Feel better, Las Vegas

You could be Phoenix. A reader shared with me a Wall Street Journal article on the cratering hotel market down there. (No link, sorry.) Occupany hit 58% in April, far worse than anything Las Vegas has seen. (J.P. Morgan forecasts 80% Strip occupancy in July.) Also, there are concerns about the addition of 1,900 rooms to a 56,000-room market. Hell, Aria is going to add almost twice that much inventory to the Strip all by itself.

In the past five months, W Scottsdale Hotel & Residences has been put into foreclosure, InterContinental Montelucia Hotel has been sued for default, Pointe South Mountain Resort missed its mortgage payments and Wigwam Golf Resort & Spa filed for bankruptcy. In one case, the amount of money in dispute is $82 million — pocket change compared to Las Vegas, where you can rack up billions in construction debt before anyone gets worried.

Posted in Arizona, Economy, MGM Mirage, The Strip | Comments Off on Feel better, Las Vegas

Reid rewarded, Trop rescued

… Sen. Harry Reid's (D-NV) efforts on behalf of the casino industry have not gone unrewarded. If you can follow this formatting garble, you'll see that his donors include not only Tim & Tom, late of the Golden Nugget, but also several reliably Republican casino CEOs.

Even the Fertitta Brothers have chipped in, which is the least they could do after the Senate Majority Leader shepherded a provision that incentivizes companies to buy back distressed debt … which Station Casinos has in abundance. All of which means that Sharron Angle and any other GOP challenger will have to build up a war chest from other industries. The coffers of Big Gaming — with possible exception of Sheldon Adelson's kitty — are slamming shut. The industry has taken sides and put its money on Reid.

Yemenidjian is in the house. Pending the stamp of approval for the Nevada Gaming Commission, all systems are "go" for Alex Yemenidjian to take the reins of the Tropicana Las Vegas. The feeling at the Trop must be akin to that of a besieged garrison finally seeing a relief column marching its way.

The former MGM Grand boss is saying all the right things. His backer, Onex Corp., will invest $100 million (or more) in the property, which has suffered manifest neglect. Current operator Tropicana Entertainment's capex budget was fairly puny, symbolic of CEO Scott Butera's halfhearted commitment to the LV Trop.

Under Yemenidjian, the casino will be extended to encompass the ends of the two pedestrian bridges. Two new eateries and a nightclub are planned. No word yet about a new evening show (or about chasing the prostitutes, pimps and — worst of all — timeshare peddlers from the premises). But Yemenidjian has too much reputation at stake to simply continue the stagnation that has been the Trop's status quo for more years than I care to remember.

(Correction: Yemenidjian plans to lower the bridge, not raise the river. Which is to say that the pedestrian bridges will be extended to reach the casino, not the other way around.)

When Yemenidjian was (unsuccessfully) pitching an Illinois casino — also backed by Onex — his prospective management team included two Gulf Coast veterans: Joe Billhimer and Karen Sock, late of Hard Rock Biloxi and Harrah's Grand Biloxi, respectively. Both are heavy hitters and Sock, in particular, is overdue for a Vegas posting. Here's hoping Yemenidjian brings them here. Better late than never … and the Trop needs some serious brainpower.

"We really mean it this time." Another day, another "Las Vegas Sands has the capital to restart the Cotai Strip™" story. Turns out it's the same old same-old. The prospect of asset sales, if not dead, isn't looking terribly hale. After all, who wants to buy a hotel in Macao if you must forefeit the casino action? Where's the fun in that (to say nothing of the money)? 

Posted in Alex Yemenidjian, Current, Economy, Election, Harrah's, Macau, MGM Mirage, Politics, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Station Casinos, The Strip, Tropicana Entertainment, Wall Street | Comments Off on Reid rewarded, Trop rescued

Station 1, Boyd 0

In a North Las Vegas proxy war, Station Casinos handed defeat to Boyd Gaming when its preferred candidate, Councilwoman Shari Buck, trounced a colleague, to become the city's next mayor. Both Boyd and Station contributed to both candidates but slight biases were evident.

Station and partner Greenspun Corp. gave $32,600 to Buck, $28,500 to opponent William Robinson. Boyd and its NLV partner, Olympia Group, gave $37,500 to Robinson, as opposed to $25,000 for Buck.

Hence, the outcome of the election will not be good news for Boyd, especially if Station comes back to the city council, asking for a zoning variance so it can build Losee Station … right across the street from Boyd's as-yet-untitled joint venture with Olympia. Outgoing Mayor Michael Montandon had opposed expanding the number of casino enterprize zones in NLV until all the existing ones have been developed, a process that might have required waiting until Hell is dripping with icicles. With Montandon out of the picture, all bets — so to speak — are off.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Election, Gary Goett, Station Casinos | Comments Off on Station 1, Boyd 0

Pansy passes the buck

An understandably sheepish-looking J. Terrence Lanni toasts the opening of MGM Grand Macau alongside business partner Pansy Ho and, front and center, project co-financier Stanley Ho.

MGM Grand Macau co-owner Pansy Ho says it's entirely up to MGM Mirage to defend her honor before the New Jersey Casino Control Commission. The gaming company says it isn't going to take the "unsuitable" finding of the Division of Gaming Enforcement lying down, setting the stage for the most riveting regulatory confrontation since the NJCCC decked Columbia Sussex.

Meanwhile back in Macao, papa Stanley Ho says that because his company is publicly traded that means everything is ipso facto on the up-and-up. Gosh, what a relief. How could we have ever doubted the man?

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Macau, MGM Mirage, Regulation, Stanley Ho | Comments Off on Pansy passes the buck

Rumble in Macao

Although an oft-promised loosening of visa restrictions by Peking stubborny refuses to materialize, an air of cautious hopefulness has crept back into Macao now that City of Dreams has opened on schedule — and it looks dazzling. Aggressive revenue projections have literally reversed the fortunes of co-owner James Packer, whose disastrous venture into the U.S. casino industry is now seen by some as a blessing in disguise.

At $2.4 billion, City of Dreams rivals the cost of Venetian Macao and is hoped to equal or surpass the latter’s 20% return on investment. One projection has it leapfrogging Wynn Macau into third place, with 20% of the Macanese market.

It also represents a double-edged sword for Sheldon Adelson‘s mammoth casino-resort. If it draws more punters to the Cotai Strip™, good. If it dilutes Adelson’s customer base, not so good, obviously. In comments to the Wall Street Journal, Adelson seemed at pains to temper some headstrong pronouncements he’d offered to Steve Friess. As expected, an Adelson without the restraining influences of William Weidner and Brad Stone, is a pedal-to-the-metal Sheldon, saying Las Vegas Sands should have gone faster, faster, faster with its Cotai Strip™ projects, not slower. (The mind reels.)

I just came back from Macau and we have five or six different options that we can pursue, each one of which would solve our liquidity problems,” the Venetian’s doge proclaimed … which doesn’t sound a lot different from what he’s been saying for months. That is, until he contradicted himself by buying up a truckload of LVS stock — something he wouldn’t have done were a major deal in the offing.

Adelson predicts all his suspended Macao projects will be back in gear by year’s end. He’s on the curve in one respect, suggesting that his aborted St. Regis condo-hotel on the Strip could be revived by Sands’ acting as lender to prospective unit buyers. Palms Place just started doing that very thing.

Sheldon’s Commissariat for Optimism never closes, so one tends to grow skeptical of each new variant of “Victory is mine!” Anyway, Adelson was just off the plane from China, so perhaps jet-lag accounts for this reality-challenged assertion: “Our numbers have been going up and the [Macau peninsula] have been going down.”

‘Fraid not. Scarcely had that Adelsonian utterance made print than Lusa reported May’s revenue numbers. If April had seen Wynn Macau falling back toward the pack, with 13% of market share, it returned with a vengeance in May. Steve Wynn‘s 18% market share — with far less capacity than Adelson — put him only three points behind LV Sands and came at the latter’s expense. Stanley Ho still leads everybody with 30% — as much as Galaxy Entertainment, Melco Crown Entertainment and MGM Grand Macau combined.

A few days earlier came news that visitation from Mainland China to Macao had been -43% in April … hardly propitious conditions for flooring the Cotai Strip™ gas pedal. Ditto a 10% drop in May gambling revenues. Until that much-mooted visa liberalization actually happens, going apeshit with casino-hotel construction makes no sense whatsoever.

Nor did Adelson do his public image any favors with a gratuitous slam against jilted sidekick Weidner. (The latter, given the opportunity to respond, took the high road.) This ‘hit ’em when they’re down’ move will accrue exactly zero sympathy for Adelson — and it might have some nasty repercussions should it hamper Weidner’s attempts to find another job. Then again, he’s as rich as Croesus, so he can probably spend the next few decades on the golf course, should he so desire.

There’s been no additional movement on the rumored Genting Berhad offer for MGM Grand Macau. However, even in a $13.8 billion/year casino market, the numbers don’t look great for MGM. After it splits its 8% market share with partner Pansy Ho, it would have $55 million from which to pay an onerous tax bill, plus operating expenses. (The ROI must be dismal.)

Borgata, in Atlantic City, does $55 million a month — in a bad month — and MGM basically cashes a check from Boyd Gaming. So if MGM elects to stay in Macao and vacate Atlantic City, it won’t be because the Chinese enclave is contributing more to the bottom line. Who ever thought MGM Grand Macau would function as a glorified “loss leader”?

Back home, MGM is going downmarket at The Mirage. And they didn’t even have to sell the place to Penn National in order to get there.

Strangely enough … Penn’s recent expression of interest in both Planet Hollywood and Station Casinos passed with scarcely a murmur of comment locally. You’d think that a well-capitalized company like Penn’s hanging of a target on Robert Earl‘s or Frank Fertitta III‘s back would make headlines — or maybe Vegas journos have tired of Penn’s endless feints and tuned the company out. Well, almost all of them, anyway.

Planet Hollywood, at least, is acting far more aggressively than one would expect from a property that is contemplating a sale. So perhaps Earl is more pursued than pursuer. However, his conversion of Desert(ed) Passage into Miracle Mile appears to have run out of steam — or money — at the halfway point. Try as he might, Earl is never going to completely de-Aladdin-ize that place. A magic lantern and three wishes would come in real handy down there.

Also flying under the radar was former Planet Ho boss Michael Mecca‘s enlistment with Galaxy. Mecca jumped — or, more likely, was pushed — from the Planet right when the Omar Siddiqui scandal was at its height. Informed speculation had it that Mecca was thisclose to being tapped to head up James Packer’s projected North American gambling empire. Crown Ltd. CEO Rowen Craigie was noncomittal, though, and Crown’s big Cannery Casino Resorts acquisition fell through soon thereafter, leaving Mecca hanging.

Success being the best revenge, Mecca not only landed a prestigious new gig — it’s with one of Packer’s direct rivals in Macao. Mecca shoots, he scores!

Which brings us full circle to Macao. That worked out tidily, didn’t it?

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Cannery Casino Resorts, Cosmopolitan, Current, Economy, Genting, George Maloof, James Packer, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Melco Crown Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Planet Hollywood, Sheldon Adelson, Stanley Ho, Station Casinos, Steve Wynn, Taxes, The Strip | Comments Off on Rumble in Macao

Margaritaville wastes away

In an utterly (not) shocking development, the interminably protracted sale of Trump Marina has given up the ghost. This deal was on life support for months, so today’s bulletin merely ratifies the inevitable. The would-be reinvention of the Marina as “Margaritaville” has exhausted its last shaker of salt.

While it goes against the grain to give Donald Trump the benefit of the doubt, buyer Richard Fields‘ accusation of “fraudulent activity” sounds like a big stretch. The supposedly heinous deed was Trump Entertainment Resorts‘ movement of players from the Marina to Trump Taj Mahal and Trump Plaza.

Big whoop. Not only was this the obvious explanation for Trump Marina’s plunge to the bottom of the Atlantic City food chain, it’s what casino companies do. You don’t sell a casino and leave your hard-earned customer base in place for the next guy’s benefit. (Readers with long memories will recall that a deal by Park Place Entertainment to sell the Las Vegas Hilton to Silverton owner Ed Roski fell apart over the exact same issue.)

Had Trump CEO Mark Juliano not moved prime players to his two remaining properties, he’d have been derelict in his duty to the shareholders. Unfortunately, now he may have to build that customer base back up. I don’t envy him the task.

It also strikes an odd note that Fields’ lawyer accuses Trump of fraud and then Fields’ spokesman has the brass to say Coastal Marina still might deign to buy the Marina — at an additional discount. Juliano had already knocked 15% off the sticker price. Perhaps Fields is feeling emboldened by Carl Icahn‘s impending $200 million acquisition of the Tropicana Atlantic City and is attempting brinksmanship. Fields is making some big noises about shopping around Atlantic City for a different casino, describing the town as “the perfect market for a Margaritaville project.”

Good luck with that, unless he’s willing to settle for one of Colony C(r)apital‘s two near-death properties. Harrah’s Entertainment is carrying at least one casino too many on the Boardwalk but there’s no way in hell that CEO Gary Loveman parts with Bally’s or the Showboat for a measly $270 million or so. Harrah’s current reporting method really muddies the waters but the cash-flow numbers still imply an asking price well in excess of what Fields can afford.

Raymond Kot, 1952-2009

The accused killer of Trump Taj shift manager Raymond Kot is one messed-up motherfucker, and that’s as gently as I can describe Mark Magee, who appears to have stalked and killed Kot in very cold blood indeed. Taj game-protection veteran Dr. David G. Schwartz offers some expert-witness testimony, if you will. Kot’s only crime was to achieve the American Dream … until his assassin decreed otherwise.

Posted in Atlantic City, Carl Icahn, Colony Capital, Current, Donald Trump, Economy, Harrah's, Silverton, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on Margaritaville wastes away

Planet Ho Towers peep show

As for Nov. 1, PH Towers — the Westgate condo component of Planet Hollywood — will be open for business. Time constraints preclude creating an entire photo gallery, so I’ll just direct you here. (Be warned that there’s some damned annoying “house” music that you’ll probably want to mute.)

If the photos are a reliable guide, some of the units look a mite cramped. Then again, when you’re paying for a lot of high-end fixtures and furnishings, it feels like a waste of money not to be spending as much time in your room as possible. We’ve come a long way from the days when then-Imperial Palace owner Ralph Engelstad forbade bathtubs in his hotel rooms for fear guests would spend more time soaking than getting soaked.

Hunter S. Thompson: The Game. Human imagination doth run riot in a new parlor game. Your grandmother’s Parchesi set never looked like this. I’m not sure why you’d buy this $3,500 placebo in lieu of taking a Vegas vacation with the same dinero but give the creators high scores for creativity.

Sweat, the final frontier: Embattled Neonopolis supremo Rohit Joshi may have principle on his side but when your adversary is perspiration, principle has to take a back seat. In hindsight, it’s a good thing the reopening of Star Trek: The Experience got pushed back a year. Who wants to look at Trek artifacts in a Borg-like steambath?

Posted in Downtown, Entertainment, Planet Hollywood, The Strip | Comments Off on Planet Ho Towers peep show

Report from the Strat

A reader asked (possibly in jest) how the Hard Rock Hotel was vis-a-vis the Stratosphere. While I don't have the basis for an A:A comparison, I can comfortably say that if you can afford the Hard Rock, it's no contest. Under new owner Goldman Sachs, the Strat appears to have — if you'll pardon the expression — passed its peak and begun a slow descent into seediness.

The slot mix is very "blah" and decidedly third-tier, with lots of generic machines and ones you've probably never heard of before. And while the HRH's casino floor is designed so that it contains and heightens the energy, it's the opposite case at the Strat. The latter is an anachronism: a post-Mirage casino designed with a pre-Mirage "capture" mentality.* It's absurdly strung out, as though intentionally diffusing and minimizing the energy of the play that's taking place. The amount of action looked pretty respectable for a Monday night but was muted by the immensity and sparseness of the space itself.

It's like MGM Grand without any of the upside. If you're heading to the showroom be sure and pack water and provisions (or hire a rickshaw) because you're in for a long hike. While Goldman Sachs may have been cutting back on staff, the timeshare barkers — a holdover from the Carl Icahn era — continue to accost customers at will. By what twisted logic do casino executives convince themselves that allowing their patrons to be hassled in this fashion is actually good for business?

* — for this we have Lyle Berman and Bob Stupak to thank, but they've long since left the building.

Posted in Architecture, Carl Icahn, Goldman Sachs, MGM Mirage, Morgans Hotel Group, Steve Wynn, The Strip | Comments Off on Report from the Strat

Quote of the Day

“The surroundings and clientele here are just too rough. (Ironic, but true: The first two letters on the Western marquee are burned out, so it simply reads, ‘STERN.’ It’s an apt description.” — description of an aborted fact-finding mission to the Western Hotel, from the latest issue of Las Vegas Advisor. So much for those reports of an improved, more respectable Western.

Posted in Downtown, Tamares Group | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

By request …

A reader from the heartland of this great country wanted to know whether LVA HQ provided a good vantage point for a United Way car wash at The Rio last Friday. Since I have but an obstructed view of The Rio, the answer is “no,” I’m afraid, although perhaps Anthony Curtis could see it from his southeast-looking office.

Also, I had business at Scoot City (of which more later), so I wasn’t around for the festivities. However, since Harrah’s Entertainment sent over some snaps, I’ll let you evaluate the event for yourself:

If the United Way raised $1,700-plus at $5 per car wash that means that …

… these seasonally attired young ladies — drawn from the terpsichorean talents of Sapphire — washed a minimum of 340 cars. With results like those, you can’t fault the marketing angle.

Harrah’s giveth and Harrah’s taketh away, especially if you happen to be an 83-year-old porter at Showboat Atlantic City. The 21-year Showboat veteran got eight weeks’ pay and no benefits. Way to reward employee loyalty, Harrah’s! Murray Freedman, God bless him, is fighting back. That’s not how you treat a guy who says he offered to take a pay cut but instead was shown the door, and not nicely.

Here’s hoping the court system shows him more compassion than did his former employer. The casino industry would survive quite nicely without Gary Loveman but of Murray Freedmans there can never be enough. Customer service is the industry’s bedrock and Freedman’s work ethic is an example to us all.

Posted in Atlantic City, Charity, Harrah's, Labor, The Strip | Comments Off on By request …

Super-screwed at Santana

Morgans' gradual obliteration of the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino continues apace, in this February photo. Actually, this was one of the few flattering angles to be found.

Ever since Morgans Hotel Group plunged into the Las Vegas market, first with Echelon and then the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, it's been in over its head. Latest case in point: trying to run an ostensibly major concert venue like it's the Suncoast showroom.

Based on what we encountered during Saturday night's attempt to see Supernatural Santana, if you're planning to catch a show at The Joint (sorry, "The Rogue Joint"), better get there super-early and pack a picnic lunch, too. At 15 minutes to curtain time, lines both for ticket purchase and for "Will Call" stretched waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay back into the new convention area. An understaffed box office of (by our count) two ticket sellers was clearly inadequate to cope with the turnout. Knowing defeat when we saw it, we took our business over to The Palms.

Is anybody else fed up with Morgans' make-it-up-as-you-go-along style? Or what about its conversion of the once-elegant HRH into a scrum of buildings that strongly resembles an office park with some light-industrial facilities out front on Paradise? No? Just me? OK.

Speaking of The Palms, the place was crawling with customers, as always — including a septet of German lager louts (but that's another story). So who does Station Casinos CEO Frank Fertitta III think he's kidding when he writes off the value of Station's minority stake in George Maloof's place?

Maloof takes offense at this diss of his property and rightly so. Fertitta grossly overvalued Station when he took it private and now looks like he's "stashing" some of that excess valuation via this Palms writedown. As feats of ledger-demain go, this one wouldn't even make it as an afternoon magic act at the Greek Isles.

Posted in Architecture, Entertainment, George Maloof, Morgans Hotel Group, Station Casinos | Comments Off on Super-screwed at Santana

Macao: Genting in, MGM out?

I’ve speculated elsewhere — I believe it was on the TwoWayHardThree forum — that Genting Bhd might be a logical, even inevitable successor, should MGM Mirage bail out of Macao. Seems that while I was laid up, news surfaced that Genting insiders are selling shares and rolling up a $425 million nest egg. They’ve also snapped up $100 million in secured MGM Mirage notes.

MGM Grand Macao co-owner Pansy Ho‘s dad, Stanley Ho, has played footsie with Genting in the past — something the Singaporean government frowned upon fiercely. Hence the delicate footwork that key Genting players will have to execute if they’re to convince Singapore (where Genting is building a multi-billion-dollar resort) that there’s more than an arm’s length between any potential dealings with the Ho family and Genting’s investments on Sentosa Island.

That’ll be a difficult minuet to dance but for what’s been called “the golden ticket” — entry to Macao — Malaysian investors would surely find it worth twirling an ankle or two. Unless Boyd Gaming has waived its right of first refusal on Borgata, this sudden accumulation of Malaysian cash can have one purpose only.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, International, Macau, MGM Mirage, Singapore, Stanley Ho | Comments Off on Macao: Genting in, MGM out?

Station: Unleash the hounds!

So Station Casinos is kicking the tires of dog-racing tracks in Massachusetts (as is Boyd Gaming)? Greyhound races will soon — but not soon enough — be illegal in Massachusetts, although the Bay State Lege just gave them a two-year reprieve. So it's a life-or-death priority for those tracks that lawmakers baptize some racinos in Massachusetts, stat.

Boyd, at least, has access to the requisite financing. But what's Station doing poking around the Eastern Seaboard? There are two ways of looking at it. One: How can Station justify spending money in Massachusetts when it can't afford to make its existing creditors whole? Or: Station's Vegas-centric business model has contributed to the deep hole in which the company finds itself and any geographic diversification is welcome.

That's not to imply that one perspective cancels out the other, especially when Station needs every revenue stream it can tap …

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Economy, Massachusetts, Station Casinos | Comments Off on Station: Unleash the hounds!

Pansy Ho: time for Plan C

In my usual cart-first, horse-later fashion, I elicited a legal opinion regarding the scenario I postulated the other night: MGM Mirage spinning off either its Atlantic City holdings or MGM Grand Macau into a quasi-autonomous entity, much as Sheldon Adelson proposes to do with his Macao properties.

Well, unless Pansy Ho can sit down with the New Jersey Casino Control Commission and charm them into turning a blind eye to the penumbra of unsavoriness that surrounds her father, Stanley Ho, MGM is up against a wall. It could put MGM Grand Macau into a limited partnership in which it would have equity but no power.

Did MGM spend so much time and money getting into Macao just so it could be a passive investor? Probably not. So either MGM has to scrape together the cash to buy out the Ho family or Pansy and her sister can exercise their right of first refusal on the property.

Likewise, Boyd Gaming holds the prerogative of acquiring MGM's Borgata share, but of all the possible scenarios on deck, that appears the most unlikely. Here's why:

Borgata represents no ongoing cost to MGM. It can sit back and collect 50% of the profits in perpetuity, while Boyd does the heavy lifting. In Macao, not only does MGM have to run the place, it's in a market with narrower profit margins, thanks to a confiscatory tax rate and the commissions charged by junket operators — to say nothing of the draconian meddling of the Chinese government. And if it's relying solely on mass-market play, it's not enough to get MGM out of single-digit market share.

MGM took too long and spent too much getting into Macao to be happy with being stuck in sixth place among operators. If it's going to have to amputate a limb, losing Macao may be the less painful cut.

It could also be the more lucrative one because, even in a down market, Macao has two very price-boosting qualities: a finite number of casino concessions and a comparable limitation on casino-zoned land. Neither freeze is likely to thaw anytime soon.

Macao is still a seller's market. But if Boyd were to decline its option on MGM's half of Borgata, other suitors are going to be very hard to find. Nobody wants in on Revel or Bader Field and the Tropicana is essentially being given away. The accomplished Ms. Ho could still pull MGM's chestnuts out of the fire but if she can't, her family could wind up with 2.5 of the six casino concessions in Macao.*

* — slightly more, actually, as James Packer's stake in Melco Crown Entertainment is exceeded by that of Lawrence Ho.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Carl Icahn, James Packer, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Melco Crown Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Stanley Ho, Taxes | Comments Off on Pansy Ho: time for Plan C

Under Attack II

Aside from being the title of ABBA's final single (and lamest music video), it's also the status of our Web site. Which means precious little blogorrhea, I fear. In the interim, experience an absolutely mind-boggling interview with Harrah's Entertainment CEO Gary Loveman, then take a sanity break with this:

Since the music video (one of the few not directed by Lasse Hallstrom) is such a non-event, I opted instead for ABBA's last-ever appearance in Germany, an emotional occasion where the audience swarmed the stage during the final credit roll.

Posted in ABBA, Entertainment, Harrah's, Technology | Comments Off on Under Attack II

Slots A Fun defeats Donald Trump

I'm not sure if you can see the "unique page views" counter on this blog or not but, as of Friday afternoon, people prefer to read about Slots A Fun than about the bizarre reasoning patterns of one Donald J. Trump, 208 to 148. If that were an election, Trump would be losing by a double-digit margin. It's Slots A Fun in a landslide!

It's worse still if you're CityCenter's Aria and Vdara hotels because you're getting crushed — crushed! — by the Cabana Suites at the El Cortez. By an over two-to-one margin (1,537 vs. 755) people would rather look at hotel-room photos of "the El."

It gets better. In his Los Angeles Times blog, Richard Abowitz pronounces the Cabana Suites, "the nicest rooms in downtown Vegas, even nicer than the ones I've seen at the Golden Nugget … a new alternative that allows you to see the the dirty urban origins of Vegas without having to take a cut in the contemporary Vegas luxury experience."

Somebody better hide that copy from tempestuous Nugget owner Tilman Fertitta. He's not going to "friend" Abowitz after he reads it.

Posted in Donald Trump, Downtown, The Strip, Tilman Fertitta | Comments Off on Slots A Fun defeats Donald Trump

Oscar Goodman, Voice of Reason

Even as MGM Mirage CEO Jim Murren and Treasure Island owner Phil Ruffin are preparing to stomp out any incipient recovery in Las Vegas by jacking up room rates, words of restraint are coming from the unlikeliest of sources: Mayor Oscar Goodman. Quoth Hizzoner: "There are a lot of people [here] now; I understand they may not be spending as much as they have in the past."

(And if Ruffin really doesn't want $50/night customers, as he's said, I can inform him that Harrah's Las Vegas would be very happy to take them off his hands this very evening. As for Columbia Sussex's Westin Casuarina, those guys are living in a f***ing dream world, demanding $109 for a room on a night when I can get one at Caesars Palace for but a dollar more. Hmmmm … Westin Casuarina, Caesars Palace … Casuarina, Caesars … such a tough choice.)

Goodman was counseling moderation in the context of praising what he called "very conservative" projections by the Las Vegas Convention & Visitors Authority. The recent double-whammy of low occupancies and ADRs obviously sucks, but if occupancy truly is beginning to ramp back up, there'd be no better way to nip that in the bud than by repricing as though a full-blown recovery were underway.

As for the LVCVA, it sure didn't waste any time ditching the "bargain destination" message in favor of the same old "Party like it's 2006" crap. Do you get the feeling that selling a message of affordability really chaps the LVCVA's ass? (That band of brothers and sisters from Cranfils Gap, Tex., seems to have done a quick disappearing act. Anybody seen them lately?)

The indiscreet charm of the douchebagerie appears more to the LVCVA's liking. According the authority's guru-on-retainer, Billy Vassiliadias, customers seek "some comfort that this is the Vegas they've always known and loved." You mean that high-end-centric, $500-for-a-bottle-of-Absolut-and-some-cranberry-juice Vegas? Yeah, that's the ticket.

Goodman gets it. Too bad Vassiliadias apparently doesn't.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Economy, Harrah's, LVCVA, Marketing, MGM Mirage, Phil Ruffin, The Strip | Comments Off on Oscar Goodman, Voice of Reason

Quote of the Day

A certain casino.

"The old timers will remember the time, and not that long ago, when casinos just looked at your action and rewarded you accordingly. They figured everyone wins at least part of the time, and they knew that if they cultivated the customer and encouraged him to continue to play, they would usually still make money on him in the long term. Bean counters are big on looking at the short term!" — Jean "Queen of Comps" Scott on certain casinos that are sweating slot-club points and bounce back something fierce.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Economy, Morgans Hotel Group, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

"Fixations"

No, Guy Laliberté is not prancing around our offices in cap and bells, reducing staffers to helpless laughter with declarations of, "Criss Angel is not a magician … he is an artist!"

Instead, cyber-gremblins have rendered our Web operations FUBAR — as you have undoubtedly discovered already. This necessitates a temporary suspension of S&G operations. Among the items trapped momentarily in Limbo is an explanation of why it looks more and more like MGM Mirage will have to evacuate Macao … plus early dispatches from the front lines of The Lion King.

However … a few S&G tweaks have been performed, including a direct link to the article that inspired "Inside the Mind of Trump." It's a wild ride inside the Trumpian psyche.

I'll catch you on the flip.

Posted in Cirque du Soleil, Donald Trump, Entertainment, Macau, MGM Mirage, Technology | Comments Off on "Fixations"

Surrender in Atlantic City?

Yesterday, I mis-reported New Jersey state Sen. James Whelan's proposal for downsizing the state's regulatory apparatus. He didn't call for elimination of the New Jersey Casino Control Commission in favor of the Division of Gaming Enforcement, merely an unspecified removal of what he perceives as a redundancy.

(Such are the perils of working from memory. Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.)

Today's paper has a longer clarification of Whelan's position. He'd like to see a DGE/NJCCC merger, although Gov. Jon Corzine sounds strongly resistant to that and other aspects of Whelan's plan. And, after hearing for years that one of Atlantic City's problems is that it has too few hotel rooms to be destination resort, it's quite a turnaround to hear Whelan advocate a 200-room minimum (like Nevada's), a 150% 60% reduction from the current mandate.

What's certain to paint a target on Whelan's back is his endorsement of aggressive employment of eminent domain to clear out distressed properties and encourage development. That's a real sore point in Atlantic City, where Donald Trump once tried to use eminent domain to push an elderly woman out of her home. (He lost.) Also, imagine how confrontational matters might have become if Pinnacle Entertainment had eminent domain in its holster when it was trying to expand its 'sphere of influence' around the old Sands site and was trying to berate the local real estate market into acquiesence.

But … we're talking about a casino market where emergency measures are required. Would the city be using eminent domain to obtain property and then offer it around? Or would the city be taking sides, using eminent domain to pressure Citizen X on behalf of Casino Z? As craptastic an idea as eminent domain is, generally speaking, it's a good thing Whelan's put it into play, because this looks like a debate that has to be conducted as Atlantic City decides what its future is going to resemble.

However, Penn National Gaming COO Timothy Wilmott is welcome to put a sock in it, at least as regards his own aggressive eminent-domain advocacy. Penn has basically given Atlantic City the finger, bypassing several opportunities to get into the market, so who cares what its braintrust thinks? I dare them to operate there. I double dare them!

Aw hell, I dare them to do anything besides sit on their $1.5 billion hoard of gold and bemoan the fact that they can't obtain Tiffany properties at Walmart prices. Wilmott probably didn't mean to come off sounding like, "Kick some old folks and small businesses out and maybe we'll build something," but Penn needs to clearly state its intentions in re Atlantic City and stop playing subtextual footsie. Otherwise, any further discussion is meaningless.

But the Missing the Boat Award goes to Casino Reinvestment Development Authority boss Thomas D. Carver. OK, he's probably right when he says, "I don’t think we’re going to see $2.5 billion casinos anymore." The market's not going to support and, at those prices, you're not building for the ROI but the bragging rights.

But then we get: "We may see $400 million facilities."

No, no, no, no, no! Four hundred million smackeroos is roughly half — I repeat, half — the budget for a Pennsylvania slot parlor. It's a locals-casino budget … and not a top-of-the-line locals place, either. Maybe some of those creaky old monoliths along the Boardwalk need to go away but replacing them with a bunch of Aliante Stations is likely to hasten Atlantic City's decline.

What do the city's three top performers — Borgata, Harrah's Marina and Trump Taj Mahal — have in common? Significant capital reinvestment, that's what. The numbers do not lie: Customers are not flocking to the places that are run on the cheap. If Carver's line of thinking gains currency, Atlantic City can forget about competing with Pennsylvania and just run up the white flag. What he advocates is tantamount to unilateral disarmament.

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