Revel gets the memo; Sheldon Adelson knows what’s good for you

Wall Street really hates it when casinos buy business with “promotional allowances” (read: comps) but sometimes — and especially when you’re Revel Hotel-Casino — there’s no choice. In marketing policies as new as its expanded nomenclature, Revel is acknowledging its lack of a customer base and trying very hard to make amends. Under the mantra, “Gamblers Wanted,” it is pursuing bread-and-butter players with a 100% rebate policy on slot losses over $100. Only during July. And only if you have a Revel players’ club card. But you’d have to play — and lose — quite a bit on the slots to qualify, so it’s a brilliant strategy for increasing slot handle. It should also bring in a lot of casual players who, despite their best [sic] efforts will fail to qualify for the rebate. Score one for Revel.

Also, the resort is touting “the introduction of the city’s largest contiguous Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Cantor Gaming, Current, Economy, Environment, Harry Reid, International, Internet gambling, Marketing, Politics, Revel, Sheldon Adelson, Tribal | 1 Comment

New bosses at Hooters; Caesars: If it worked for Obama … ?

While nobody wants to buy or even lease the Hooters Hotel, current owners Canyon Capital Realty Advisors at least have found some new gaming expertise for the property. In this case, “new” is a relative term, as the familiar faces of Larry J. and Larry D. Woolf will be steering daily operations. The elder Woolf, who once ran MGM Grand, right across the street, says Hooters — which will soon be de-branded — has been performing better and has enough in the kitty to spend $3 million on renovations. That sounds like a patchwork solution but so is Navegante Gaming: an experienced manager of grind joints, shepherding Hooters along until maybe, someday, someone will actually want to buy the place. Given the lack of name-brand hotel affiliation for Hooters, it is a marvel that it continues to survive. It’s got tenacity, no question.

In one of the odder gaming stories of the year, Sunday’s New York Times Magazine will reveal that former Barack Obama campaign operatives — now toiling in the private sector — paid Las Vegas a visit last spring to try and sell their data-mining mastery to Caesars Entertainment. The latter “was looking for ways to induce semiregular visitors to show up more routinely at its other casinos around the country and to keep regulars from defecting to new competitors.” Guess that Total Rewards magic isn’t working as well as it once did. The visiting wonks from A.M.G. must not have gotten a Caesars sinecure because they sniff about the trip being “a small discomfort” and playing “the Devil’s advocate.” (It would never occur to me to liken Gary Loveman to Satan, no matter how badly he’s wrecked Caesars.)

One certainly hopes Caesars doesn’t Continue reading

Posted in Current, Delaware, Harrah's, Hooters, Marketing, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Politics, Racinos, Taxes, The Strip, West Virginia | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“… casino ‘taxes’ are really more accurately described as profit-sharing arrangements, making states in effect business partners in gambling operations, a recipe for crony capitalism, favoritism for politically connected businesses, and, now, to no one’s great surprise, bailout considerations … when the state is a partner, every business is too big to fail.” — Kevin Williamson, of the National Review, on Delaware Gov. Jack Markell‘s $8 million rescue plan for the state’s racinos.

Posted in Current, Delaware, Economy, Politics, Racinos, Taxes | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Galaxy fights back

What do you do if you’re Galaxy Gaming CEO Robert Saucier? A judge in California has called you “evasive and … intentionally dishonest.” (Or, in plain English, “Liar, liar, pants on fire!”) You’re under scrutiny for a laundry list of evasions, omissions and misrepresentations? This situation, 11 years in the making, could get Saucier bounced from the Golden State, although the Nevada Gaming Control Board is fairly yawning with apathy. But, ever since his troubles started making national headlines, Saucier has raised his profile, not lowered it. Late last month, he troweled on the charm for Wall Street‘s benefit. This morning, Galaxy was on the wires again, proclaiming itself, “the big winner in Casino Enterprise Management Magazine’s International Table Game Awards for 2013.” The acclaimed products were Continue reading

Posted in California, Current, Regulation, Technology, Tribal, Wall Street | Comments Off on Galaxy fights back

Quote of the Day

“It reminds me of an Applebee’s.” — remark overheard during the media rollout of Pub 1842, newest restaurant at MGM Grand, a Michael Mina “gastropub. Whoever’s in charge of the myriad TVs needs to be told that there are other summertime sports than hockey. (The raw bar was good, though.)

Posted in Current, Dining, MGM Mirage, The Strip | 3 Comments

Ohio: A disappointment, not a flop

Editor’s note: On June 20, J.P. Morgan lowered its price-per-share target for Penn National Gaming, citing “the sluggish Ohio ramp,” along with cannibalization of business in neighboring states.

On May 22, legislators in Ohio voted to limit payouts from “sweepstakes machines” in Internet cafes, thereby crimping — without outlawing — this gray-market industry. Observed Deutsche Bank‘s Carlo Santarelli at the time, “while the existence of internet cafes in Ohio was known prior to the start-up of casino gaming in Ohio many thought the impact from the cafes would be minimal. However, the slow out of the gate results, relative to the demographics in Ohio, caused many to reevaluate the impact the cafes were having on the casinos.”

In other words, it’s a governmental effort to forcibly steer customers from one segment of the industry to another, more politically palatable one. Since Gov. John Kasich (R) had already diluted the earning power of the four Buckeye State casinos approved by voters, by allowing seven racinos as well, it’s an after-the-fact form of protectionism. Given the inelastic nature of the Ohio market to date, it’s questionable whether cracking down on Internet cafes will drive massive amounts of slot play to the casinos and racinos. But, after the number of times the gaming industry has been shaken down by Kasich and his legislative cronies, it’s awfully sweet of them to try and manipulate the market back into Continue reading

Posted in Dan Gilbert, Economy, Harrah's, Internet gambling, Massachusetts, MTR Gaming, New Hampshire, Ohio, Penn National, Pennsylvania, Politics, Racinos, Regulation, Rhode Island, Tribal, Wall Street | Comments Off on Ohio: A disappointment, not a flop

Delaware casinos offered bailout; Wynn making gains in Massachusetts

State governments like casinos because they fill the capitol’s coffers with revenue. At least that’s what they’re supposed to do. But something’s gone very wrong in Delaware. Gov. Jack Markell‘s administration — having an extra $50 million on hand — is proposing to float an $8 million subsidy to the state’s three racinos, groaning under new competition in neighboring states and a 36% tax rate, two factors that are highly unlikely to change for the better.

But what Markell gives with one hand, he takes with the other. The $8 million is “temporary” relief. Lowering the tax rate is off the table. “The administration has not supported changing the tax structure permanently, but recognizes that forcing the casinos to bear additional costs will make them less competitive at a time when they need to be more competitive with casinos in surrounding states,” said Markell spokeswoman, Cathy Rossi. I’m of two minds about this. On the one hand, casinos accepting government handouts look pathetic. They are, after all, profit-making enterprises in which the odds always favor the house. However, states where government controls the amount of capacity and competition (such as Delaware) have an obligation toward the casino industry’s financial health. Markell and the Legislature should shave a few points off that tax rate or else Continue reading

Posted in Harrah's, Massachusetts, Neil Bluhm, Penn National, Politics, Steve Wynn, Taxes, Tribal | Comments Off on Delaware casinos offered bailout; Wynn making gains in Massachusetts

Vegas: Bullishness is back; Getting high at the Trop

While we’re still a few years from seeing Resorts World Las Vegas come to fruition, in the meantime, Genting Group would like to tease our interest. It’s asking Clark County for permission to build a couple of “preview centers” on the Las Vegas Strip, out in front of the remnants of Echelon. Hey, anything that stimulates foot traffic in that area is great by me. Resorts World LV’s design is sufficiently intriguing that I think we’d all like to get an advance peek at what’s going to be under that turtle shell.

Given the continued softness in the locals market, I wonder if Las Vegas Lucky Investment isn’t jumping the gun with its proposal for a Continue reading

Posted in Alex Yemenidjian, Colorado, Current, Economy, Entertainment, Fontainebleau, Genting, Harrah's, International, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Tourism | 1 Comment

Nazarian’s secret weapon?; Vegas still equals value

It’s Monday, so it must be time for another worshipful Sam Nazarian profile in the Los Angeles Times. Sure enough. If you can endure the usual LAT fawning, one will glean some useful facts and inferences — plus a reminder that incompetent Colony Capital has a $35 million stake in SLS Las Vegas‘ parent company, potentially hexing the project. There also seems to be some “price creep,” with the tab now pegged at $800 million. According to the LAT, Nazarian has $450 million in the kitty and the question is begged of how the $350 million shortfall will be bridged. (I’m still convinced that much of the project will be held in abeyance until a Phase II can be underwritten.)

If white-on-white SLS Las Vegas still looks like a long-shot proposition as a casino hotel, Nazarian is well-positioned in one Continue reading

Posted in Colony Capital, Current, Entertainment, Genting, MGM Mirage, New York, Politics, Racinos, Sam Nazarian, The Strip, Tourism | 1 Comment

Macao: Light and darkness

If you read Bloomberg News last week, Macao is tantamount to Disneyland, at least if you visit Venetian Macao, which is “home to a fake grand canal, crooning gondoliers and brands from McDonald’s to Dior.” The amenity-laden style of Sheldon Adelson is causing his mass-market business to grow exponentially faster than that of longtime rival Stanley Ho, next to whom Adelson is a plaster saint. Shopping malls just don’t figure in the business plan of Ho or whoever is pulling Sociedade de Jogos de Macao‘s strings these days.

The casino oligarch even said in 2009 (before the numbers proved him wrong) that trying to emulate the styles of Atlantic City or Las Vegas — two very different animals in and of themselves — “would not be a successful strategy.” And now he is paying the price, as Continue reading

Posted in Macau, Marketing, MGM Mirage, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Stanley Ho, Steve Wynn, The Mob, Tourism | 1 Comment

Pinnacle folds; Kansas City rebounds

Wow. I am stunned. Despite defiant proclamations that he would fight the Federal Trade Commission in court, Pinnacle Entertainment CEO Anthony Sanfilippo capitulated in swift order. This morning, J.P. Morgan reported that Pinnacle had reached an agreement in principle to sell both its own Lumiere Place and Ameristar CasinosLake Charles project. The accord is subject to various other conditions (such as the assent of the Missouri Gaming Commission) but removes a huge obstacle to the Pinnacle/Ameristar deal and improves the prospects of closing the sale by its late-summer deadline. Pinnacle describes interest in its package of properties (which includes a Four Seasons hotel) as “pretty robust” already.

It’s not clear what prompted Sanfilippo’s volte-face but I suspect there was pressure from Continue reading

Posted in Ameristar, Current, Harrah's, Isle of Capri, Louisiana, Missouri, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Regulation | 2 Comments

Tilman Fertitta, stiff; PokerStars’ desperation; Parrotheads in Shreveport;

I can visit the Fremont Street Experience anytime I want, for free. So can guests at any Downtown hotel … except the Golden Nugget. In a vile new variation on the “resort fee” phenomenon, owner Tilman Fertitta is now tacking on a bullshit, $5 tariff called a “Fremont Street Experience fee,” for which you can get … what all the rest of us get gratis. Spokeswoman Tiffany Hauck demonstrated the art of making a distinction without a difference, when she explained the move as an altruistic decision that “rather than raise hotel rates or charge high resort fees, we have chosen to keep our rates low and implement a nominal $5 fee.” Is it too soon to call for a boycott of the Nugget?

Rational Group may be almost irrationally desperate (remember, Trump Plaza is up for grabs) to get the downmarket Atlantic Club. Its payouts to the U.S. Department of Justice have now hit the $781 million mark. PokerStars Chairman Mark Scheinberg is so eager to expedite an Atlantic City deal that he’s agreed to forfeit $50 million in potentially ill-gotten gains. Scheinberg’s online casino is now arguably the scummiest license applicant in New Jersey history, but a lot of people want to see this deal done. One who doesn’t is Colony Capital CEO Tom Barrack, who recently took Rational to the cleaners (along with his investors, who have seen a $513 million investment lose $498 million of its value). Even so, Rational is going to fight it out in appeals court. However, PokerStars is obviously rolling in dough, giving one cause to wonder why it doesn’t pursue Trump Plaza instead. Money should be no object, since legitimized Internet gambling is the ultimate prize, and Rational has more than enough scratch that even Trump creditor Carl Icahn should be satisfied.

Although the Shreveport/Bossier City market needs another casino like Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Carl Icahn, Colony Capital, Current, Downtown, Indiana, Internet gambling, Louisiana, Tilman Fertitta, Tourism, Tropicana Entertainment | 2 Comments

Wynn gets serious in Massachusetts; Little racino bests Caesars

Steve Wynn is engaging a multi-pronged effort to clinch the favor of voters in Everett. Of course, if the Massachusetts Gaming Commission takes time off from generating paperwork to stop and be impressed by Wynn’s campaign, so much the better. Wynn’s Everett United lobbying arm is going door to door while Wynn Resorts rolled out a $90K model of the proposed resort, a replica so big it couldn’t be fit onto the corporate jet. (I guess Steve is going to have to get a bigger plane.) The podium level of Wynn Everett looks very much like Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, Current, Dan Gilbert, Harrah's, Massachusetts, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Racinos, Regulation, Steve Wynn, Taxes, Tribal | 1 Comment

Pinnacle: First the good news …; Cuomo strikes again

Pinnacle Entertainment has lined up $2.9 billion in financing for its takeover of Ameristar Casinos. (Wouldn’t it have been awkward if Wall Street had said, “No thanks”?) In case you’re wondering, the deal values Ameristar at 8X cash flow, a nice premium for a company that’s rooted in secondary and tertiary markets. Assets sales to placate either the Federal Trade Commission or the State of Missouri shouldn’t change that valuation, since it’s Pinnacle’s own Lumiere Place (above) and an unfinished Ameristar casino that are likeliest to go onto the auction block — with Pinnacle in a very poor bargaining position right now.

(Oddly, Forbes has chosen this nodal moment to Continue reading

Posted in Ameristar, Current, Harrah's, Louisiana, MGM Mirage, Mississippi, New York, Pinnacle Entertainment, Regulation, Taxes, Tribal, Wall Street | 1 Comment

For sale: One mall, slightly used; Sheldon’s big buyback

Buried at the bottom of a J.P. Morgan analyst rep0rt on meetings with MGM Resorts International executives was a real corker: “[W]we would not be surprised to see MGM look to monetize some of CityCenter’s asset base, for example Crystals, its retail mall,” whose net operating income is a measly $40 million. Morgan’s Joseph Greff thinks the moribund, super-high-end, l0w-traffic mall could fetch $800 million at resale and boost MGM share values. Although Greff characterized customer spending and hotel bookings along the Strip as recovering in “modest, baby-step improvements,” that’s overshadowed by a Continue reading

Posted in CityCenter, Current, Economy, Entertainment, International, Macau, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, The Strip, Tourism, Wall Street | Comments Off on For sale: One mall, slightly used; Sheldon’s big buyback

Adelson’s troubles mount; Rage at Wynncore

Las Vegas Sands has been losing one court case after another, whether in Macao or at home in Las Vegas. But the sands really hit the fan today with the revelation that Sheldon Adelson‘s company is under the scrutiny by a federal grand jury for potential money laundering. Sands imposed a prohibition on international monetary transfers earlier this year, but it was a classic case of closing the barn door long after the horse had bolted.

The federal inquiry focuses on “potentially suspicious financial transfers” by degenerate gambler Yusuf Omar Siddiqui (left, who has now added “convicted felon” to his resume) and Mexican pharmaceutical exec Zhenli Ye Gon, who’s being housed and fed at U.S. taxpayer expense while he tries to avoid going back to Mexico to face felony charges there. While these are pretty rum customers, Sands can’t exactly choose the company it keeps. But if it had reason to be suspicious about the provenance of Siddiqui’s ill-gotten gains or Gon’s money, then it’s in the soup. Heck, I’m still waiting for a convincing explanation of how Sands China could be paying 700 grand to Macanese legislator Leonel Alves and not be in contravention of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Given Sands’ history of Continue reading

Posted in Cretins, Current, International, LVCVA, Macau, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, The Strip | 1 Comment

Penn: Start making sense!; Casinos clean up in Lege

Casinos in Ohio have not been living up to revenue expectations. Given such a fallow market, what has Penn National Gaming decided to do? Break ground on two racinos, of course! One is in the Dayton area, the other — $250 million Mahoning Valley Race Course — is near Youngstown, and Penn is pushing for a third. Since they’ll only have VLTs, they won’t be fully competitive with, say, Hollywood Toledo or underachieving Hollywood Columbus. But remember that MTR Gaming has been kicking Penn’s ass in Columbus with VLT-only Scioto Downs, so these are not second-class facilities by definition. At least Rock Gaming Caesars had the perspicacity to negotiate a sweetheart provision with Ohio that enables it to move ThistleDown Racino to near Akron if it bombs in the Cleveland market.

Station Casinos may be taking a premature victory lap in the online-poker war. Caesars Entertainment has the World Series of Poker … you might have heard of it? Station has — wait for it — Continue reading

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Current, Dan Gilbert, Economy, Harrah's, Internet gambling, Macau, MGM Mirage, MTR Gaming, Neil Bluhm, Ohio, Penn National, Politics, Racinos, Sheldon Adelson, Slot routes, Stanley Ho, Station Casinos, World Series of Poker | 1 Comment

Don’t tell Sheldon!; East Coast misadventures

As EuroVegas appears on the verge of collapse, recent bulletins pile another indignity upon Sheldon Adelson. When Barcelona‘s BCN World wanted to add a casino, it reached 3/4 of the way around the globe to recruit … Melco Crown Entertainment as operator. Oh, the irony! The humiliation! The $1 billion Barcelona casino seems a bit small — 1,100 hotel rooms — to warrant so high a budget. However, it’s quite a feather in Melco Crown’s cap to obtain a European foothold while Adelson is losing traction.

Back home in Macao, Melco rival Galaxy Entertainment is waxing positive Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Harrah's, International, Internet gambling, Marketing, Massachusetts, Melco Crown Entertainment, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Politics, Sheldon Adelson, Slot routes, Taxes, Transportation, Tribal | 2 Comments

The rest of the story: Boyd, IGT & Bally

While in Vegas, Deutsche Bank’s Carlo Santarelli dropped in on Boyd Gaming and … well, the news wasn’t as good there as on the Strip. He predicts a “tempered recovery,” adding that “expectations for an inflection in the LV locals gaming recovery are premature at present.” All the important indicators — employment, construction activity, home prices — are trending in the right direction. Not so good for players is a drastic reduction in comps and promotional offers. Given all of that, is it any great surprise that locals are spending 4/5 of what they were at the height of the boom? Boyd, specifically, is looking toward $200 million in locally derived cash flow this year, compared to 2007’s $275 million. According to Santarelli, “they believe [recovery] is lurking around the corner,” as they always seem to do. Elsewhere, its Midwest casinos are stable, performance in Louisiana — where Wall Street erroneously Continue reading

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Current, IGT, Illinois, Internet gambling, Louisiana, Mississippi, Slot routes, The Strip, Tribal, Wall Street | Comments Off on The rest of the story: Boyd, IGT & Bally

Wall Street visits Vegas: Wynn, Sands & MGM

Like the pig in a ham-and-egg breakfast, Deutsche Bank is committed to Las Vegas, while many of its brethren (like the chicken) merely hold an interest. However, DB’s $4 billion grubstake fortunately does not preclude analyst Carlo Santarelli from dropping in periodically and meeting with some of the other powers on the Las Vegas Strip, as he did last week. Here are some of the observations he gleaned while in town.

Wynn Resorts: Let’s face it — this was the meeting you would most have wanted to attend. Steve Wynn‘s people told Santarelli that their Cotai Strip project  remains on schedule to open in early 2016 (a covert dig at Sheldon Adelson‘s perpetual tardiness?) and Santarelli describes the project as “meaningfully under-appreciated.” Interestingly, Wynn is the only operator in Macao not to offer rebates on losses to high rollers. Wynn Macau is adding two more VIP rooms and Santarelli implies that tables will be shifted there, away from mass-market play. (Remember, there’s a government-imposed cap on the number of table games you can have.)

Ongoing dividend issues are foreseen, music to Continue reading

Posted in Cosmopolitan, Current, Economy, Entertainment, International, Macau, Marketing, Maryland, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | Comments Off on Wall Street visits Vegas: Wynn, Sands & MGM