One city, two Plazas

 

It's game, set and match to El-Ad Properties, after a Clark County jury ashcanned the remnants of Tamares Group's attempt to block El-Ad from building an oversized version of the New York Plaza on the Strip. (Parts of Tamares' case, including a claim for punitive damages, got tossed early on.)

UNLV's David G. Schwartz is too modest to say so, but it sounds like his show-and-tell presentation on the varying identities of the downtown Plaza, aka Union Plaza, was what closed the case for El-Ad. As for Tamares, in pursuing this litigation it's probably lavished more upon lawyers, motions, exhibits, etc., than it's spent on any of its downtown casinos in four wasted years of ownership. And Tamares' claim that it was going to spend $100 million on the former Union Plaza until those Tamares spoilsports came along has the fragrant aroma of bull manure.

Tamares' attorney tried to wring a few jurors' hearts by channeling the feelings of the downtown Plaza, keening that, "I can't be known as the old Plaza, I can't be the cheap Plaza, I can't be the bad Plaza."

Guess what? You already are.

Posted in Downtown, The Strip | Comments Off on One city, two Plazas

A.C. casino workers dissed (again)

Representative democracy seems to be too radical a concept for the New Jersey state senate's Wagering, Tourism & Historic Preservation Committe to enwrap within its parochial minds. It's sent back for redrafting a bill that would allow Atlantic City casino employees to hold elective office there, too. Dangerous, revolutionary stuff, that.

Most reasonable people know a conflict of interest when they see one, but Sen. Richard Codey (D-Essex) wants it codified in the statute. GOP Sen. Joseph Pennacchio, of Passaic, went one further, huffing and puffing that allowing casino workers to represent themselves "potentially could be putting the wolf in the chicken coop, where right now the wolf is on the outside."

Geez, if you work in an Atlantic City casino, moving to a leper colony would be a step up, at least when attitudes like Pennacchio's hold sway. Besides, taxation without representation is so 1775, senators.

The Wall Street bailout in 10 words or less: And the winner is … President George W. Bush with, "If money isn't loosened up, this sucker could go down." It won't pass for Nobel Prize-winning economic analysis, but it possesses the virtues of being memorable and succinct.

1999 Mets revisited. A reader points out, "You know, those Mets were not too overachieving.  Their Pythagorean W-L was only 2 games worse than their actual W-L. It's the 2000 Mets that were seriously overachieving. By comparison, the 1999 Braves were 5 games over their Pythagorean. The winner on overachieving, however, are this year's Angels … 12 games over!"

Math was, by far, my worst subject, so I'll take your word for it. But — did you have to remind me of the 2000 World Series, which the Mets lost when creepy manager Bobby Valentine hung pitcher Al Leiter out to dry in the final game? (Never mind a possibly steroid-maddened Roger Clemens trying to harpoon Mike Piazza with a broken bat.) I've never teared up at the end of a sporting event … except that once.

Posted in Atlantic City, Baseball, Politics, Wall Street | Comments Off on A.C. casino workers dissed (again)

Happy anniversary, you're fired

That was essentially the message conveyed to several dozen workers at MGM Grand Detroit as the hotel-casino passed its first anniversary. Such cutbacks are usually routine in the industry and this one affected but a fraction of a percentage of the casino’s workforce. But it’s a heckuva way to say, “Happy anniversary!”

It’s also an indicator of how much our economy has soured that MGM Grand Detroit is having to curb staffing even though it’s by far the dominant player in the Motown market. Still, its workforce reduction is microscopic compared to the cuts coming up at Harrah’s Entertainment (whistleblower Fred Frazzetta, who knows a thing or two that Harrah’s management wishes he didn’t, says 20% of Harrah’s Vegas-based workforce will be decimated). Then there’s Mill Casino, in Oregon, which opened a new hotel tower in the teeth of a recession. The result? A 7% workforce diminution, the first in the casino’s 13-year history. Small wonder that Atlantic City is preparing to backpedal on its Oct. 15 smoking ban.

Wall Street has been no help. Liz Benston explains why several gaming companies’ market-cap value is a fraction of that of their asset base. The casino industry’s debt loads and ambitious construction plans are giving investors jitters, Benston reports. Ironically, the same Wall Street that has loudly pined for a never-ending stream of megaresort openings would now be happier if those same companies were doing nothing. Worse still, the gaming group is one of the few sectors that can be shorted with impunity. So if gaming stocks continue to plummet, it’s partly because it’s in some investors’ interest that they do so.

Boyd’s Michigan nemesis, Four Winds Casino is profiled by the Columbus Dispatch. It’s a close-up view of the tribal casino that’s taken a whopping big bite out of revenues from Boyd Gaming‘s Indiana riverboat, Blue Chip, basically by pre-empting the latter’s Michigan-customer base.

Second wind in Maine. While developer Gary Goett‘s Olympia Gaming may have found the Las Vegas and Kansas markets too rich for its blood, at least for now, Maine is a whole ‘nother story. Since Olympia threw in its lot with a pro-casino initiative, momentum has shifted in the project’s favor.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Detroit, Gary Goett, Harrah's, MGM Mirage, Tribal, Wall Street | Comments Off on Happy anniversary, you're fired

Monday morning levity

"TRUST IN THE LORD." At first I thought it was someone writing in, trying to save my soul. But, no, it's the headline of yet another e-mail scam,* in the vein of the (in)famous "Nigeria Letter." I just get a chuckle out of somebody running a con having the brass to begin their snake-oil pitch with the word "TRUST."

* — the link leads to an abridged version of the letter. The one sent to HP has an additional four paragraphs, including much taking of God's name in vain.

Angels 5, Bosox 4. In 12 innings. It's getting so I can't bear to watch. (And who thought that hitless wonder Erick Aybar would provide the clutch RBI?) Like the emotionally grueling '99 NLCS between some plucky, overachieving Mets and the then-ubiquitous Braves, I keep hoping the Angels will climb out of the hole they've dug themselves, but every pitch is agony, especially when there's no room for error.

Actually, that's not true: The Halos have muffed so many plays and swung at so many pitches off the plate, it really is a miracle that they're still in it. A good thing I have two bottles of Mylanta in the fridge.

Posted in Baseball, Current | Comments Off on Monday morning levity

Tamares mines comedic gold

Nothing says "quality" quite like a Tamares joint.

As the trial dubbed "Plaza Versus Plaza" winds down, Tamares Group — owners of the downtown Plaza — came up with a good one. The Lichtenstein-based company would have jurors believe "that it delayed renovations of the … Plaza because it was paralyzed by the prospect of a hotel by the same name on the Strip."

Haha! Hahahahahahaha! That's rich. Who writes their material? Tamares has had four years to do something with the Plaza and its other downtown holdings and hasn't done anything … unless you count closing a couple of low-rent motels, selling the Gold Spike and yanking some of the gambling options out of places like the Vegas Club.

Tamares hasn't renovated the Plaza because Tamares is too darn cheap to do so and has no apparent downtown strategy beyond continual drift. If anything, Elad Properties' "Plaza" project momentarily lit a fire under Tamares — at least to the extent of spurring the company to hold a development workshop several weeks after Elad's plan became known.

Back in '04, somebody must have sold them on the idea that an assemblage of disconnected, Jackie Gaughan-held parcels would be a great real estate play. Instead, Tamares found itself holding a bunch of old casinos, running successive management teams in and out. It looks like they're stuck downtown and we're stuck with them.

Same condos, new name. The project that was previously reported on here as "Allure II" may actually turn out to be "Q," Steve Friess reports. Or it could turn into nothing at all, as Vegas condo projects are wont to do.

Posted in Downtown, Tamares Group, The Strip | 1 Comment

Macao: Not so fast?

Here’s a how-de-do, to paraphrase Gilbert & Sullivan. The head of the Travel Industry Council of Macau appears to confirm a report that many Chinese citizens will now be restricted to visiting the former Portugese colony on a quarterly basis. But … Blogmacau got in touch with the authorized agency that handles visiting permits to Macao, Guangdong Post. The latter told Blogmacau that no such instructions had been received. This may explain why the selloff of MGM Mirage, Las Vegas Sands and Wynn Resorts stock has slowed today.

Meanwhile, visitation to Macao during the Golden Week holiday is up 9% this year. Oh, and the city has a housing-bubble crisis of its very own. It’s becoming more and more like Vegas every day.

Cherokee back on the block. The magic date for submitting new bids on the Cherokee County, Kan. casino concession (whew!) is Jan. 21, 2009. That means you’ve got 90 days, folks, to get your $225 million casino proposal (plus a modest $25 million application fee) in order.

The price of entry may come down a bit — like 80% — if Phil Ruffin can convince the Kansas Lege to reduced the mandated level of investment to $50 million. If so, he plans to pitch a racino for a defunct dog track near Frontenac, Kan. Does this mean gambling in Kansas is already going to the dogs? <rimshot> I’ll be here all weekend, folks.

P.S. Ruffin is swimming in $1.2 billion, after he took Elad Properties to the cleaners on that New Frontier sale. He might not be the best person to carry the message that casino development in southeastern Kansas is currently unaffordable.

That’ll teach ’em! Cripple Creek, Colo.’s Midnight Rose Hotel & Casino was found to have violated Colorado’s smoking ban by allowing players to smoke them if they’ve got them. The penalty was a whopping $100. Plus court costs. (The maximum penalty is $200.) Ouch! The Midnight Rose must be just reeling in pain. Let that be a lesson to all you scofflaws out there.

Dr. Hammergren’s House of Horrors. Even in a city that is currently home to the likes of Michael Jackson and Siegfried & Roy, there is no more colorful character like Dr. Lonnie Hammergren, brain surgeon and former lieutenant governor. If he didn’t exist, a novelist would have to invent him. If you’re not familiar with this only-in-Vegas phenomenon, here’s a quick video primer, although nothing compares to the in-person experience and words will never provide an adequate description.

Posted in Colorado, Kansas, Macau, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | Comments Off on Macao: Not so fast?

Still more Trop follies

Just when I was ready to get behind Tropicana Entertainment CEO Scott Butera's quest to reclaim the company's eponymous Atlantic City casino, he goes off his meds, so to speak. He blustered that "Our creditors, our employees and our neighbors in Atlantic City cannot afford to have this marquee Atlantic City property purchased at a severely depressed price."

I'm sure the creditors are hopping mad about the sale price but I sorely doubt that the employees are losing any sleep over it. Most are probably happy to have the continuing uncertainty about the Trop's future heading toward a resolution. As for the "significant investments" that Butera is saying he'll make, that's bold talk from a company that's in Chapter 11 and doesn't have any high-yield properties. Or, to quote one of my Mom's favorite queries, "Using what for money?"

It's unclear upon what Butera's stated valuation of $950 million for the Trop is based. Unless perhaps he's going by the high-end bid made by a shadowy group of New York investors. That offer was a non-starter, predicated as it was on the buyers being approved sight unseen. Butera can say $700 million (of which only $450 million is in cash) is not "acceptable" until he's blue in the face, but that doesn't make the Trop inherently worth more. The market will tell him what it's worth and right now the market isn't feeling any too generous.

In Butera's defense, if Trump Marina — with a hotel-room base 29% of the Trop's, a third of the convention space, 53% the number of slot machines and 44% the number of table games — went for $316 million, one can see where Butera's $950 million figure might have justification. But the Marina sold before the credit market cratered. Which means that re-selling the Trop at some more seller-friendly juncture means an interregnum of indeterminate length.

Besides, as the Las Vegas Sun's Jeff Simpson pointed out during yesterday's "Vegas Gang" taping, no matter how much Butera tries to talk around it, TropEnt is still a wholly owned subsidiary of Columbia Sussex, a company whose name is mud in Atlantic City. New Jersey regulators aren't going to sign off on any deal that might allow William J. Yung III to sneak back into the Trop through a side door, metaphorically speaking.

Taking a chill pill. With the imposition of Atlantic City's smoking ban less than two weeks away, Mayor Scott Evans is amenable to a delay. Matters wouldn't have reached this juncture had the city council not felt goaded into levying a total ban by the casinos' snail-like compliance with the previous 75% cutback on smoking areas.

However, there's nothing like a recession to refocus one's priorities. Council members face an unenviable choice on this one, caught as they'll be between het-up constituents who have breathed as much secondhand smoke as they care to and the prospect of further casino-revenue declines — and higher unemployment.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Regulation, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on Still more Trop follies

Harrah's wants your two cents

Not as in your opinion, this time, but just to book a room. That’s right, guys, Harrah’s Las Vegas is offering two-cent Tuesdays. The catch is you have to stay in the Strip casino that most closely resembles an urban penetentiary. But at these prices, why let some beastly architecture stand in your way?

One reader takes a less heady view of it, though, opining that “the credit market patient has gone critical.” No question, the timing of the casino industry’s romance with private equity buyouts was impeccable — if you mean “impeccably bad,” that is.

Thank god it’s Friday, because that means tonight is the two-hour premiere of Sanctuary. This series was originally created for the Internet and, when I saw the pilot ‘webisode,’ a year ago, I couldn’t fathom why the SciFi Channel wasn’t picking this up (instead of renewing moribund Stargate Atlantis). Yes, it stars Amanda Tapping. Why do you ask?

1 Picture = 1,000 Words. Your caption here.

Posted in Architecture, Harrah's, Sheldon Adelson, The Strip, TV | Comments Off on Harrah's wants your two cents

Macao: Not so fast?

Here’s a how-de-do, to paraphrase Gilbert & Sullivan. The head of the Travel Industry Council of Macau appears to confirm a report that many Chinese citizens will now be restricted to visiting the former Portugese colony on a quarterly basis. But … Blogmacau got in touch with the authorized agency that handles visiting permits to Macao, Guangdong Post. The latter told Blogmacau that no such instructions had been received. This may explain why the selloff of MGM Mirage, Las Vegas Sands and Wynn Resorts stock has slowed today.

Meanwhile, visitation to Macao during the Golden Week holiday is up 9% this year. Oh, and the city has a housing-bubble crisis of its very own. It’s becoming more and more like Vegas every day.

Cherokee back on the block. The magic date for submitting new bids on the Cherokee County, Kan. casino concession (whew!) is Jan. 21, 2009. That means you’ve got 90 days, folks, to get your $225 million casino proposal (plus a modest $25 million application fee) in order.

The price of entry may come down a bit — like 80% — if Phil Ruffin can convince the Kansas Lege to reduced the mandated level of investment to $50 million. If so, he plans to pitch a racino for a defunct dog track near Frontenac, Kan. Does this mean gambling in Kansas is already going to the dogs? <rimshot> I’ll be here all weekend, folks.

P.S. Ruffin is swimming in $1.2 billion, after he took Elad Properties to the cleaners on that New Frontier sale. He might not be the best person to carry the message that casino development in southeastern Kansas is currently unaffordable.

That’ll teach ’em! Cripple Creek, Colo.’s Midnight Rose Hotel & Casino was found to have violated Colorado’s smoking ban by allowing players to smoke them if they’ve got them. The penalty was a whopping $100. Plus court costs. (The maximum penalty is $200.) Ouch! The Midnight Rose must be just reeling in pain. Let that be a lesson to all you scofflaws out there.

Dr. Hammergren’s House of Horrors. Even in a city that is currently home to the likes of Michael Jackson and Siegfried & Roy, there is no more colorful character like Dr. Lonnie Hammergren, brain surgeon and former lieutenant governor. If he didn’t exist, a novelist would have to invent him. If you’re not familiar with this only-in-Vegas phenomenon, here’s a quick video primer, although nothing compares to the in-person experience and words will never provide an adequate description.

Posted in Colorado, Kansas, Macau, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | Comments Off on Macao: Not so fast?

And this is *bad* news?

Greyhound Racing Facing Extinction in Mass.” — headline in The Ledger (Lakeland, Fla.) over a story chronicling the decline of dog tracks. Says one opponent, “Our economy should not be built on cruelty to dogs.”

Posted in Animals | Comments Off on And this is *bad* news?

Steamed at Suncoast

Every so often, both Jean Scott and I yield the floor to casino customers who have a beef with The Man. One such gentleman approached me today and, with his permission, I am reprinting his letter, which he has also shared with Jean and with the Las Vegas Review-Journal's Heidi Rinella. I've made a couple of discreet elisions and bold-facings but otherwise you are reading the letter as I received it.

"I had a major incident concerning a comp/coupon I received in the mail early in September that I feel I need to relate. This incident made me 98-degrees angry. Please read the following as I attempt to explain …

"Early in September, I received a coupon from Suncoast for a $50 credit for dinner at the newly-opened Salvatore's Restaurant in the Suncoast Casino. I decided to go over there tonight to redeem this coupon, have a nice dinner and gamble for a few hours afterwards. When I approached the maitre d', I asked for a table for one (I am single) and informed them I had an offer I received in the mail. After about a 10-minute wait, I was ushered to a booth located in the back corner of the room, a location I really did not mind. I was brought a menu and wine list and a glass of water. The restaurant was not crowded … However, I was refused service: I waited a good 25-minutes before I walked out without having anyone approach my table to take my order. As a matter of fact, no one approached my table. No waiter/waitress. No busboy. No bread sticks. No acknowledgement. I was left there and forgotten.

"I then went over to the Club Coast booth across the casino floor and asked to speak to a manager. I was given a Supervisor after I was told the manager was off-duty. Not a problem. The Supervisor offered to make a call to the restaurant owner and I was told to wait a few minutes while a representative from the restaurant would come over to offer an explanation/apology.

"Finally, after several long minutes, the Assistant Slot Shift Manager came over to apologize. The restauarnt [sic] personnel didn't even care enough to come over to discuss this matter. The Slot Shift Manager … was gracious and apologetic, and offred [sic] to comp me and a friend a meal on a subsequent visit. I told him — and on this I will stand on — that I would never step foot in Salvatore's again, and I will not come back to gamble at any Coast Casino as long as that restaurant remains in the confines of Suncoast. I then proceeded to go to Red Rock Casino, where I had a quick meal and gambled a few hours.

"I cannot believe how I was treated at Salvatore's. If they didn't want to serve me, they should not have shown me a table. And, they should not have been part of this comp! I am not only angry, but offended, and consider this offer a cheesy way of getting me into the casino.

"They have lost a valuable customer."

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Dining | Comments Off on Steamed at Suncoast

Lipstick on a pig

That’s how Atlantic City Tropicana conservator Justice Gary Stein is trying to pass off a deal that continues to make a loud “Oink!” He’s trying to spin the media that his $700 million agreement with Cordish Co. is really an $800 million purchase once you factor in a promised $100 million worth of renovations. (Does he have that in writing, mayhap?)

Having made his bed with Cordish, Stein finds himself having to lie in it. What looks like $700 million on the surface turns out to be $450 million in cash and $250 million in securities. And when people hear the term “securities” right now, they feel anything but secure. The alternative was an all-cash, $575 million offer — this for a casino that was drawing bids in the $850 million-$950 million range a scant five months ago. Stein — does it bear repeating? — shredded those offers even as the market started to soften and now finds himself a seller in a buyer’s market.

Right now my sympathies are with Tropicana Entertainment CEO Scott Butera, who has to maximize the value of the Trop in order to satisfy a host of creditors. Instead, he’s seen Stein fritter that value away. And remember, since Columbia Sussex CEO William J. Yung III weaseled out of paying the fines imposed on him by the State of New Jersey by instructing in lordly fashion that they simply be deducted from the eventual sale price, that means Butera is looking at an increasingly meagre payday. His repeated cries of “fire sale” are sounding less and less like a catchy exaggeration and more like the ugly truth.

If Stein can’t get a good price on the Trop, it’s time for the New Jersey Casino Control Commission — which appointed this Barney Fife to run the sale — to seriously consider putting the property into Butera’s hands and seeing if he can make a go of it. ColSux apparently couldn’t have cared less if it drove the Trop’s revenues straight into the ground (which it did), but with debtors’ knives at his ribs, Butera has a considerably sharper incentive to make the Trop competitive again.

Hell may freeze over before Station Casinos puts the first shovel in the ground on its Inspirada project. Considering how saturated the locals-casino market in Las Vegas is, Station would be crazy to proceed at this time. But that’s not stopping the company from trying to annex a 22% increase in the size of the project’s footprint.

Never let it be said of Station that it was content to take an inch when there was a mile to be had. And, should the economy continue to go south or were Station to strangle on its LBO-related debt, the more real estate it has to flip, the better its chances of survival.

Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Regulation, Station Casinos, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on Lipstick on a pig

Case Bets: PR, Trump

Press releases are always manna on a slow news day but sometimes you get one (OK, many) that make you want to pull your hair. For instance, I received such a specimen late yesterday from an agency that shall remain nameless — last name rhymes with “Coke” — breathlessly informing me of a new restaurant at Luxor. There was all the usual, meaningless verbiage: “fun, high-energy vibe,” “rock-n-roll flair,” etc.

The kicker was the announcement that aforesaid restaurant would be “Exploding at Luxor in mid-September.” And when did I get this super-urgent blast? That’s right, September 29, the next-to-last day of the month; this Tail End Charlie goes right back there with the time that Tilman Fertitta didn’t announce the grand opening of his Golden Nugget steakhouse until two weeks after the event. (P.S., The food was greasy, Tilman.)

As for all that “high-energy,” “rock-n-roll” mierda, if I’m going to this place (called T&T), my intention is to enjoy my dinner at a pace and in an ambience that don’t give me indigestion, not to shake my booty ’til I puke. If want to rock out, I’ll go home and put on my ABBA at Wembley Arena DVD (if the climactic rendition of “Hole in Your Sole” doesn’t get you moving, check your pulse). And when I want to eat … I probably still won’t go to T&T after this lame-ass promo.

One more thing: The press release also mentions that the Titanic exhibit, still anchored at the Tropicana, will be making port at Luxor “in 2009.” Which could mean 14 weeks or 14 months. (Translation: Luxor has no idea.) But at least we know we shouldn’t expect its trans-boulevard voyage to happen anytime soon.

Pleasant surprise. I was able to tag along for a tasting menu at DJT, in Trump International, which is subdued and even posher than it looks on the Web site (the restaurant, that is). At the moment, it’s also the best-kept secret in Las Vegas, judging from the handful of diners on a Friday night. The recently repriced menu is quite affordable, depending on how closely you watch your budget: You could also find yourself dropping $75/person here without even trying.

The hotel lobby, too, is quite restrained by Vegas standards, although the superabundance of gold leaf, gold glass and onxy would scream “TRRRUUUUUUUUUUMMPPP!!!!!” even were his name not already writ large on the building. The main problem it faces boils down to three words: location, location, location. Unless your prime directive is to log considerable quality time at Fashion Show Mall (Trump’s porte cochere is directly opposite Nordstrom’s), you’re a bit of a hike from anything else. And, if and when Elad Properties gets started on redeveloping the vacant land where the New Frontier once stood, you’ll be on the backside of a construction site, too.

One doesn’t normally equate the words “Trump” and “bargain play” but the hotel’s saving grace may be its room rates. Our top-notch research team vetted a series of October-December dates and found Trump to be consistently competitive with — and sometimes cheaper than — Paris-Las Vegas. It’s also less expensive, whether by $40 or $170, than Wynn Las Vegas. Then again, my hunch is that customers would probably pay the extra $40 for the cachet of staying at a Steve Wynn property and right on the Strip — not to mention being at the front door of Fashion Show Mall rather than the back one.

Posted in Architecture, Dining, Donald Trump, Downtown, Harrah's, Steve Wynn, The Strip, Tilman Fertitta, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on Case Bets: PR, Trump

The view from your window

That’s the name of a popular feature on the blog of Andrew Sullivan, who posts photos that readers send him from around the world. Well, if you happen to be my boss, Anthony Curtis, the view from your office window will be this:

 … at least in 2010, when Wyndham Hotels & Resorts opens the first tower of its Desert Blue timeshare complex. Look on the bright side, boss. Maybe the value of Huntington Press HQ will rise by virtue of sheer proximity. As for the look of the building, it doesn’t say “residential” to me — more like a corporate center or part of a downtown university campus.

Posted in Architecture | Comments Off on The view from your window

Pinnacle: "We're the boss here!"

“Pinnacle tells store owner to lower his price” reads the headline in the Press of Atlantic City, and it’s no exaggeration. Although the owner of the Atlantic City News Agency (a bookstore) has dropped the asking price for his property by 29%, that’s just not good enough for Pinnacle Entertainment, which balks at paying more than $2.3 million. The store’s owner wants $3.9 million.

“I think we have to be more realistic on price. They have a written offer. That’s the way it is,” huffed Pinnacle’s viceroy for Atlantic City, Kim Townsend. Yup, Massa Pinnacle’s giving the orders here and those pesky locals better fall in line, pronto. Although Pinnacle CEO Dan Lee has slammed the News Agency as “tawdry” because it sells adult magazines, the real tawdriness is Pinnacle’s attempt to dictate market values and its picking a fight over $1.6 million in the larger context of a project on which it will spend at least $1.5 billion.

Pinnacle execs would undoubtedly reply that they’re simply being fiscally responsible, and I’m sympathetic to that. But projects like Pinnacle’s Atlantic City megaresort tend to be advanced with the argument that they will improve property values. Well, property values have improved — and Pinnacle should have expected this scenario when it pushed past the boundaries of the old Sands site.

Strong language: Never have I seen a journalist who regularly covers the casino industry unload on it in the terms employed by Jeff Haney in a recent excoriation of a Boyd Gaming parlay-card promotion. While the latter’s “best parlay cards on the planet” verbiage is obvious hyperbole, Haney ran the numbers and found Boyd’s cards not even to be remotely the best in downtown Vegas. Haney called the claim “a blatant lie that goes beyond the usual bluster and hype and reflects poorly on legal gambling in Nevada” and “an out-and-out falsehood.”

He said it was even worse than the “sleazy and demeaning to customers and visitors” promos that audaciously touted 6-5 blackjack as a “whopping” advantage. (To the casino, maybe. To the player … not so much. You should hear the suppressed anger in former dealer Dennis Conrad‘s voice when 6-5 blackjack is the topic.)

Haney also opened a can of verbal whup-ass on “the bizarro realm of corporate doublespeak, where gambling is ‘gaming,’ the Super Bowl is the ‘professional football championship contest,’ and rank suckers (such as those who think Boyd has the best parlay cards) are ‘valued guests.‘”

His thesis boils down to a central paragraph that reads as follows: “Touting parlay cards as the best on the planet while offering average or below-average odds serves to lower the discourse on the business of state-regulated legal gambling toward the level of a big con.”

Players have few advocates more outspoken than Jeff Haney. Bettors are fortunate to have such one-man truth squads on their side.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Downtown, Pinnacle Entertainment, Sports | Comments Off on Pinnacle: "We're the boss here!"

$150 million

That’s at least how much money was left on the table by Tropicana Atlantic City‘s state-appointed conservator, Justice Gary Stein, when he chucked out all the first-round bids last spring. One of the lower known offers at that time was Colony Capital‘s $850 million — far more than the $700 million for which Stein has had to settle.

(It does, however, hit the benchmark set by UNLV’s David G. Schwartz, who gets the Nostradamus Award for correctly predicting the eventual sale price.)

Never fear, said Stein when giving the thumbs-down to Colony and other bidders, there’s a billion dollars to be had out there. Not only did Stein have visions of sugarplums and inflated Trop valuations dancing in his head, he’d also been exchanging some ex parte pillow talk with companies who led him to believe there were big bucks to be reaped by the state, if only he’d reopen the bidding.

If there was any doubt remaining that Stein was a damn fool — and that the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, which appointed him, was following him through the looking glass — it has now been erased. Stein had the opportunity to strike while the Trop iron was hot. Instead, he dithered and dithered, then dithered some more. All the while, Atlantic City casino revenues continued to trend downward, as did the Trop’s market value.

Stein’s eventual pick, Cordish Co., was one of the spurned first-round candidates and it’s unclear how Cordish’s initial offer compares to the new one. Even so, Cordish was the logical choice, especially with Trop-savvy executive (and former regulator) Dennis Gomes on board. In essence, Stein has spent a great deal of extra time and money to arrive at a result that could and should have been achieved months ago. If he’s keeping the previous bids secret (and Cordish could still be outbid at bankruptcy court), it keeps some of the egg off his face.

Stein’s salient accomplishment has been to fling the door wide open for Tropicana Entertainment CEO Scott Butera to try and throw a body block on the deal. He’s right to call Stein’s timing “odd,” seeing as how the judge had three more weeks to wait for a better offer to materialize. He’s dragged what was supposed to be an expeditious resale process out for nine months. What’s three more weeks?

What’s also odd, though, is that Butera hasn’t submitted a petition for the reconveyance of the A.C. Trop that he says he wants. He’d better get on the stick, and faces a few obstacles. As he’s pretty much acknowledged, Butera has to convince the NJCCC that TropEnt is now a William J. Yung III-free zone. Also, if the state were to reconey the Trop to Butera, it would have to forego the revenue that might be realized from the Cordish sale. There may not be much appetite for that.

Cordish, for its part, is talking about putting another $100 million-$200 million into the Trop. Butera’s TropEnt is mortgaged to the topmost hair of its head and would be hard-pressed to match Cordish’s proposed capital improvements.

Stein might have avoided this if he’d sold the Trop with dispatch at a time when TropEnt parent Columbia Sussex was in disarray. By taking the tortoise-powered course he did, Stein gave Butera time to reorganize and counterattack. If the NJCCC goes through a year of shopping around the Trop only to have a court hand it over to Butera, this time the fault will be entirely the commission’s own.

What a complete frigging botch.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on $150 million

Station gets it; In defense of Boyd

Kudos to Station Casinos for agreeing to give its employees first dibs on apartments to be built near Fiesta Henderson. This is a story that fell through the cracks recently but deserves to be highlighted. The land was originally set aside for expansion of Fiesta H., but the locals-casino market is pretty saturated at present. (And, one suspects, Station could probably use the capital that can be realized by selling the land to developer Trammell Crow.)

Affordable housing, on the other, has been in short supply in the Vegas area. This is probably a crackpot suggestion, but I've often wondered if Harrah's Entertainment was ill-advised to start shuttering and razing the myriad apartment complexes it bought up behind its Barbary Coast/Flamingo/Imperial Palace/Harrah's Las Vegas agglomeration.

Construction workers have been an underserved market for housing (many were hanging their helmets at the Klondike before it closed). Even if only Harrah's Caesars Palace expansion is still in train — and that's a big "only" — the company might have been able to turn a dime or two off of all those newly acquired domiciles, as well as giving its workforce a place to live that's within a stone's throw of the Strip.

Like I said, probably cockamamie, but it's been rattling around in my brain for so long that I thought I'd fling it out there for the heck of it.

Another good Station idea is to 'double up' on its concert bookings once Aliante Station's Access Showroom opens its doors. At least some acts will be shared between Aliante and either Green Valley Ranch or Boulder Station (whose Railhead is currently suffering the indignity of being pressed into service as a temporary buffet; it's not one of the comfier dining experiences in town).

As Mike Weatherford notes, with gas prices being what they are, it's an iffy proposition whether Station patrons will drive 25 miles or so to see a concert; Station's solution effectively halves the problem. It also means that, as it seems to be my karma that Station books jazz-piano stylist Keiko Matsui for dates when I'm either out of town or sick, my odds of actually catching her in performance have slightly improved.

Boyd Gaming's Morgans deal defended. A reader writes, "I can't blame Boyd for wanting so badly to open the whole [Echelon] at once.  All they have to do is look down the street at the Palazzo chaos to see what a disaster it can be to open in stages or half-assed (and remember that the Venetian had the same problem)

"Venetian has obviously overcome it but who knows how much of Palazzo's current problems have some basis in the fact that when the hotel opened the sign wasn't even built and there was still a huge construction project in front. I think the only thing that a resort can get away with opening in stages these days would be the hotel itself — nobody cares if half the rooms are yet to be built … when the resort is otherwise functioning at 100%.
 
"Steve Wynn didn't open his doors until everything was in place, and look at the attention and publicity he got for it. Palazzo was exactly the opposite."

Those are all excellent points and well worth considering. Boyd's prostration before fickle Morgans Hotel Group is still embarrassing, though.

Posted in Boulder Strip, Boyd Gaming, Harrah's, Morgans Hotel Group, Sheldon Adelson, Station Casinos, Steve Wynn, The Strip | Comments Off on Station gets it; In defense of Boyd

Landry's vote set; IGT blues

Nov. 3 is the appointed day for Landry’s shareholders to vote on CEO Tilman Fertitta‘s $21/share buyout offer. The stock’s had a wild ride lately, hitting bottom at $12.42, following a precipitate dive during what might be called Hurricane Ike weekend. No fool he, Fertitta took advantage of depressed prices to scarf up an additional 400,000 shares. The performance of Landry’s huge restaurant portfolio hasn’t been stellar of late, but the two Golden Nugget casinos are keeping revenues aloft, providing 43% of the company’s total intake.

Although daily newspapers rarely have the luxury of indulging in analysis, the Las Vegas Review-Journal has been dipping a few toes in the analytical waters of late. Noting the Ike Effect on Landry’s restaurants, the R-J finds Fertitta between a rock and a hard place: If operated revenes fall below certain benchmarks, Fertitta’s financing is imperiled. But if the deal doesn’t go through, a re-restructuring of debt is nigh and Landry’s probably couldn’t meet a margin call. Fertita’s own equity contribution to the buyout consists of $90 million in cash and $97 million worth of shares.

A similar story chronicles some of the business challenges that are bedeviling International Game Technology. It doesn’t get into why IGT is losing market share to Bally Technologies (which just dodged a bullet from the SEC) and WMS Industries, but it suggests that Wall Street impatience is part of the problem.

IGT is trying to pivot and position itself at the leading edge of server-based slots, something that’s not going to yield any short-term results. Depending on where the impending cuts of 500-1,000 IGT jobs fall, it would be unfortunate if their effect was to impair the company’s ability to innovate, simply to placate stock analysts.

Posted in Downtown, IGT, Tilman Fertitta, Wall Street | Comments Off on Landry's vote set; IGT blues

Boyd & Morgans: co-dependency and abuse

Where is your pride, Boyd Gaming? After being kicked in the teeth by Morgans Hotel Group last summer (when Morgans leaked the news of Echelon's suspension before Boyd's planned announcement), the casino company is crawling back for more.

Today's announcement by Morgans extends the life of a deal that was set to expire on Rosh Hashanah (Sept. 30), but at terms that represent a total capitulation by Boyd. In addition to receiving an extra 15 months to finance its two-hotel commitment to Echelon, Morgans: A) gets its $30 million deposit back, stat; B) is released from $41 million worth of funding obligations toward Echelon; C) obtains complete control of how the Delano and Mondrian brands are used in connection with Echelon, and D) is not required to guarantee its construction loan.

That's one sweet deal — for Morgans. Boyd gets bupkes. Clearly, it was negotiating from a position of extreme weakness. Is it so hard up to find a hotelier as a joint-venture partner that Boyd must assent to such a lopsided deal? In spite of having taken a 9-12 month pause for reflection on Echelon, Boyd has obviously not backed off from its Ahab-like determination to build the whole thing in one great gulp.

Meanwhile, the other JV partner, General Growth Properties, continues to melt down. It'll be interesting to see whether Boyd continues to pursue that dysfunctional relationship also. If Boyd felt — as it said — that it could open Echelon in stages, then there's no reason it can't build the metaresort in the same way, mothballing the mall/boutique hotel aspects of Echelon until more reliable partners can be found. It's difficult to read the present course of action as anything other than sheer obstinacy … with perhaps a large portion of masochism mixed into it.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Morgans Hotel Group, The Strip | Comments Off on Boyd & Morgans: co-dependency and abuse

Mohegan Sun in Kansas: D'oh!

A reader in Oklahoma City points out an obvious reason — one which I somehow managed to completely overlook — why the Kansas Lottery‘s casino-selection panel didn’t go with Mohegan Sun, which I foolishly thought to be a prohibitive favorite. To wit: Most casinos in the central U.S. are tribally owned, so why use the auspices of the state to establish yet another one? The 2007-08 edition of Casino City’s Pocket Gaming Directory lists five tribal casinos in Kansas and, hindsight being 20/20, it now seems obvious that there was no enthusiasm for adding a sixth, at least when your projected revenue is the lowest of any of the proposals on the table. (Mohegan Sun is the only Kansas applicant to have received no votes for its proposal.)

In a rare visit to Planet Earth, the Las Vegas Review-Journal‘s editorial page weighs in on smoking bans in Atlantic City and Illinois, and their deleterious effects on revenue. Judging from the well-researched nature of the piece and its novel (for R-J editorials) employment of actual facts, it must have been written by somebody conversant with the issue, like Howard Stutz.

… at least until the final five paragraphs, where it devolves into stale invective, and even rails against Nevadans’ decision to ban smoking in restaurants and supermarkets. (The effrontery of those voters!) The salient fact that Atlantic City banned casino smoking because the city’s gambling halls did almost nothing to comply with a smoking restriction — basically daring the city to take action — is also conveniently omitted. It’s as though the first 14 paragraphs were written by an adult, whereupon the pen was commandeered by a tantrum-prone infant.

Update: The owners of the El Cortez have declined to comment on the allegations made to S&G by minority owner Lonny Zarowitz. A query to the Nevada Gaming Control Board remains unanswered at this time.

Posted in Downtown, Kansas, Regulation, Tribal | Comments Off on Mohegan Sun in Kansas: D'oh!