Poker outlawed in Wisconsin; A new game in New York

Score one against private poker games and score one for tribal casinos, which are now the only places in Wisconsin where one can legally play poker. As Poker News put it, ” the fact remains even poker-cardplaying poker for pennies against grandma constitutes a crime.” A crowdfunded lawsuit by poker players challenging state law met with a not-unsympathetic but ultimately negative verdict from Judge Richard G. Niess. Saying his “hands are tied” by a 1964 legal precedent, Niess ruled, “I’ve got to say that poker is such a rich topic on so many levels. It’s as much a part of the American fabric, I think, as Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Genting, Macau, New York, Regulation, Technology, Tribal, Wisconsin | 2 Comments

Vegas Club rescued; Straight talk from Steve Wynn

Good news for fans of the Las Vegas Club (and you know who you are): Its long Tamares Group nightmare will soon be over. Tamares LV Clubhas sold the Vegas Club to the D owner Derek Stevens and his brother for a undisclosed $40 million pricc. Details are thin on the ground, particularly as to Stevens’ intentions. However, given the vast improvements he wrought at the D and Golden Gate, optimism is warranted. In a cover-your-ass announcement, Tamares tried to paint its retreat from the increasingly threadbare Vegas Club as the kind of Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, Derek Stevens, Donald Trump, Downtown, Economy, Golden Gaming, Macau, Penn National, Regulation, Steve Wynn, Tamares Group, The Strip, Wall Street | 3 Comments

Kabuki comes to Vegas

Here’s a preview of the half-hour Kabuki spectacle Fight with a Carp, which will play five performances at Bellagio over the next three nights. A special, 165-square-foot stage has been erected in the Bellagio lagoon for the show, which is synopsized as “a handsome samurai … falls in love with a beautiful maiden … only to discover she is actually a giant carp’s spirit taking the form of a woman to seek revenge against humans for killing her carp lover.” In other words, just another day at the koi pond. MGM Resorts International is to be commended for this effort to spread the appreciation of Kabuki theatre.

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Quote of the Day

“I wondered how in the world we would protect it. And it’s like putting a Renoir in Disneyworld.” — Elaine Wynn, on the genesis of the Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art.

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Yesterday in Las Vegas


The rains came — with a vengeance.

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What they did to your luggage

Whee! I feel like I’ve just been on El Loco at Circus CircusAdventuredome.

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Studio City in trouble; Tribal clash in Massachusetts

Melco Crown Entertainment is in Eeyore mood these days, darkly muttering about a “contingency plan” for Studio City if the Macao government doesn’t give it 400 table games. As far back as its 2014 Lawrence Hoannual report, the company was making noises about bankruptcy at the $3.2 billion megaresort, a rescue project that Melco Crown (unwisely?) took over from its original developer. It has threatened to default on a $1.4 billion loan, stating, “In the event that we are unable to meet these conditions, it may constitute an event of default under the Studio City Project Facility.” Melco Crown is also reeling from an 83% decline in second-quarter profits.

While Lawrence Ho has admitted that he could get Studio City up to 400 tables by moving some inventory over from other Melco Crown properties, he thinks special treatment is in order, saying,  Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Election, Galaxy Entertainment, Geoff Freeman, Internet gambling, Isle of Capri, James Packer, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Massachusetts, Melco Crown Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Mississippi, Neil Bluhm, Pennsylvania, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, The Strip, Tribal | Comments Off on Studio City in trouble; Tribal clash in Massachusetts

Packer plays musical chairs; Atlantic City … the rest of the story

A 41% dive in Crown Resorts prompted James Packer to resign his chairmanship of the company, handing his portfolio to Deutsche Bank Packer brawlveteran Robert Rankin. The change appears to be more cosmetic than substantive, seeing as the brawling billionaire will take on the role of executive director. He said, “Crown remains my number one business priority and passion. I will continue to drive key projects, including our joint business in Asia and our planned resort in Las Vegas.” In other words, it’s business as usual at Crown. (Its profit slump was nothing compared to that of Sociedade de Jogos de Macau, down 54%.) Crown board member Harold Mitchell spun it as a personal matter: “James is going to spend more time with his children, his children live in Los Angeles, so that’s perfectly understandable.”

Also, Packer will retain his co-chairmanship of Melco Crown Entertainment, so anyone expecting him to Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Australia, Cannery Casino Resorts, Harrah's, Internet gambling, James Packer, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Marketing, Melco Crown Entertainment, Mohegan Sun, Stanley Ho, The Strip, Tilman Fertitta, Tropicana Entertainment, Trump Entertainment Resorts | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“We are creating a caste system from which it’s almost impossible to escape, except for the few with exceptional brains, athletic skills or luck. That’s why I’m scared. We risk losing the capitalist engine that brought us great economic success and our way of life.” — Young & Rubicam emeritus chairman Peter Georgescu, calling for higher wages and greater reinvestment by companies in their own products.

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Business heats up in Detroit, cools in Manila

Ohio? What’s Ohio? Casinos in Detroit may as well ask that as they continue to recover from the dent in their business made by the Buckeye State. July revenues were up 3% and, Lion Detroitfor the year to date, casino revenues are up nearly 5%. Unfortunately, Dan Gilbert can’t catch a break these days, as revenue fell 4% at Greektown Casino-Hotel ($27 million). Lately, casino revenue has been as elusive for the Cleveland Cavaliers owner as an NBA trophy. What Greektown lost, MotorCity more than gained, up 6% to $39 million. Predictably, MGM Grand Detroit continued to reign supreme, up 5% and banking 49%. The MGM really is a case of building a better mousetrap and having the world — well, Michigan, anyway — beat a path to your door.

* Casinos and racinos in Maryland are taxed to within an inch of their life (60% for slots), so it’s not entirely surprising that — with the addition of Horseshoe Baltimore — state gaming-tax revenues crested the billion-dollar mark for Continue reading

Posted in Australia, Dan Lee, Detroit, Economy, Environment, Harrah's, Macau, Maryland, Melco Crown Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Ohio, Philippines, South Korea, Taxes | 2 Comments

Isle abandons ship; Borgata crushes Atlantic City; Radical move from Full House

Faced with a casino that had been generating negative return on investment for the past two years, Isle of Capri Casinos announced it was closing its 15-year-old Natchez riverboat and mcdowellselling the accompanying hotel to Magnolia Bluffs Casino for $11.5 million. The riverboat had been doing $87/slot/day on average — abysmal by any industry standard. The question isn’t why Isle made the move but why it left the patient on life support for so long. CEO Virginia McDowell has been trying to trim the Isle ship since taking over but this move seems rather tardy. Deutsche Bank analyst Carlo Santarelli speculates that the gaming inventory will be divvied among other properties. Isle isn’t selling the vessel itself, which makes one speculate whether they hope to drop anchor in another market.

* The latest numbers are in for Atlantic City and July saw a 7% decrease in gaming revenues, albeit a 7% increase on a same-store basis (i.e., without the four dead casinos). Table play was up 10% but luck didn’t favor Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Dan Lee, Indiana, Isle of Capri, Majestic Star, Mississippi, Ohio, Politics, Racinos, Wall Street | 1 Comment

Bluhm presses case in Massachusetts; Lawrence Ho tells it like it is

Despite having to wait at least until early next year to start building, a potential Brockton casino could be “up and running by 2018,” sometime in the second quarter, according to Neil Bluhm. “We are shovel-ready to go.” Unfortunately for Bluhm, the sluggish Massachusetts Gaming Commission is far from gavel-ready to approve the project. Chairman Stephen Crosby voiced mild skepticism about Bluhm’s financing and the economic viability of the project.

He also continued to flash some ankle, in hopes of getting a fantasy competitor into the running. “We want to know what we can get from Continue reading

Posted in Entertainment, Illinois, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Massachusetts, Melco Crown Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Neil Bluhm, Regulation, Sam Nazarian, Tribal | 1 Comment

Midwest shakes off malaise

Yes, there was an extra weekend day this year but let’s look at the glass half-full, as regional gaming markets shook off their malaise. Illinois Grand Victoria ILwas up 2% despite mild weakness in the St. Louis market. Empress Joliet (+10%) was the biggest gainer of the month, followed by Rivers Casino (+9%), while MGM Resorts International enjoyed a 5% bounce at Grand Victoria (above). Also still producing is Harrah’s Metropolis, up 8%. The bulk of the Penn National Gaming portfolio underperformed, with Hollywood Aurora down 6% and Argosy Alton off 3%. Harrah’s Joliet lost business, down 7% while Boyd Gaming‘s Par-A-Dice was off 3%.

Missouri did even better, up 3%. Despite a 2% increase in revenue at River City, it was surprisingly weak month for Pinnacle Entertainment, down 1% at Continue reading

Posted in Ameristar, Boyd Gaming, Dan Gilbert, Economy, Hard Rock International, Harrah's, Horseracing, Illinois, Indiana, Isle of Capri, Majestic Star, MGM Mirage, Missouri, Neil Bluhm, Ohio, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Racinos, Wall Street | Comments Off on Midwest shakes off malaise

What’s up, Macao?; Strange plan from Full House

Lawrence Ho minces few words in an interview with Bloomberg News about the autumn opening of Studio City, the $3.2 billion rescue project Lawrence_Ho_Melcoof Melco Crown Entertainment. It’s difficult to decide what’s strangest about the project. Is it having Batman, Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny fronting a casino project? (OK, they’re part of “an indoor play center” but we weren’t born yesterday and know they’re not the primary attraction.) Is it spending $70 million on what must be the world’s most expensive commercial, with Martin Scorcese helming Continue reading

Posted in Dan Lee, Galaxy Entertainment, Indiana, Kentucky, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Melco Crown Entertainment, Ohio, Regulation, Transportation | Comments Off on What’s up, Macao?; Strange plan from Full House

Lucky Horseshoe for Maryland; Old McDonald had a casino

What would have been a revenue-negative July for Maryland casinos turned into their biggest month ever, thanks to Horseshoe caesarscasino_1Baltimore. Gaming revenue rose more $23 million, with all that and more coming from the Caesars Entertainment property. While the casino is still short of projections, it’s still making the difference between a growing gaming market and a saturated one.

Not too much skin came off Maryland Live‘s nose, as the Cordish Gaming property was only down 2%, grossing Continue reading

Posted in Cordish Co., Cretins, Harrah's, Maryland, New York, Penn National, Racinos, Regulation, The Strip, Westgate LV | 1 Comment

Thought for the day

trumpMany question Donald Trump‘s qualifications for the presidency of the United States. I do not. Why? What other past or present occupant of the Oval Office (or Republican candidate for president, for that matter) appeared in the 1989 Bo Derek nudie Ghosts Can’t Do It? I rest my case.

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Boston: Smackdown for McCheese; Online gaming hopes fade

Boston Mayor Martin Walsh got a taste of his own medicine when a Suffolk Superior Court court judge put a beatdown on his sleazy Walshlegal tactics. Assertions by Boston attorneys, slipped in at the last minute, that the Massachusetts Gaming Commission acted in “bad faith” and was guilty of “improper behavior” were so far over the line — “entirely improper” that she was going to have them stricken from the public record. “Although the materials have already been released to the media before the hearing (indeed, that seemed to be the real motive for these filings), they do not belong in the public file of this case,’’ ruled Superior Court Judge Janet L. Sanders.

This ruling must come as a harsh rebuke to Mayor McCheese, for whom slander and innuendo have Continue reading

Posted in California, Harrah's, Horseracing, Internet gambling, Laughlin, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Penn National, Pennsylvania, Politics, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, Tribal | Comments Off on Boston: Smackdown for McCheese; Online gaming hopes fade

Macao: “Less bad”; MGM beats estimates

That’s how J.P. Morgan analyst Joseph Greff spun the latest numbers out of Macao, where gaming revenues plunged 34%, less
than the year-to-date average of 37%. Mass table game winnings were HotelLisboaup 11% from June, “more positive than we otherwise would have thought.” However, VIP revenues were down 44%, slipping from already-low June numbers. However, punters ran riot at the slot machines, where revenues catapulted 39%. Greff expects August to see another 34% decline and for comparisons to be rough until the fourth quarter, when Macao comes up on the first anniversary of its recession.

* If Greff was guardedly optimistic about Macao, his Deutsche Bank colleague, Carlo Santarelli, was downright Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Detroit, Economy, Illinois, Macau, Mississippi, Scientific Games, The Strip, Wall Street | 1 Comment

MGM’s cost-discipline difficulties; Wynn framed in Boston

As fast as MGM Resorts International can sell off non-core assets, the proceeds are consumed by new construction. Case in NationalHarbor1point: MGM National Harbor, whose initial $925 million cost has crept up to $1.3 billion. That’s money that can’t go to debt servicing and MGM is the second-most highly leveraged company in gaming. (Cautionary note: Caesars Entertainment is #1.) Having deployed 10 construction cranes and sunk 6,400 pilings, MGM’s course is set, with a late-2016 opening the eventual goal. General Manager Bill Boasberg helped oversee CityCenter and Aria, and has to like the odds of National Harbor better than his two previous projects.

The Springfield Republican describes the project as “a 125,000 square-foot casino that includes 3,300 video lottery terminals and National Harbor room160 table games; a roughly 26,500 square-foot spa and salon; a transformable arena with 3,000 seats; 18,000 square-feet of retail space; 27,000 square-feet of meeting space and 12 restaurants,” plus a 308-room hotel. MGM projects it will draw 17,000 visitors a day and, at those proportions, it will need to. Some of the features, like motion-sensor lighting, will be familiar from Aria and MGM’s other recent Las Vegas Strip properties.

* Boston Mayor Martin “McCheese” Walsh (below) caught a nasty sideswipe from federal authorities who are prosecuting the three men (Charles Lightbody, Anthony Gattineri and Dustin DeNunzio) who sold Steve Wynn the land on which Wynn Everett will eventually stand. In a lawsuit against the walshMassachusetts Gaming Commission, Boston attorneys accused the feds of giving a pair of private investigators access to sensitive documents and wiretaps. Not only do the investigators deny working for Wynn at the time, they’re seconded by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kristina Barclay, who characterizes Walsh’s accusations as based “on a rumor spewed and spun by the City of Boston in a vicious civil lawsuit against the Massachusetts Gaming Commission.” The city is pushing for a disclosure of the evidence, which could be embarrassing if there’s nothing to disclose.

The massive snit fit by Boston, Revere and Somerville is coming at Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downssteep price to taxpayers: $1.4 million so far … and more if a Sept. 22 hearing permits the ligitation to go forward. Personally, were I a casino developer, I’d have serious questions about going forward in lawsuit-happy Massachusetts, where the inmates truly seem to be running the asylum. Revere Mayor Daniel Rizzo, for his part, is in the pocket of Mohegan Sun, which is paying for his city’s litigation. Gee, no hidden agenda there.

Meanwhile, only $80,000 remains of the MGC’s legal budget, so this may be a case of spending the commission into oblivion. Somerville Rizzohas to be complimented for getting a good deal on legal representation, spending only 79 grand to date. The sentiments of all three cities are essentially summarized by Mayor Rizzo (left), who whined, “We do not believe that the residents of Revere received a fair outcome. The city has lost many millions of dollars in improvements, revenue, and jobs as a result of the Gaming Commission’s flawed and tainted process.” If you don’t like the rules, don’t play the game.

* Deciding that if it can’t beat ’em it better join ’em, Penn National Gaming is bidding on an undisclosed slot route in Illinois, with 1,100 slots up for grabs. If Penn’s doing it, can Caesars Entertainment and Boyd Gaming be far behind?

* If you visit only one tourist attraction in Las Vegas, make it the Mob Museum. It’s so rich in content and atmosphere that my wife and I spent three hours there and only made it halfway through the exhibits. Chalk it up as “unfinished business.”

Posted in Architecture, Boyd Gaming, CityCenter, Downtown, Harrah's, history, Illinois, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Slot routes, Steve Wynn, The Strip | 1 Comment

McCain, NIGC butt heads; Paper Tiger

U.S. senators put the squeeze on the National Indian Gaming Commission and allies like the National Indian Gaming Association at a recent hearing. Sen. John Barrasso (R) put the mccaingripes in a nutshell when he said, “The commission is not effectively promoting voluntary compliance with federal guidelines related to gaming regulatory standards.” NIGA Chairman Ernie Stevensdefended the tribes’ plethora of self-regulatory regimes by saying, “I challenge anyone to find a better regulatory system worldwide.” (I can think of a few.)

That wasn’t good enough for Sen. John McCain (R), who noted that the General Accounting Office found 25% of tribal casinos to be at Continue reading

Posted in Economy, Genting, Kazuo Okada, Macau, Melco Crown Entertainment, Philippines, Politics, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Tribal | Comments Off on McCain, NIGC butt heads; Paper Tiger