Poster cuts his losses; Showdown in Lansing

Gaming executive Tim Poster has bounced hither and yon, and now he’s asking to be bounced to the outer fringes of the casino industry. His attorneys will not be challenging the Nevada Gaming Control Board‘s finding of unsuitability and will Tim_Posterask the Nevada Gaming Commission to ratify it. Poster will still be able to work as a casino consultant but not in any meaningful executive role. A gaming license is out of the question. During his tenure at the Golden Nugget, Poster came off as a doofus, but his counsel is valued in the corridors of Wynn Resorts and Ultimate Poker. But his NGCB hearing was pretty ugly and Gaming Commission proceedings promised to be even uglier, as the NGCB hadn’t unloaded its full dossier on Poster. Even so, it’s only a matter of time before we see him again, in some capacity and sooner rather than later, I reckon.

Do people really fall for the Undercover Boss ruse when Continue reading

Posted in Charity, Internet gambling, Maryland, MGM Mirage, Mohegan Sun, Regulation, Station Casinos, Steve Wynn, Tribal | Comments Off on Poster cuts his losses; Showdown in Lansing

Quote of the Day

“All I can say is the process is continuing.” — Atlantic Club Hotel COO Michael Frawley on the casino’s slow-moving bankruptcy auction, which encountered a new obstacle yesterday.

Posted in Atlantic City, Colony Capital, Current | 1 Comment

Etess, Wynn cross swords & other Case Bets

Mitchell_EtessMohegan Tribal Gaming Authority CEO Mitchell Etess is A-OK with Massachusetts casino regulation, as he made clear in a recent interview. (Mohegan Sun is vying for a casino license at Suffolk Downs.) “I think everybody who got into this process had the opportunity to review the law before we began doing anything, and so I don’t know why all of a sudden you would feel that there’s things that you don’t like,” said Etess, taking a not-so-muffled pot shot at Steve Wynn. Among Wynn’s complaints had been that the Bay State’s regime didn’t square with the “arithmetic of gaming establishments,” Whatever that means. (Wynn isn’t saying.)

If he wants lower taxes, he should have thought of that sooner. Besides, he pays more in Macao and would have paid yet more in Continue reading

Posted in Alabama, Japan, Massachusetts, Melco Crown Entertainment, New York, Pennsylvania, Regulation, Taxes, Tribal | 1 Comment

A good week for Packer, Wynn and Caesars

packerJames Packer didn’t get permission to open a casino at his planned, $400 million resort in Sri Lanka (though he may have gotten something better) — but he wasn’t forbidden, either. The Sri Lankan government is keeping its options open even as it encourages resort development. The big idea is to encourage international-local partnerships in which the native contingent would hold the gambling concession. Local businessman Dhammika Perera is keeping one concession for himself (Queensberry), farming out another to John Keells Holdings — and seeking a U.S. or Asian partner for the third. (Gary Loveman, do you have Perera on speed dial?) Sri Lanka’s Buddhist community isn’t taking this especially well but it looks as though Packer will have the last laugh.

Steve Wynn, in a relaxed, professorial mood, waxed expansive with Boston-area media earlier this week. He made his attitude toward Continue reading

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Genting, Steve Wynn & so much more

Resorts World LV-1Genting Group has narrowed its price target for finishing Resorts World Vegas. It will spend between $3 billion and $4 billion to complete the project (for which it has already paid $350 million for land). For a post-recession Vegas that’s a high price point. Look at the struggles endured by $4 billion Cosmopolitan. Ever discreet, MGM Resorts International keeps the returns on its $8.5 billion (at minimum) CityCenter very much on the QT. At one point, Genting was talking about a $7 billion Resorts World LV, which isn’t an investment — it’s suicide, especially on the North Strip. The silence and gloom shrouding the Echelon site are not to be taking for a sign of Genting having second thoughts, though. “The Genting folks take a longer-term view of their investments. They are not in any rush,” Wells Fargo Securities analyst Dennis Farrell told Howard Stutz. Certainly, the metrics of Vegas’ gradual recovery ought to be encouraging to Genting. A $2.65 billion grab bag of projects is rising to meet the incremental new demand.

He bombed on the Las Vegas Strip with Fontainebleau but Jeffrey Soffer is going to try again in Continue reading

Posted in CityCenter, Colorado, Current, Dubai, Economy, Florida, Fontainebleau, Foxwoods, Genting, Internet gambling, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Mohegan Sun, New York, Pinnacle Entertainment, Politics, Racinos, Steve Wynn, The Strip | 2 Comments

Quote of the Day

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Falling out in Philly; Falling apart at Caesars

sugarhouse-casinoSugarHouse Casino has finally said what needed to be said: The Philadelphia market is tapped out for casinos. It’s not entirely a  disinterested stance; SugarHouse is finishing a $155 million expansion and vulnerable to new competition. But the numbers have shown, for some time now, that the saturation point has long since been reached. “Revenues will be split, resources will be strained, capital improvements will be postponed, and employees will lose their jobs as casinos cut costs,” argue SugarHouse attorneys.

Neil BluhmNeil Bluhm‘s people also cannily point out that Greenwood Racing and Penn National Gaming may be ineligible because of their racino ownerships. (Greenwood, owner of Parx Casino, would be getting a second bite of the Philadelphia apple.) Then there’s Mr. Everywhere, Ira Lubert, who owns pieces of two casinos and would have a portion of a third. Bart Blatstein‘s The Provence casino is drawing ire from Congregation Rodeph Shalom, Friends Select School and Mathematics, and the Civics and Sciences Charter School, posing a potentially serious obstacle. Kiddies and casinos don’t mix and if that’s the perception of The Provence, Blatstein’s chances may be fading.

It’s not even been a week and already the wheels are coming off Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Greenwood Racing, Harrah's, Internet gambling, Maryland, Massachusetts, Neil Bluhm, Penn National, Pennsylvania, Regulation, Steve Wynn, The Strip, Tilman Fertitta | 1 Comment

Bad news for Adelson; Wynn OK’d

SheldonI don’t know if Sheldon Adelson deserves the credit, but it looks like his anti-Internet-casino jihad has driven Big Gaming closer together. Wynn Resorts and Station Casinos and Churchill Downs have all joined the American Gaming Association. AGA prexy Geoff Freeman has already spoken out (indirectly) against Adelson and just substantially grown his constituency. To land three big operators at once is quite the coup de theatre and reinforces the ideological isolation of Las Vegas Sands and its sultan. It’s not been a good week for Sheldon. (Note that Monte Carlo’s casinos gross less than 1% of the projected cost of EuroVegas.)

Wynn EverettThere’s very little standing between Wynn Resorts and a Massachusetts casino license after the Massachusetts Gaming Commission‘s executive branch deemed Wynn suitable. “It seems like they run as buttoned-up an operation in Macau as pretty much can possibly be done,” said MGC Chairman Stephen Crosby during a hearing during which Steve Wynn was seeing periodically dozing off. While awake, he Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Colony Capital, Geoff Freeman, International, Internet gambling, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Station Casinos, Steve Wynn | Comments Off on Bad news for Adelson; Wynn OK’d

The case against Crosby

As expected, the Massachusetts Gaming Commission fired off a broadside against Caesars Entertainment. It defended its Investigations & Enforcement Bureau as “comprised of seasoned investigators, [who act] independently to protect the public interest.” That’s partly a defense of the IEB against charges it bowed to pressure from MGC Chairman Stephen Crosby and partly to justify any differences of opinion the body might have had with consultants Spectrum Gaming Group.

CrosbyBased on what I’ve read of the IEB’s report, Caesars and the MGC would have had issues, but no deal-breakers. (Except for Arik Kislin, whose background is seamier than Gary Loveman would like you to believe.) So now Caesars is suing Crosby for “tortious interference,” or kicking the ball off the fairway. The civil rights suit also protests “reputational and economic injury. Caesars wants the suitability report sealed, which is rather like asking the genie to return to the bottle, the document having been widely disseminated via PDF. (I’ve read a fair amount of it myself.)

(In an accompanying letter to Suffolk Downs, the Commission writes it Continue reading

Posted in Election, Florida, Foxwoods, Harrah's, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Regulation, Steve Wynn, Tribal | 1 Comment

Hasta la vista, EuroVegas

His demands having been rejected by the Spanish government, Sheldon Adelson has renounced EuroVegas, his $30 billion grand folly of 12 hotels, six casinos and 18,000 slots in Spain. Considering his hard-nosed stance that the company Sheldononly concentrate on projects that can generate a 20% ROI, it’s always been difficult to understand why Adelson indulged in this white elephant as long as he did. Evidently Adelson upped his demands at the last minute, bringing an end to negotiations. One such obstacle was Adelson’s request for national exclusivity, along with governmental subsidies. Even with unemployment running at 26% (worse in younger demographics), the Spanish government decided it could afford to say “no.” Ironically, an attempt by Adelson to ban Internet gambling brought his project down.

So could Wall Street, which reportedly balked at having to foot $20 billion of the project cost. Adelson said  Continue reading

Posted in Greenwood Racing, International, Japan, Maryland, Melco Crown Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Sheldon Adelson, Wall Street | Comments Off on Hasta la vista, EuroVegas

‘Twas the toga before Christmas

While it was saying “Bah, humbug!” to the Massachusetts Gaming Commission, along with a lump of coal, Caesars Entertainment released this cheerful swatch of Christmas kitch to the public. (Special thanks to those entertainers — like Taylor Hicks — who clearly practiced their parts.) Mac King and I both are alumni of Macalester College, in St. Paul. Obviously, he has put his degree to better use than have I. And finally, congratulations to Veronic, whose Bally’s residency has been extended through 2014. Job well done.

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Fertitta’s luck; The big get bigger; Tribes in cyberspace

fertitta_webCongratulations to Tilman Fertitta, just named Gaming Executive of the Year by Casino Journal magazine. “Fertitta, owner of Golden Nugget casinos, has accomplished something few gaming executives can claim these days—founding and expanding a U.S.-based casino company in the midst of a recession and desperately slow economic recovery. He has accomplished this by taking the valuable lessons he learned establishing the Landry’s restaurant chain and applying them to gaming,” begins the accolade, in which Fertitta is as outspoken as ever.

Strategic Gaming Management‘s 870 slot machines make it the second-biggest slot route operator in Nevada. First-place Golden Gaming has 7,000-plus. And that was before Golden cut a deal to buy out Strategic. This doesn’t make Golden the only route operator in Nevada, but close enough. The regulatory process for this transaction will likely be another display of the Silver State’s high tolerance for monopolies.

Between Meadows Racetrack & Casino and nearby natural gas development, gambling has helped author an economic feel-good story for Continue reading

Posted in Cannery Casino Resorts, Internet gambling, Pennsylvania, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Slot routes, Tilman Fertitta, Tribal | Comments Off on Fertitta’s luck; The big get bigger; Tribes in cyberspace

Quote of the Day

“I think it would be a wonderful spot for a casino.” — Albany County Industrial Development Authority Chairman Gary Domalewicz, speaking of the abandoned and decidedly dilapidated Tobin First Prize packing plant, in Albany, New York.

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Sioux City mess

Hard Rock International and Sioux City Entertainment find themselves in a pickle not of their own making in Iowa. Due to a rupture between Penn National Gaming and nonprofit Missouri River Historical Development, holder of the casino license, Penn found itself having to rebid for the casino. It made the mistake of dividing its forces in the face of numerically superior opposition (there were at least two rival bids), submitting two projects. The Iowa Racing & Gaming Commission chose neither — in no small part because they weren’t downtown. Instead it went with the in-progress Hard Rock Hotel & Casino (below), which had partnered with MRHD.

Hard Rock Sioux CityAnd it may get taken away — or sold under duress. (“As far as the city goes, there is not going to be any negative,” said Mayor Bob Scott.) A planned July opening is now off the table and must await the resolution of litigation between Penn and state regulators. The former maintain that they have exclusive rights over the market, even if their Argosy Sioux City riverboat has to be retired. Of course, Continue reading

Posted in Detroit, Hard Rock International, Harrah's, Iowa, MGM Mirage, Ohio, Penn National, Racinos, Regulation, Technology, Tribal | Comments Off on Sioux City mess

Sore losers; Poker Stars’ ticket punched

Update: Fallout from the lawsuit might force Stephen Crosby to step down. (Caesars is suing him for damages, among other things.) “Chairman Crosby and members of the commission’s staff have made untrue and misleading statements about plaintiffs and their affiliates. Chairman Crosby,” the lawsuit reads in part, “deprived plaintiffs of their due process and equal protection rights and tortiously interfered with plaintiffs’ relationship with Suffolk Downs and right to fair consideration in the gaming suitability process.” One can hardly wait for the counterclaim in this dust-up.

There’s no question that Massachusetts Gaming Commission Chairman Stephen Crosby‘s disclosure of a potential conflict of interest regarding Steve Wynn‘s casino site in Everett was inexcusably tardy … but actionable? Taking a ride on the crazy train, Caesars Entertainment is suing Crosby for not making the situation public sooner (which he should have done, no question). At first blush, it sounds like Gary Loveman is clinging to the myth that the MGC was somehow to blame for Caesars no longer being in Massachusetts. He continues to conveniently forget that it was Suffolk Downs that asked Caesars to take a walk, depriving the latter company of a chance to plead its case before the MGC.  What’s Caesars’ endgame? To force its way back into the Bay State? But where? And with whom?

Meantime, Boston Mayor-elect Martin Walsh may be seeing Suffolk in court. He’s threatening to sue to Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Election, Harrah's, Internet gambling, Massachusetts, Regulation, Tribal, Trump Entertainment Resorts, Wisconsin | Comments Off on Sore losers; Poker Stars’ ticket punched

Ohio: Half-full or half-empty?; MGM lauded

Whether Ohio‘s casinos are succeeding or disappointing depends on how the question is framed. Are they delivering what the state (and casino companies) promised or are they financial slackers? Penn National Gaming‘s Hollywood Casino Columbus is somewhat of both, down 12% last month, yet delivering $17.5 million. But nearby Scioto Downs Casino & Racetrack rose 14%, while Penn fell.

ohio_plate_08None of this comes as consolation to cities and governments that are having to pare their budgets even further, because gambling revenues aren’t living up to what both the industry and the state promised. Big tax payments were part of the sales pitch for having casinos in Ohio. They were also supposed to soften the blow of draconian budget cuts made by Gov. John Kasich (R). But Kasich’s projections Continue reading

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Compromise in Boston; Good riddance at Pinnacle?

Suffolk revisedIt would appear that the Massachusetts Gaming Commission has tacitly bowed to ballot language that would require any restructuring of the Suffolk Downs casino deal to be submitted for a re-vote. Fresh off the wires comes news that the MGC has granted a waiver under which the Downs and Mohegan Sun can pursue their plans … for now. But a second vote will have to be held in Revere in February, to approved the revised design and deal.

In retrospect, Pinnacle Entertainment is probably going to be glad the Federal Trade Commission made it divest Lumiere Place. Had the sale to Tropicana Entertainment gone through by November, Pinnacle would be Continue reading

Posted in Harrah's, Isle of Capri, Massachusetts, Missouri, Mohegan Sun, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Racinos, Regulation, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on Compromise in Boston; Good riddance at Pinnacle?

MGM: Crossing fingers and hoping; Bloodbath in Indiana

MGM SpringfieldAfter several ups and downs, MGM Resorts International finds itself justthisclose to a casino in Springfield, Massachusetts. The state’s equivalent of the Nevada Gaming Control Board urged a finding of suitability. Whether the circumspect Massachusetts Gaming Commission agrees hangs upon several factors. One of them is the company’s somewhat cavalier employment of ex-board members Terry Christensen while he was under indictment for felony wiretapping: “Despite his indictment, resignation from the Board and ultimate conviction, Christensen was allowed to engage, on a repeated and prolonged basis, in certain sensitive and non-public corporate matters of MGM Resorts.”

That indiscretion predated the Jim Murren presidency, as did Continue reading

Posted in Affinity Gaming, Atlantic City, Harrah's, Macau, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Ohio, Pansy Ho, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Racinos, Regulation, Technology | Comments Off on MGM: Crossing fingers and hoping; Bloodbath in Indiana

D-Day nears for Massachusetts, Maryland

Pansy Ho 28

This just in: MGM Resorts International has been tentatively approved by the investigative branch of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission, pending the satisfaction of certain matters.

That moment is drawing nigh at which point the Massachusetts Gaming Commission must rule upon the suitability of Wynn Resorts and MGM Resorts International. The magic word is “Macao,” although that likely presents a smaller hurdle for Steve Wynn. After all, none of his shareholders is Pansy Ho. MGM CEO Jim Murren must perform his best sleight of hand to convince regulators that Ms. Ho’s part ownership of MGM Grand Paradise (purchased with money given her by papa Stanley Ho) is of no moment whatsoever. Massachusetts regulators have set a high bar to casino operation in the Bay State and if MGM clears it, it may not be by much.

Other issues of the moment are that it took MGC Chairman Stephen Crosby 13 months to recuse himself from discussion of the Wynn project, despite being aware of a potential conflict of interest since last winter. Also, “the Nov. 5 ballot question specifically stated that Suffolk Downs could not pursue a lovemangambling license without the support of East Boston voters,” an obstacle Mohegan Sun and the Downs hope MGC will help them overcome … though it sounds rather a stretch. Crosby, by the way, and the commission have been the target of much vitriol and myth-information ever since Suffolk Downs ran Caesars Entertainment out of Eastie, much of it emanating from Gary Loveman himself. A mite belatedly, Crosby gets to tell the commission’s side of the story and set the record straight on some matters.. But better late than never.

Massachusetts regulators are juggling casino megaresorts and slot parlors, as deadlines loom. One of the would-be slot parlors is promising that Greenwood Racing can be getting customers into the turnstiles (and money into the state’s tax coffers) by August. The existing Raynham Park grandstand would get a Plainridge5literal facelift, slot machines and two eateries. Even a hint of thoroughbred racing was dangled, as further enticement, and not was duly taken of landslide public support (86%). The MGC also has to weigh bids by Penn National Gaming (at Plainridge Racecourse) and Cordish Cos., up in Leominster, but Raynham Park has to make an especially strong case, as its existence could mean much less tax revenue from the Mashpee Wampanoags, should the latter’s convoluted pact with the state ever bear fruit.

MGM moved a big step closer to a casino in Prince George’s County in Maryland. Two independent consultants predicted that MGM, not Greenwood, MGM MD 2not Penn, would build the better mousetrap — to the tune of $713 million-$719 million in gross gaming revenue. Penn came in a distant third in the entrail-reading exercise, projected to generate $152 million-$168 million less. By comparison, a Parx-branded casino was forecast to make $30 million-$102 million less. And these are undoubtedly optimistic estimates. Further complicating the math, each applicant is proposing to pay a different tax rate on its slots: MGM’s is the lowest (56%) but computes to the highest amount of dollars by Year Five.

Greenwood CEO Tony Ricci pitched his company’s more slots/higher taxes formula, arguing Parx would outgross MGM: $800 million. (Parx’s site choice may require new highway infrastructure, though.) Penn executives, while dissenting, managing to keep their dignity while Ricci went into a verbal meltdown, implying that the fix was in.

Miraculously, the Atlantic Club Hotel somehow has slightly more assets than liabilities. Too bad it can’t auction off its contents. Bad enough, it owes Bally Technologies and International Game Technology an aggregate $1.2 million. And then there’s eyebrow-raiser: “Also listed among unsecured creditors are numerous people pressing workers’ compensation claims of unspecified amounts against the casino.” Well, that’s about what we’d expect from Colony Capital and its shambolic mismanagement of the place, isn’t it?

Posted in Atlantic City, Colony Capital, Cordish Co., Greenwood Racing, Harrah's, Maryland, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Pansy Ho, Penn National, Regulation, Stanley Ho, Steve Wynn, Tribal | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“There’s going to be gaming someplace, and it’s going to affect your business. You might as well be part of it.” — Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority CEO Mitchell Grossinger Etess, rationalizing cannibalizing his New York State customer base to protect his base of operations in Connecticut.

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