Tribal betrayal in Connecticut; Disappointing year in Schenectady

If the Mashantucket Pequots and the Mohicans feel they’ve been screwed they’re right to do so. Connecticut legislators, in a classic white-man-speaks-with-forked-tongue move, are proposing to tear up the bill that gave Mohegan Sun and Foxwoods Resort Casino a satellite casino in East Windsor. In its place, a bill would be introduced to breach the current gaming compact by designating Bridgeport as the site for a third casino and opening bidding to all comers. This is MGM Resorts International‘s wet dream. Rationalized state Rep. Chris Rosario (D), “The process will let every developer with an interest — whether it is MGM or the tribes or anyone else — give it their best shot. It is a process that is consistent with industry best practices, and it’s best for Connecticut.” Rhapsodized state Rep. Ezequiel Santiago (D), “With its strategic location right in the center of the transportation hub including highway, rail, bus and ferry, Bridgeport is uniquely poised to become an entertainment center that can attract patrons far and near.”

While Gov. Dannel Malloy (D) withheld comment, his spokeswoman allowed that “we have consistently stated that we should aim to Continue reading

Posted in Economy, Foxwoods, Internet gambling, MGM Mirage, Mohegan Sun, Neil Bluhm, New York, Pennsylvania, Politics, Taxes, Tribal | Comments Off on Tribal betrayal in Connecticut; Disappointing year in Schenectady

Life after Wynn

There may not be much, according to a feature in the New York Times. Wall Street analysts are already circling Wynn Resorts like buzzards. “Elvis has left the building. Mr. Wynn’s value to the company is unarguably profound as its chief visionary and diplomat. As such, we do not believe the company can grow at the same trajectory nor can it maintain its cutting edge position,” wrote Jeffries analysts. They added, “Given the reduced value implied for the company going forward, we believe the value of the market value of the assets could be higher.” In other words, sell the company off in pieces. That would certainly appeal to rival companies that haven’t got the $24 billion scratch for Wynn Resorts in toto or have antitrust concerns but would like to increase their presence in select markets. For instance, perhaps Sheldon Adelson will have a change of heart about his native Boston area, now that Wynn has done most of the heavy lifting in that region. Then again, the $2.4 billion price tag on Wynn Boston Harbor may give him pause, as might projected ROI of just under 10%.

In addition to shareholder lawsuits, Wynn Resorts still has to fend off regulatory concerns. Wynn Macau President Linda Chen was called on the carpet by the Gaming Inspection & Coordination Bureau. In Massachusetts, the chairman Continue reading

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Dan Gilbert, Eldorado Resorts, Hard Rock International, Macau, Massachusetts, Ohio, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Racinos, Regulation, Sexual misconduct, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | 1 Comment

One picture = 1,000 words

Las Vegas visual artist Laura Martin has a one-word solution for Wynn Resorts‘ new branding problem.

Posted in Steve Wynn, The Strip | 1 Comment

Caesars seeks to transform New Orleans skyline

Harrah’s New Orleans was built on the presumption that it would have neither hotel rooms nor restaurant, thereby not sapping the businesses around it. Through some clever — one might even say Machievallian — maneuvers by then-CEO Phil Satre, both restrictions were overturned. Now Caesars Entertainment CEO Mark Frissora is trying a similar gambit, requesting permission to build a 24-story hotel tower. It would be built in a style intended to harmonize with the buildings in the immediate area, and would have a nightclub and more restaurants. The $340 million expansion, would not, however, have additional gaming positions. While you might expect this initiative to go down like a load of coal with Harrah’s competitors, it’s not. In fact, “There seems to be a lot of support,” said state Rep. Walt Leger III (D). State Senate President John Alario (R) is also supportive but has a caveat: “I’d like to know: What else is involved? I just want to make sure the state’s interest is protected. I always like to see the fine print.” He does well to be concerned, as Satre was a master of the fine print, to the detriment of the state’s political establishment.

The hotel addition is thought to be a done deal since it has the backing of Speaker of the House Taylor Barras (R). Other aspects of the hotel would be a rooftop pool and a canopy over Fulton Street, to facilitate Continue reading

Posted in Election, Harrah's, history, Isle of Capri, Louisiana, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Politics, Tribal | Comments Off on Caesars seeks to transform New Orleans skyline

Wynn: “The End of an Era”

That’s how Deutsche Bank analyst Carlo Santarelli headlined his investor note alerting stockholders to the news that Wynn Resorts CEO/Chairman Steve Wynn has opted to step down. One can only speculate, but Carrie Geer Thevenot‘s long-buried Las Vegas Review-Journal report on Wynn’s “I love grannies” sexcapade was the pinkie-shove that sent Wynn tumbling into a rapidly deepening abyss. The move does not imply an acceptance of responsibility on Wynn’s part. He blamed it on “an avalanche of negative publicity … in which a rush to judgment takes precedence over everything else, including the facts.” Wynn Resorts President Matt Maddox moves into the void — and it is a big one — left by Mr. Wynn’s departure. “Steve Wynn is an industry giant.  He is a philanthropist and a beloved leader and visionary. He played the pivotal role in transforming Las Vegas into the entertainment destination it is today,” said board member Boone Wayson by way of a goodbye note. Wayson also implied that the Wynn brand will remain on the company’s various and sundry casinos, tainted though it is. One analyst wrote, “We think it stays in Macau, but we are less certain in Boston and, to a lesser degree, Las Vegas.”

While Wynn’s resignation removes some of the regulatory pressure faced by the company in Macao and Nevada, it’s far from being Continue reading

Posted in Current, George Maloof, history, Macau, Massachusetts, Nevada, Regulation, Sexual misconduct, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | 5 Comments

Vici victorious on the Street; Macao monopoly threatened

MGM Resorts International is definitely going to have to sweeten its offer for Vici Properties after the latter had a hugely successful IPO, hitting $1.2 billion. Shares of the REIT were sufficiently in demand that Vici is going to enlarge the float. As far as the MGM angle is concerned, an offer of $19.45/share isn’t going to cut it when Vici is trading for $21, as it is. Victorious Vici CEO Ed Pitoniak gloated understandably and rightly: “There is growing interest in gaming real estate as a real estate asset class worthy of institutional investment.” He added, “We are fortunate to be a point where that interest is growing strongly.” Gaming analyst David Katz laid out a scenario whereby Vici and tenant Caesars International could buy, say, Wynn Resorts by bidding for it in tandem. (Needless to say, MGM and MGM Growth Properties could execute the same pincer movement.) How long do you think it will be before Sheldon Adelson forms a REIT?

So what is Vici going to do with its bankroll? $670 million will be used to pay down debt. Some of it will be squirreled away for as-yet-unforseen acquisitions. It would be congruent with Caesars’ history for Vici to pick off Continue reading

Posted in Australia, Harrah's, International, Internet gambling, Macau, MGM Mirage, Wall Street | Comments Off on Vici victorious on the Street; Macao monopoly threatened

Quote of the Day

“Everything we do around e-sports is going to be mainstream. E-sports are getting more popular. Traditional sports are becoming less relevant. If you look at the PGA Tour, the average age of a fan [is] 69 years old. Major League Baseball, the average fan is 55. Traditional sports fans are dying, and esports fans are being born. Everything we do is going mainstream.” — Unikrn co-founder Rahul Sood.

Posted in e-sports, Sports, Technology | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Illinois anemic; MGM flexes pecs in Maryland, Washington, D.C.

Thank God. There is nothing new about Steve Wynn in this morning’s headlines, so we can talk about some good, old-fashioned gambling. Illinois last month saw a 5.5% drop-off for a somewhat anemic gross of $105 million. Foot traffic was 12% down but players spent 7%, which I guess is a silver lining of sorts. The only casino in the state to gain business was perennial leader Rivers Casino, up 3.5% to $35 million. (Isn’t that nicely symmetrical.) Down south, Harrah’s Metropolis suffered an absolutely catastrophic month, plummeting 29.5% to $5 million. Returning to the northern casinos, Harrah’s Joliet was the closest thing Rivers had to competition, grossing $13.5 million (-9%). Penn National Gaming grossed $9 million at Hollywood Aurora (-11%) and $9 million at Empress Joliet (-9%). At Grand Victoria, co-owner MGM Resorts International grossed $12 million, a 5% slippage.

Mid-state, Par-A-Dice took in $5.5 million, down 6%, while Jumer’s Casino Rock Island was only 3% down, grossing $5 million. In East St. Louis, oft-dissed Casino Queen tumbled Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Cordish Co., Donald Trump, Economy, Foxwoods, GLPI, Golden Gaming, Harrah's, Illinois, Marketing, Maryland, MGM Mirage, Mohegan Sun, Neil Bluhm, Penn National, Pennsylvania, Politics, West Virginia | Comments Off on Illinois anemic; MGM flexes pecs in Maryland, Washington, D.C.

Kentucky legislators try again; Del Lago: The dog ate our revenues

Kentucky is resuming its off-again/on-again flirtation with casino gambling. The reasoning was predictable. “The reason this idea has been on the radar for years is that we know we’ve been headed towards very bleak budgets. Well, we’re there now,” said state Sen. Morgan McGarvey (D). Added state Rep. Jerry Miller (R), “It’s much more palatable than a tax increase.” True that, but this idea has come up in Lege after Lege and always fallen short. “This would free up tax dollars now going to pensions to be spent on other things in the budget,” Miller said and he’s proposed a bill that would dedicate all “casino gaming” revenues to the state’s sagging pension fund. Would casino companies cotton to something so confiscatory?

Gov. Matt Bevin isn’t on board with the idea, offering unspecified but ‘comprehensive’ tax reform in its place. The Kentucky Baptist Convention has his back. “I expect most legislators still agree that this is a terrible way to Continue reading

Posted in Iowa, Kentucky, Nebraska, New York, Pennsylvania, Politics, South Dakota, Taxes, Tribal, Wall Street | Comments Off on Kentucky legislators try again; Del Lago: The dog ate our revenues

Quote of the Day

“The main thing is the game itself. If only you knew how it carries one away.” — Fyodor Dostoevsky on the subject of gambling, his greatest weakness.

Posted in history, Problem gambling | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Wynn: Brain bleach, stat!

Today, I was going to file my quota of one Steve Wynn story per every 24 hours, but what to make of this? Another court filing against Wynn has surfaced, as well as the disclosure that the Las Vegas Review-Journal knew about allegations involving Wynn in 1998 and quashed the story. (Ah, the high ethical standards of the Sherman Frederick era.) Not only did the paper require that the two witnesses in question undergo polygraph tests, standard practice at the National Enquirer — evidently at then-Editor Thomas Mitchell‘s behest — one of Frederick’s underlings ordered then-reporter Carrie Geer Thevenot to delete the story from the R-J‘s antiquated computer system. Thevenot, now metro editor, kept a hard copy of the story, saying she “always wanted to tell these women’s stories. That’s why I saved this file for 20 years.” Frederick is pleading amnesia. “It was hard enough to come forward in the first place and reveal this stuff to my family, and then to have the newspaper curb the whole story, I feel I got silenced,” says alleged victim Cynthia Simmons, who flunked the lie-detector test (she says she was under too much stress), although another, corroborative witness passed.

“According to a court document and interviews with multiple sources,” Wynn pressured one of his waitress for Continue reading

Posted in e-sports, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Sexual misconduct, Steve Wynn, The Strip | Comments Off on Wynn: Brain bleach, stat!

Steve Wynn makes his case; Gambling stalemate in Florida

It’s no longer enough for employees of Wynn Resorts to reflect well upon the company. No, now Steve Wynn wants their gratitude. His confidential pep rallies have had all the watertight integrity of a colander. By reminding workers that the company hadn’t laid any of them off during the Great Recession (although it did cut some of them to part-timers), Wynn not so subtly reminded them that he could fire all their asses at a moment’s whim. He referred to the company as a “family,” although he makes a very dysfunctional paterfamilias, feeling the need to say that Wynn Resorts (i.e., he) “always trusted, respected, and honored women.” And, as if all that mixture of reassurance and gloved threats didn’t do the trick, Wynn raised the prospect — but not the promise — of pay increases: “Just so long as that doesn’t bug any of you I’m happy, and I’m happy if you’re happy.”

Weirdly, Wynn chose to invoke serial groper Donald Trump as a character witness. Also, seemingly thinking he was addressing an audience of fellow billionaires, he said, “You guys are going to love” the new tax law. Meanwhile, Wall Street is having questions about Wynn’s Continue reading

Posted in California, Detroit, DFS, Dining, Donald Trump, Election, Entertainment, Florida, Galaxy Entertainment, Genting, Harrah's, Internet gambling, Macau, Massachusetts, Melco Resorts & Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Movies, Politics, Regulation, Seminole Tribe, Sexual misconduct, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, Taxes, The Strip, Wall Street | 1 Comment

Wynn in a corner; Delaware may cut racinos some slack

Things have gotten so bad for Steve Wynn that he’s been reduced to asking his employees to support him in Sexgate. “In a family, people look after each other … They take care of the people they serve” he said, a sentiment that he would have done well to have remembered when he was raiding his dealers’ tip pool to compensate pit bosses. The plea comes as an increasingly unpopular Wynn has been stripped of his honorary degree by the University of Pennsylvania, his alma mater. The latter also took Wynn’s name off a scholarship program and a campus plaza, Wynn Commons, where his name had already been vandalized. (Oh, and Penn took Bill Cosby‘s honorary degree back, too.)

Referring to Wynn’s alleged sexcapades, Penn President Amy Gutmann and Board of Trustees Chairman David L. Cohen wrote that  Continue reading

Posted in Ameristar, Delaware, Dining, Genting, Indiana, Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Pinnacle Entertainment, Racinos, Regulation, Sexual misconduct, Steve Wynn, Taxes, The Strip | 1 Comment

Macao is back; Steelman predicts the future

Gross gaming revenues in Macao blew away Wall Street analysts’ estimates of 19% growth, posting a 36.5% gain. Deutsche Bank analyst Carlo Santarelli still advised caution for the near future, writing, “While [Chinese New Year] generates a lot of hype, the month around the holiday has often tended to bring about disappointment as the periods into and post the holiday tend to offset the primarily mass strength during the holiday.” There was n0 breakdown of how market share was divided among the six operators, so we should hope for greater clarity in the future.

According to architect Paul Steelman, who has considerable experience in Macao, U.S. operators are going about it the wrong way back home. Says Steelman, “the Asian customer wants the casino so much brighter. We didn’t actually realize that until Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, Atlantic City, Galaxy Entertainment, Genting, Hard Rock International, Internet gambling, Macau, Massachusetts, Revel, Steve Wynn, The Strip, Tilman Fertitta, Wall Street | Comments Off on Macao is back; Steelman predicts the future

Wynn’s disgrace continues; Robots overthrow Las Vegas

It’s getting to the point that one wishes Steve Wynn would just go away quietly and take the saga of his sagging, septuagenarian genitals with him. But the news is rarely convenient like that. Fox News is reporting that the University of Iowa “announced plans to remove Wynn’s name from the school’s vision research institute in light of sexual misconduct allegations against Wynn.” The $25 million endowment by Wynn, made in 2013, met with some skepticism at the time. “An endowment gift from a tycoon suffering an obscure disease or condition may sound less like a ringing endorsement of promising research and more like a bequest in the name of wishful thinking,” wrote the Medical Daily.

Wynn got a dubious endorsement from sexist and incompetent ex-casino owner Tom Barrack: “This is a guy who Continue reading

Posted in Colony Capital, Economy, GLPI, history, Illinois, Iowa, Massachusetts, Regulation, Steve Wynn, Technology, Unite-Here | 3 Comments

Baccarat slays the Strip

Gaming revenues on the Las Vegas Strip continued to dip in December, down 3% ($571.5 million). Baccarat tore a hole through gaming receipts, with the house plunging 30% on 9% less wagering. Non-baccarat table games fared much better, up 7.5%. A slight increase in coin-in was enough to propel slot revenues up 6%. (Tighter holds helped.) Locals casinos saw flat slot revenue on 4% more coin-in but table game wagers were 6.5% higher, leading to 12% greater win.

Downtown fared far better, up 10% ($47 million), while Laughlin grew 11% ($31 million). The Boulder Strip ($47 million) was flat, North Las Vegas leapt 16% ($20 million) and miscellaneous Clark County ($93 million) was a percentage point higher. Lake Tahoe ($18.5 million) was also Continue reading

Posted in Boulder Strip, Economy, Eldorado Resorts, Environment, Illinois, Indiana, Lake Tahoe, Laughlin, Missouri, North Las Vegas, Pennsylvania, Reno, Taxes, The Strip | 1 Comment

New investigation of Wynn; Eldorado on the prowl

After several days of uncertainty, it’s definitive: The Nevada Gaming Control Board will investigate the allegations of sex abuse against Steve Wynn. In the past the NGCB has been only too willing to look the other way when prominent Nevada casino figures got into trouble elsewhere, whether it was Clifford Perlman being found too mobbed-up to operate in New Jersey or Station Casinos being chased out of Missouri with regulators nipping at its heels. Not so this time. “After completing our review, the Nevada Gaming Control Board is conducting an investigation with regard to the allegations of sexual misconduct involving Steve Wynn. The Nevada Gaming Control Board will conduct its investigation in a thorough and judicious manner,” stated Chairwoman Becky Harris, enduring a trial by fire in her first month on the job.

Meanwhile, the Massachusetts Gaming Commission is meeting to discuss the matter today. Gov. Charlie Baker (R) has already Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Colorado, Downtown, Eldorado Resorts, Entertainment, Florida, history, Isle of Capri, Louisiana, Macau, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, Regulation, Reno, Sexual misconduct, Station Casinos, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | Comments Off on New investigation of Wynn; Eldorado on the prowl

Case Bets

When Las Vegas casinos sit down with the Culinary Union this year expect wireless “panic buttons” to be on the table. Labor unions have been pushing for these as a means of summoning security when their members are assaulted by guests. In one such appalling incident, a Boulder Station housekeeper was doing her job when a “man stormed the room, punched the woman in the face, closed the doors and assaulted her. The victim told police that she yelled, but the man only hit her harder.” A similar incident led to an arrest at Bally’s. The so-called panic buttons are already standard hotel issue in New York City, Seattle and Chicago.

It shouldn’t be a sticking point in labor talks. MGM Resorts International is already on board with the idea. Caesars Entertainment says it is Continue reading

Posted in Culinary Union, DFS, Foxwoods, Harrah's, MGM Mirage, Missouri, Mohegan Sun, Sexual misconduct, Sports, Station Casinos | 1 Comment

Wynn loses big-time

Since the Wall Street Journal broke the cone of silence around Steve Wynn‘s sex life, shares of WYNN have fallen 19%. That means that the Wynn Resorts CEO is $463 million the poorer, being so heavily invested in his own company (12,230,334 share as of last month). At present, a share that would have cost you $201.30 on Jan. 26 now goes for $163.48. The stock is also taking a battering on the Hong Kong bourse. Things could get worse, Macao having joined the queue of jurisdictions lining up to investigate the mogul. On the plus side, an initial geyser of Republican lawmakers seeking to divest themselves of Wynn-tainted cash has slowed to a trickle, if that, although Sen. Dean Heller (R) broke radio silence long enough to say he was giving $5,400 in Wynnbucks to charity.

The Republican Governors Association is cutting Wynn loose, returning $100,000 of Wynn lucre and banning any future contributions from Wynn or his company. Worse still Continue reading

Posted in Donald Trump, Macau, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Politics, Regulation, Sexual misconduct, Steve Wynn | 1 Comment

MGM Cotai gets rave review; Cracking the Millennial code

MGM Grand Cotai continues to miss opening deadlines, the latest obstacle being the government’s continued failure to issue a hotel license. “The licence application for the opening of the five-star hotel MGM Cotai and establishments inside the property is still
waiting for the favourable opinions from related technical departments,” said the Macao Government Tourism Office. Fire-safety and other related clearances are believed to be at the heart of the delay. Nomura Securities blamed a “governmental approval backlog, although we believe that most of it is a local management decision.” It thought MGM could have met its original, Jan. 29 deadline but only with “a herculean effort.” Nomura believes MGM will take hotel bookings for Chinese New Year (Feb. 16) which, in the understatement of the week, it called “an important revenue window no operator wants to miss.”

MGM can take consolation in the advance report of Desmond Lam, who got a sneak peek and deemed the megaresort “mesmerizing.” He wrote, “I truly believe this property is the way forward, in several Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, CityCenter, Genting, Golden Gaming, Harrah's, Macau, Marketing, MGM Mirage, New York, Regulation, Technology, TV | Comments Off on MGM Cotai gets rave review; Cracking the Millennial code