Happy days: Here again?; DIY Vdara Death Ray

America‘s casino officially emerged from the doldrums with the release of the American Gaming Association‘s yearly survey, showing a 5% increase in private-sector casino revenue, just $200 million shy of 2007’s record amount. Mind you, we have quite a few more casinos now than we did in ’07, so the pie much be sliced more thinly. Twenty-one were added last year alone. Newer markets, from Maine to Kansas, led the surge. No surprise, New Jersey (-8%) was the biggest loser. Delaware and Indiana, much assailed by new, nearby competition, also had rough years. Despite the increased lucre at the tables, employment was down a percentage point, while tax payments rose 8.5%. New York City, where two, VLT-only racinos raked in $1.32 billion, clearly has explosive potential. Yet, despite all of this, lotteries remain Americans’ preferred form of gambling. After all, when it’s a Powerball jackpot vs. a progressive slot, Powerball is going to win every time.

Unfazed by rejection at the ballot box, Penn National Gaming is going to try, try again for a casino in Prince George’s County, in Maryland. Although voters preferred MGM Resorts International‘s pro-casino push (as opposed to Penn’s disingenuous opposition to gambling) and Penn has pissed off much of Continue reading

Posted in Animals, Atlantic City, Cannery Casino Resorts, Current, Economy, Election, Entertainment, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Penn National, Politics, Steve Wynn, Taxes, The Strip, Tourism, Vdara Death Ray | 1 Comment

The wrath of PokerStars; Hart’s win; NV Internet poker: Too soon to tell?

That “thud” you just heard was the price of an Atlantic City casino hitting its lowest level ever. In litigation filed against Colony Capital, spurned buyer Rational Group said it was to have paid only $15 million for the Atlantic Club Hotel. Having done so many things wrong, it’s only apt that Colony CEO Tom Barrack couldn’t even get a decent exit price in Atlantic City. (This super-bargain deal makes life harder for Carl Icahn, who’s trying to extract a higher valuation for the just-sold Trump Plaza.) PokerStars got a temporary restraining order against Colony, but I don’t think there’s much danger of Colony being able to find another buyer anytime soon.

According to PokerStars, Barrack’s greed has gotten the better of him again: He’s alleged to have pocketed $11 million of the purchase price already and wants the rest as a “termination fee.” Colony is also accused of upping the sale price to $21 million and asking for 10 more days to shop the place around. If true, Barrack really took Rational Group for fools. Per ancient custom, Colony refused to comment.

If the latter has been getting by on Rational Group subsidies, it’s hard to see how Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Carl Icahn, Colony Capital, Current, Harry Reid, IGT, Internet gambling, Politics, Station Casinos, Tourism, Wall Street | 4 Comments

“Pin Up” begs to be taken down

We saw Claire Sinclair‘s new show at Stratosphere the other night … or rather, ‘saw as much as we could withstand.’ Our attention and sitzfleisch gave out around the one-hour mark, with at least another 30 minutes stretching before us. Speaking of stretch, the corps de danse looks very well-toned and amazonian but some of their routines appear under-rehearsed. Ditto the synchronization with the band of a vocalist only identified as “Anne.” The latter was mostly inaudible and when you could hear her, you Continue reading

Posted in Current, Entertainment, The Strip | Comments Off on “Pin Up” begs to be taken down

Quote of the Day

“It was mostly old guys with cigars. It was very intimidating to walk into a poker room and see a guy who’s a thousand years old, smoking 10 packs of cigarettes a day, giving you dirty looks because you’re taking the wrong card. What online poker did was let people get familiar with the game, feel a little bit of confidence and then they said, ‘I want to go to Vegas and do the real thing.’” — Dr. David G. Schwartz, director of UNLV’s Center for Gaming Research on the debut of legitimized Internet poker and its potential impact.

Posted in Current, Internet gambling | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Steve Wynn turns into Debbie Downer; Caesars’ screwy priorities

Yes, the recovery in Las Vegas could be said to be a chastened and limping one. The national press will leap at just about anything to restart the “Vegas is back” narrative. And yes, CityCenter ROI improved exponentially … to 4%. But all that being the case, nothing seen in recent numbers — like a 15% revenue increase in February — would appear to warrant the doom-and-gloom demeanor that Steve Wynn adopted in Carson City. “Right now the gaming industry has a serious health problem,” Dr. Wynn proclaimed glumly outside the operating room. Now, when Wynn makes ones of his rare visits to the state capitol, he’s usually seeking a tax break. There’s scant chance of that happening but the Wynn Resorts CEO seemed more concerned with heading off any increase in state gaming taxes. However, Wynn’s proclamation of ill health would be a more convincing piece of spin doctoring were his company not coming off a profitable 1Q13 that saw a 7% revenue increase at its Las Vegas Strip operations. If Steve keeps talking about ‘health problems,’ it won’t be long before someone points out that Continue reading

Posted in CityCenter, Current, Economy, Election, Harrah's, Horseracing, Macau, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Racinos, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, The Strip | 6 Comments

Quote of the Day

MGM [Resorts International] still has much of its business in on the Strip, unlike its major rivals Las Vegas Sands Corp. and Wynn Resorts … Those companies both reported gains for the first three months of the year because of their Macau resorts, while Caesars Entertainment, which has no presence in Macau, reported a loss.” — The Associated PressHannah Dreier, summing up a China-driven quarter which saw MGM even report on a profit from CityCenter, among other unexpected events.

Posted in CityCenter, Current, Harrah's, Macau, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Revel: Christie catches a break; Illinois remains suicidal; Online poker debuts in Nevada

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) is one lucky fellow. Bankrupt Revel threatened to become an albatross around his neck, thanks to a $261 million tax break that Christie helped push through Trenton. Last week, it turned out that Revel hadn’t drawn down so much as one penny from the Economic Development Authority, whose leader was able to testify that “no funds have been paid to Revel by the state.” Revel probably still intends to go for the gold but hasn’t filed the requisite paperwork. EDA tax abatements are not uncommon — 228, to be exact — but a state-subsidized megaflop at Revel is an issue Christie can very well live without if he intends to continue his promising political career. Even so, given the amount of taxes it will be exempted, Revel is one of the largest, plumpest infants in the EDA’s maternity ward, mostly reserved for small start-ups.

Christie could still face uncomfortable questions about why he put not just political capital but real money into a business plan as bad as Revel’s. Chief Restructuring Officer Dennis Stogsdill has been taking inventory of the mistakes and they are staggering in their naivete. They include: Continue reading

Posted in Ameristar, Atlantic City, Current, Illinois, International, Internet gambling, Missouri, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Politics, Regulation, Revel, Station Casinos, Taxes, Technology | 1 Comment

Springfield: MGM bests Penn … for now

Yes, the comedy is finished in Springfield, at least for the moment. In an episode worthy of The Simpsons and after an epic amount of foot-dragging, Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno was cajoled and ultimately browbeaten into actually taking a stand on which gambling company will get the city’s nod to build a resort downtown. And the winner isMGM Resorts International. (Not such a big surprise, considering the ritzier MGM brand, the historically sensitive design and its willingness to spend heavily.)

Faced with a Penn vs. MGM choice, Mayor Sarno dove under the table, punting  the decision to the voters this summer. The city council’s Casino Site Committee, unamused by this profile in lack of courage, told Sarno to do his job: Make the tough calls. I won’t say MGM was a foregone conclusion but the highest, most extravagant offer is always likeliest to come out ahead when casinos are up for bid, and MGM’s $850 million trumped Penn’s $807 million. (We’ll just ignore that $13.5 billion in long-term debt for the moment, ‘kay?)

West Springfieldwhich is paired with Hard Rock International — and Palmer (dickering with Mohegan Sun) are still very much Continue reading

Posted in Current, Dining, Economy, International, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Neil Bluhm, Penn National, Politics, Racinos, Regulation, Tourism, Tribal, TV, Wall Street | 1 Comment

I-cahnned! River Palms sold; PokerStars out of A.C., Langford out to lunch

Subtract one casino from the Tropicana Entertainment portfolio: The River Palms Resort & Casino, in Laughlin, just went for $7 million today. TropEnt CEO Anthony Rodio isn’t pulling out of the Colorado River market altogether. He says the company will continue to maintain its presence at the Tropicana Express (a former Ramada), which has been the priority property for some time. LVA reader queries about the future of the River Palms (left) have focused on a steady diminution of amenities. It could certainly be argued that today’s price — less than impressive — reflects long periods of neglect, dating all the way back through the Carl Icahn era to the pinch-penny regime of Columbia Sussex.

The River Palms now goes into the relatively untested hands of M1 Gaming. It’s the sort of small-scale enterprise that has flourished in the years following the Big Crash of the casino industry, scavenging up surplus properties and trying to turn them around. While M1 may be a comparative newbie, Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Carl Icahn, Colony Capital, Colorado, Columbia Sussex, Current, Economy, Internet gambling, Lake Tahoe, Laughlin, Pennsylvania, Pinnacle Entertainment, Planet Hollywood, Politics, Regulation, Reno, Station Casinos, Tropicana Entertainment | 3 Comments

Land of the Rising Hope

Every few years, brows are knitted earnestly in discussion of whether this will finally be the year in which Japan legalizes casino gambling. I’ve been hearing versions of this debate regularly since 2005, so you’ll pardon me if I suppress a yawn. Yes, billions of dollars — to say nothing of various Asian currencies — are flowing into Macao and Singapore. But this is hardly new or shocking intelligence. One’s skepticism is only fed by the hype of brokerages such as CLSA which predicts Japan could gross $10 billion/year … more than Las Vegas or Singapore … on the strength of two ‘integrated resorts.’ But wait! Wasn’t Manila supposed to be “the next Las Vegas”?

This time around, the theoretical appeal of Nipponese casinos is predicated upon a lower tax rate than China‘s 39% — and proximity to the Peking and Shanghai markets. But if even the need to raise revenue in the wake of wake of recent naturals disaster wasn’t enough to get gambling expansion through parliament, what will be different this time? Meanwhile, the three nominal front runners — Las Vegas Sands, MGM Resorts International and Wynn Resortsare all facing a tough sell in Canada, to a large extent because of how they’ve done business in China. And while Japan might have seemed like a walkover for MGM or Sands in previous years, now they have to deal with upstarts like Melco Crown Entertainment and Genting Group, as well as local favorites, such as Fuji Media and Sega Sammy Holdings. Wynn, of course, can expect a not-so-friendly welcome from former buddy and now rival Kazuo Okada, who’s got at least $1.9 billion he can put into repelling Wynn from Japanese soil.

Mind you, I do not share the kind of skepticism peddled by Continue reading

Posted in Current, Genting, International, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Melco Crown Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Steve Wynn, Taxes, The Mob, The Strip, Tourism, Wall Street | Comments Off on Land of the Rising Hope

Adelson’s accountant quits, reaction minimal

Pricewaterhouse Coopers, accountant to the stars — and Las Vegas Sands — tendered its resignation last week, news that Sands kept carefully under wraps until after the markets closed on Friday. After a brief, initial shock, Sands shares went back to trading as usual. J.P. Morgan analyst Joseph Greff explained the rupture thusly: “we think this is likely a situation where a service provider reviewed the amount of fees its client pays in relation to services rendered and decided to quit the account.” In other words, keeping Sands’ books was more trouble for PWC than it was worth. This ends a quarter-century relationship between the accounting firm and Sands CEO Sheldon Adelson. Evidently that was more than enough of Adelson for PWC’s taste, according to Wall Street Journal sources. The unpleasant surprise that Sands had committed some still-undisclosed Foreign Corrupt Practices Act boo-boos is alleged to have played a role as well. PWC, for its part, may have double-dipped by acting as a consultant in the neverending Richard Suen lawsuit while continuing to serve as Sands’ auditor.

Perhaps not coincidentally, Sands’ Hong Kong auditor also stepped down, paving the way to Continue reading

Posted in Current, Laughlin, Macau, Massachusetts, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Tribal, Wall Street | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“Slot machines and blackjack tables have no power at all. What we are not building is a box of slots. We’re building a beautiful hotel that just happens to have a gaming room in the back.”– Steve Wynn, repositioning himself as an urban hotelier in the course of unveiling a $1.2 billion, proposed casino in Everett, Mass. Wynn’s company posted a $203 million profit for the first quarter of 2013.

Posted in Architecture, Massachusetts, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | 1 Comment

Pinnacle/Ameristar: A done deal; Elaine Wynn’s domino effect

All but a very few Ameristar Casinos shareholders voted to approve the company’s takeover by Pinnacle Entertainment, in one of the fastest M&A deals in industry memory. Regulatory approvals are still pending in Nevada and other states but Ameristar always kept its nose clean and Pinnacle has generally behaved itself under previous CEO Dan Lee and successor Anthony Sanfilippo. Despite a player-sharing agreement with MGM Resorts International, Ameristar wasn’t able to draw MGM into a bidding war. Caesars Entertainment was too levered up and would have been duplicating assets (not that either consideration ever stopped CEO Gary Loveman before) and Penn National Gaming had taken itself out of the fray by going all REIT on us ahead of Pinnacle’s play for Ameristar. Pinnacle nabs a couple of lucrative assets in Missouri, two slightly less so in Indiana, a juicy one in Iowa and a loyal base of players. For Penn, meanwhile, this will be The One That Got Away. Back in St. Charles, Ameristar also received some good news …

Free Elaine! Few of us would argue with Elaine Wynn‘s prerogative to sell Continue reading

Posted in Ameristar, Dining, Entertainment, Harrah's, Indiana, Iowa, Macau, MGM Mirage, Missouri, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Regulation, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | Comments Off on Pinnacle/Ameristar: A done deal; Elaine Wynn’s domino effect

Today, it’s Boyd’s turn to shine

Even the illusion of a rising tide lifts all boats, it would appear. Yesterday’s big stock-pump by Caesars Entertainment carried Boyd Gaming up with it, as did much-better-than-expected first-quarter numbers from Boyd. Shares that closed Tuesday at $8.94 were riding as high a $11.70 today. As one Wall Street newsletter put it “What to do 23% later”? Set a higher price target, for one thing. Boyd executives have long held that the stock is undervalued, largely due to Boyd’s vulnerability in the urban and suburban Las Vegas markets, with the former showing some worrisome slippage.

As Motley Fool pointed out, Peninsula Gaming acquisitions are driving all of the 1Q13 growth. Still, J.P. Morgan analysts assigned 25% of their new, higher stock valuation to Borgata alone — and its ability to penetrate New Jersey‘s intrastate Internet-gambling market. “Organic revenue growth is negative and the company still isn’t making a significant profit. I’d sell on the bump and move on to higher quality gaming companies,” wrote Fool analyst Travis Hoium. Boyd CEO Keith Smith pounded the theme of greatly improved cash flow in the Vegas market, even if not all were Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Boulder Strip, Boyd Gaming, Current, Internet gambling, Wall Street | 3 Comments

The tale of Big and Little Caesars

If you have been waiting for the moment to sell your Caesars Entertainment stock and get out unscathed, even making a tidy profit, that moment is now. Actually, it was March 20 this year, when CZR hit an all-time high of $17.54, gently sloping off thereafter. That continued an impressive comeback for a stock that’s been of meager value until early February, when it began manifesting signs of strength. Today’s bulletin was meant to cause a tizzy on Wall Street and it certainly did.

Why the excitement today? In some sleight of hand, Caesars and its owners, Apollo Management and Texas Pacific Group, are lopping off existing assets and treating them not only as new assets but an exciting business opportunity. Yes, YOU can get in on the ground floor of Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, Florida, Harrah's, history, International, Internet gambling, Maryland, Massachusetts, Planet Hollywood, The Strip, Wall Street | 3 Comments

Quote of the Day

“Apollo’s sixth flagship fund was carrying Caesars [Entertainment] at one-fifth of its $1.34 billion investment as of Sept. 30, according to a marketing document obtained by Bloomberg News. Caesars had returned $158.8 million to the private-equity firm, the document shows.” — yup, Apollo Management and its co-founder, Leon Black, have done it yet again. Nice work, guys.

Posted in Harrah's, Wall Street | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Icahn nixes Trump deal; Steve Wynn’s fugitive friend

If Carl Icahn holds the note on your life, you are in a world of hurt, my friend. Just ask Trump Entertainment Resorts, whose $20 million sale of wretchedly performing Trump Plaza Hotel & Casino suddenly looks very shaky. What’s Uncle Carl’s reasoning? That the casino is “worth more,” although how much more is conveniently left unspecified. Lead investor Marc Lasry would have to hit the pavements again in order to find another mug to relieve him of a casino that does about $5 million in revenue a month. You might get by in rural riverboat company on performance like that … but in Atlantic City??? Seems that Icahn’s spent the last quarter trying to thwart TER from consummating its Meruelo Group deal but finally decided to negotiate via the media. That alone speaks volumes when you know how media-averse Icahn is.

Icahn’s expectations may have been unreasonably swollen by the much higher bid that PokerStars has put on the Atlantic Club. Mind you, the latter is Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Carl Icahn, Colony Capital, Current, Donald Trump, Internet gambling, Oklahoma, Politics, Regulation, Steve Wynn, Texas, Transportation | 4 Comments

What happens here …

View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

… gets shipped to California. It certainly adds an element of color to your next visit to the Plaza, adjacent to the Las Vegas bus depot.

Posted in California, Current, Downtown, Politics, Tamares Group | 1 Comment

Massachusetts loses patience … as do Archon shareholders

As the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe and Gov. Deval Patrick (D, right) continue to try and convince the federal government that their prepackaged arrangement for the Mashpee Wamps to get a casino in southeast Massachusetts isn’t usurious (17% of gross revenues to the state), Deval’s regulators have run out of patience. Yesterday, they unanimously voted to start taking bids for the region rather than let the region lay fallow, if you will. In terms of progress, the Mashpee tribe isn’t that much farther off the pace than other regions in the state. But as Massachusetts Gaming Commission Chairman Stephen Crosby pointed out, the state ought to be entertaining potential suitors from the private sector … just in case, you know. He characterized it as making the best of a bad situation. A multi-media strike by the Mashpee tribe against the MGC is likely to create needless ill-will. Tribal chairman and regulatory gadfly Cedric Cromwell nonsensically railed, “At a time when we need to create thousands of jobs in every corner of the state and put people back to work, this is a major step backward.” Nothing personal, Cedric, but how is Continue reading

Posted in Ameristar, Archon Corp., Boyd Gaming, Economy, Laughlin, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, Politics, Regulation, Taxes, The Strip, Tribal | Comments Off on Massachusetts loses patience … as do Archon shareholders

Good and bad ideas in marketing; Small is beautiful, Vegas

Break out a flagon of whatever Derek Stevens is drinking and put it on my tab, lads. To commemorate the first leg of the Triple Crown, he’s holding a May 3-4 Sigma Derby tournament. Buy-in starts at $50, so starting emptying your piggy banks for some of the best time-on-device action in Las Vegas. To the winner goes $2,500, with varying levels of consolation prize, down to $100 for the sixth through 10th-place finishers. D owner Stevens is also splitting $10K among all punters who bet on the winning horse in the Kentucky Derby. Still not good enough to draw your business? How about $6 mint juleps during the race? Stevens has proven yet again that the Joe Sixpack player in Downtown has no better friend among casino owners.

Now for something really stupid … PHL Local Gaming, a completely inexperienced, outmatched competitor for the last Philadelphia casino license pulled out its deal breaker. And it’s — a quartet of evergreens. Wow! I am so impressed. (Not.) The conifers are symbolic of a “Special Services District” that would extend from Seventh Street to I-95. PHL executives like to make the point that they were in South Philly long before bygone Veterans Stadium or either of its successors. Joe Procacci and his partners are promising a “world class” casino-hotel (2,400 slots, 105 tables, five eateries and a 250-room hotel, all for a relatively thrifty $428 million. And it can open six months ahead of anybody else, they say. (Not hard when you aim that low.)

Procacci may have been born on the intersection of Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, Boyd Gaming, Current, Derek Stevens, Detroit, Downtown, Economy, Goldman Sachs, Harry Reid, history, Horseracing, Marketing, MGM Mirage, Morgans Hotel Group, Pennsylvania, Sam Nazarian, Sports, Station Casinos, The Strip | 1 Comment