri boats posted gains, in a long-overdue piece of good news for that company.
Ameristar Casinos wasn't the biggest percentage gainer in either the St. Louis or Kansas City markets (that would be Lumiere Place — which saw a 25% higher influx of foot traffic — and Penn's Argosy Riverside, respectively). But in terms of sheer dollar amount, Ameristar remains the dominant operator in both. The future course of this company may be hazy but you have to admire how well they're maintaining the status quo.
