"Risky" Harrah's; Yanks Heart Seminoles

Reuters reported this week that the debt carried by Harrah's Entertainment “may weaken from already distressed level as heavy capital spending and interest payments absorb cash flows at a time when the casino operator is also facing declining gambling revenues.” We've already seen one set of quarterly income wiped out — and then some — by costly interest payments and early retirement of debt.
One analyst decribes Harrah's leverage as “pushed … to the limit” with little prospect for improvement. Guess that puts paid to a Galaxy Entertainment acquisition. Not to mention that physical expansion is going to require even further indebtedness.

Meanwhile, Wall Street speculates that Harrah's may elect to retire some bonds not with cash payments … but with even more debt. The cost of insuring said debt is steep, reflective of the fact that “people are pricing in a lot of risk there,” according to analyst Christopher Snow of CreditSights. And while analysts like Snow wait to see which way the current downturn in gambling shakes out, they're also fretting over how new infusions of rooms into the Vegas market are going to eat into Harrah's pricing power.

Oh, and a slew of notes come due in 2010, when Snow predicts the company will hit “a pretty high wall of maturities starting in 2010 and going through to 2011 and afterward.”

Harrah's won't fail, predicts a third analyst, “but this is a tough one.” CEO Gary Loveman's multi-million-dollar early opt-out clause may be looking very attractive right now. The Harrah's car isn't going over the cliff by any means, but the upside of the Apollo Management/TPG Capital deal still appears chimerical.

The New York Yankees are hanging in there like the tough old birds they are. And if you can bear to watch Melky Cabrera's graceless outfield play (a far remove from the gliding elegance of Bernie Williams in years past), then you'll be looking forward to pulling up a table at either NYY Steak or a Hard Rock Restaurant in the House That Ruth Didn't Build, when it opens next year. This joint venture between the Pinstripes and Florida's Seminole Tribe is another tribute to the economic muscle that was nurtured by tribal gaming but is now being flexed in myriad other business arenas.

Still, while it's all well and good for the Seminoles to be tapping into the megamillions of the Bronx Bummers, I hope that — closer to home — they're showing some love to the Tampa Bay (Devil) Rays, 2008's Cinderella team. If no else is up for a Rays/Angels ALCS, you can at least count me in.

Posted in Baseball, Harrah's, Tribal, Wall Street | Comments Off on "Risky" Harrah's; Yanks Heart Seminoles

Turnaround for Lady Luck?

A reliable source sees some light at the end of the Lady Luck tunnel: “CIM took ownership of the timeshare property last Oct. as LL Timeshare. Just this month they’re doing the individual deed assignments.”

Don’t get your hopes up for a big makeover of the Gold Spike, downtown’s skankiest casino. However, some modest improvements are being requested, including improved fire sprinklers and “upgrading the restaurant,” which would barely qualify as a lunch counter.

Gloom over Macao: Coverage of the Macao market has been initiated by Majestic Research and it’s less than thrilled with what it found, including a April-May flattening of the mass-market sector. Also, the physical amount of play at Venetian Macao “is still below its share during its first few months of operation last year.” (Guess the novelty factor has worn off.)

Game occupancy — the number of positions in play — is described as well below average … 25% below average. Again, this may reflect the plopping of a casino behemoth onto the market, as opposed to rolling out its gargantuan new amounts of casino capacity in stages (and by that I don’t mean a “soft opening”; Las Vegas Sands has had enough of those). “There continues to be very little play at The Venetian’s high end mass market tables,” the report concludes.

PBL Melco‘s Crown has “ramped significantly” in its mass market play, although it’s now sacrificing some of that for VIP play “much of which occurs behind ‘closed dooors,'” and therefore beyond Majestic’s ability to measure.

Business at Wynn Macau, meanwhile, was observed to have “increased sharply” following the opening of nearby MGM Grand Macau. However, this doesn’t cut both ways: “MGM’s share of game usage has not ramped up since it opened. In fact, its share … declined slightly each of the past few months.”

Is Pansy Ho the instrument of Stanley Ho’s revenge? Majestic reports that MGM made a brief dent in SJM‘s amount of play, but that Stanley Ho’s fleet of decrepit casinos “rebounded sharply later in January and further increased following the opening of Ponte 16 in early February.” Majestic does note some possible SJM market-share erosion in April and May, though.

Note: A contrasting, and sometimes complementary, first-hand report on Macao can be found at RateVegas.com. It’s must-reading.

Posted in Downtown, International, James Packer, Macau, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Stanley Ho, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | Comments Off on Turnaround for Lady Luck?

Blasts from the past

Snuggled inconspicuously in a recent El Cortez press release was the disclosure that the newly reconfigured ownership will include one Lonny Zarowitz. The aforesaid Zarowtiz figures briefly in John L. Smith's Running Scared: The Life and Treacherous Times of Las Vegas Casino King Steve Wynn.

Veteran investigative reporter Smith describes Zarowitz's father, Jerome, as a "mob frontman" who "retreated in style to Palm Springs" after cutting a March 23, 1973 deal with the Nevada Gaming Control Board "to approve his son Lonny as a percentage owner in the tiny Red Garter Casino." The younger Zarowitz had been previously turned down for a license to operate a slot route, Smith writes.

A former shift manager at the El Cortez, Zarowitz also held a tiny percentage of Gaughan's Exber Inc., and the two purportedly pursued an extremely contentious relationship in decades past, as detailed in a 1997 report by the New South Wales Casino Control Authority.

In 1992, it reads, Zarowitz accused Gaughan of past-posting in the El Cortez's race and sports book in 1986. However, since Zarowitz refused to provided the corroborating evidence he claimed to possess, the charges went nowhere.

Zarowitz was accused of sexual harassment by an El Cortez cocktail waitress in 1988 and was let go by the casino two years later, the document continues. He claimed the harassment complaint was a setup by Gaughan.

Reads the dossier: "Zarowitz made other allegations against Gaughan including that Gaughan was an FBI informant, that he had allegedly interfered with Zarowitz' mail and that Gaughan had conducted certain business transactions on less than an arms length basis …
 
"Zarowitz has also alleged that Gaughan has been able to influence the Nevada Gaming Regulators, the local Police and the US Postal Service not to conduct proper investigations into Zarowitz' allegations regarding the 1986 race and sports book issue."

New South Wales regulators ultimately deemed Zarowitz lacking in credibility and Gaughan suitable for licensure, "but that he should be the subject of continued scrutiny." So how is it that a character like Zarowitz is going to wind up with a piece of the El Cortez, should the Nevada Gaming Commission approve the sale? I can think of several states where he wouldn't have a prayer.

Gone and forgotten: In the course of reviewing the brief life and troubled times of the Bourbon Street hotel-casino, I discovered that if it was not the least-loved Strip (or just-off-Strip) casino, it wasn't for lack of trying. On a more personal note, I recall Bourbon Street for having the tightest slots I've ever played in Vegas. So no love lost there, either.

Following Bourbon Street's 2006 implosion, the southwest corner of the site became popular hangout for vagrants and winos, as attested by an impressive pile of empty liquor bottles that accumulated there. To be fair, this was apparently not that much of a change from when Bourbon Street was still open, to judge by eyewitness reports found at RateLasVegas.com.

One of the favorable customer reviews recounts finding a drunken woman passed out on the barroom floor. Others describe being panhandled in the restrooms. Comments also include: "It is not uncommon to catch someone shooting up in the bathroom," "Had to give $20 deposit for a hair dryer," "beds held up by phone books" while yet another offers this ringing endorsement: "I suppose it would beat staying in your car."

Stupid TV Anchor Tricks: Subbing on Fox 5's morning news program, co-anchor Heidi Hayes was in the course of reporting a buyout attempt of Cirque du Soleil by Dubai World. Not to be left out, self-involved co-anchor Jason Feinberg butted into Hayes' litany of Cirque Strip shows by noisily adding Le Reve to the list.

Now, anybody with half a brain knows that while Le Reve may play like a parody of Cirque at its most homoerotic, it is (or was) a solo venture by Franco Dragone — or as Steve Wynn infamously intoned, "A collection of imperfect dreams, created by Dragone." After three years and at least two makeovers, the non-Cirque-ness of Le Reve should be old and obvious news.

Send out the clowns: Incidentally, a trustworthy source recently viewed Le Reve 3.0 (you know, the version with ballroom dancing added) and says it's the best iteration so far. The clowns have reportedly been almost completely banished, which counts as progress any way you slice it.

Posted in Downtown, Harrah's, International, Regulation, Steve Wynn, The Strip, TV | Comments Off on Blasts from the past

Terrible news for Vegas

Comment is superfluous: This headline says it all. At least I won't have to explain anymore why I don't own a car.

Posted in Downtown, The Strip | Comments Off on Terrible news for Vegas

Good news for the Boardwalk

May 2008 was only the fourth-best May in Atlantic City’s 30-year history of casino gambling, but it was good enough to qualify as cause for celebration. The New Jersey Casino Control Commission has the full breakout, from which a few highlights may be extrapolated.

Table games were once again the Boardwalk’s savior, propelling a 1.6% year/year revenue increase. Let’s hope Pennsylvania solons don’t get it into their heads to add craps, 21 and baccarat to their ‘slot parlors.’

Slot winnings were a mixed bag, with the notable exception of Caesars Atlantic City, which either got its clock cleaned or has driven slot players away, down -10.4%. Still, even with slot win down -1.5% overall, more casinos were in the “plus” column than the “minus” one, 6-5.

Positive slot results at Tropicana and, particularly, Resorts Atlantic City was negated by unlucky table play, down -8% and 16%, respectively. While Trump Marina remains the market laggard, it had a bonny May at the tables, +22.7%, overshadowed only by Trump Taj Mahal (+31%) and Harrah’s Marina (+37.5%). Both the Atlantic City Hilton and Borgata posted double-digit gains, too.

Although six casinos posted decreased wins, exceptional months at the Taj (+11.4%) and Harrah’s (+9.8%), plus a good month at Borgata (+4.9%) were enough to drag the Boardwalk into the “plus” column overall. As far as sheer volume of win was concerned, tops was Borgata (who else?), at $64 million, trailed by Bally’s Atlantic City ($53 million). Harrah’s, Caesars and the Taj were bunched together to form a kind of “second tier.” At $35 million and $33.7 million, respectively, the Showboat and Tropicana formed the third echelon. Bringing up the rear were the Hilton, Trump Plaza, Resorts and the Margaritaville-to-be, Trump Marina.

The Press of Atlantic City has the "why" of the good numbers. It's amazing what a little sunny weather will accomplish.

Colony Capital, Resorts’ owner has finally confirmed that it did put in a formal bid for the Tropicana. That’s a relief, as a rerun of Colony’s ‘phantom’ bid for Aztar Corp. (announced, never submitted), would have given Colony a reputation for a weak trigger finger.

But if Trop trustee Justice Gary Stein wants to draw the sale process out any further, he’d better be darn sure he’s going to get bids comfortably above the $850 million-$950 million range currently on the table. Colony, Cordish Cos. and those publicity-averse New York bidders – all of whom appear to have bargained in good faith – have reason to feel skeeved at the moment.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Pennsylvania, Regulation | Comments Off on Good news for the Boardwalk

"Casino Bonds Crush Harrah's"

That’s Bloomberg, bearing the dire news that casino junk-bond debt is “generating the worst return for investors as companies from … Harrah’s Entertainment Inc. to Herbst Gaming Inc. risk bankruptcy under the weight of their debt.” With a return of 10%, casino junk bonds “are the biggest losers this year.”

Who knew? “It was viewed very much as a safe haven,” says one portfolio manager, referring to an industry long perceived as recession-proof — a bubble that has burst this year. Aforesaid manager has seen his company take a bath on Donald Trump‘s casino debt, and is foreswearing taking on any Harrah’s or Station Casinos bonds, given the size of their respective debt loads.

Other clunkers are identified as Columbia Sussex (whose debtholders want CEO William J. Yung III‘s head on a platter), Greektown Casino (scrambling to keep its license) and Herbst Gaming, which has received a “going concern” notice from Deloitte & Touche, and whose debt is plunging in value.

In the cases of Harrah’s and Station, one of the rationales for privatization was that it would enable the companies to pursue new development at their own discretion, without having to answer to Wall Street. Instead, each is handcuffed. Given the evidence of market glut on Las Vegas’ locals scene, maybe it’s best for Station that there will be a four-year lull after Aliante Station opens. But it’s a shame that the company’s push into the Reno market — one that could use new product of Station-level quality — is now on indefinite hold.

$1 billion for the Trop? Although that nice, round number was floated by Larry Klatzkin recently, there’s no evidence (yet) that the New Jersey Casino Control Commission has cracked the “B” mark in its attempts to re-sell the once-lucrative resort. And while Tropicana Entertainment co-President Scott Butera may scapegoat Garden State regulators for not getting a higher price point for the Trop, one analysis places the blame for the mammoth hotel-casino’s reduced curb appeal on Columbia Sussex’s reign of error, which cratered revenues at the property. That erratic interregnum certainly infuriated a veteran regulator, who takes a few swings at ‘ColSux’ on his way out the door, saying “They flunked Casino Management 101, as far as I’m concerned.”

Third time’s the charm. Two general managers fled Casino Aztar during Columbia Sussex’s first year of ownership. Now a third has jumped ship … but merely to another ColSux operation. Considering that Mike Jones was back in Lake Tahoe by the time the news broke, and that he used to be Bill Yung’s GM of the MontBleu and Horizon casinos there, one’s best guess would have to be that he’s been putting in charge of turning those two around (especially the embattled Horizon), but I’ll let you know for certain as soon as I do.

No official announcement has yet been made. (But you can find the settlement of the Columbia Sussex/Park Cattle litigation, posted under a rather odd link.)

Steve Friess continues to poll his readers on the coolest names in Vegas. Interestingly, nobody has yet voted for Ka, the narrative-driven Cirque du Soleil show directed by Robert LePage that even Cirque-skeptics like myself can enjoy. But apparently there is no “Ka” in “cool.”

It reminds me of one of the most famous lines from Stargate SG-1 (in the episode, “The First Ones”), where we learn that the primitive race of Unas express their displeasure with vehement utterances of “Ka!”, prompting the ever-patient Dr. Daniel Jackson to reply, “Now don’t say ‘ka!’ until you’ve tried it.”

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Detroit, Donald Trump, Harrah's, Herbst Gaming, Indiana, Station Casinos, TV, Wall Street | Comments Off on "Casino Bonds Crush Harrah's"

Laughing my … off

What’s the best Vegas-related Web site? Too many too choose from, I say. But I’m definitively certain I’ve found the funniest. If you’re a  fan of CheapoVegas.com, you’ll absolutely love its Casino Boy Graveyard. Yes, it’s a stroll down memory lane past the tombstones of some of Vegas’ best — and worst — casinos, which now only exist in our collective memory.

Pride of place is given to the Desert Inn, “the classiest place [Vegas] may ever see.” But if you want laughs, nothing beats Casino Boy’s incomparably pithy eulogies for those casinos whose demise is mourned only because we won’t have them to kick around anymore. The Boardwalk, Key Largo and Westward Ho … they’re all here. (Boardwalk, with its demonic, leering Pennywise marquee, deserves a special circle in Casino Hell.)

Maybe the prize reminiscence of the bunch is Casino Boy’s valediction for “the waiting room of the damned,” Nevada Palace: “There are other smoky dumps in town, but this place out on Boulder Highway was like a magnet for locals who loved to stuff their mouths with four, five, six cigarettes at a time and have their oxygen tanks wired directly into their tracheotomy holes.”

Just be sure not to visit this page while eating or drinking, lest you have a bad moment all over your keyboard.

Posted in Downtown, The Strip | Comments Off on Laughing my … off

Trop Trojan Horse barred from gates

Much to the dismay of senior debtholders, perhaps, a Delaware bankruptcy judge OK'd $67 million in additional borrowing by Tropicana Entertainment, money the company says it needs for operational expenses. However, the court backhanded an even bigger loan offer from Canada's Onex Corp.

The latter was what you might call a "hostile" loan. So far only UNLV's David Schwartz has twigged to this story. Basically, Onex would try to roll a $100 million loan into an equity position, as the first step in a takeover attempt. It has even retained former MGM Mirage President Alex Yemenidjian to advise it on casino-sector acquisitions. Had Onex's ploy been successful, I wonder how Yemenidjian's former MGM colleagues would have felt about "Count Dracula" (the nickname he acquired when running the MGM film studio in Hollywood) setting up shop right across the street.

"If [the gambling sector] is overbuilt and in some difficulty right now it's a good time to look at it," Onex CEO Gerald Schwartz told the Toronto Globe and Mail. Onex used the hostile-lending ploy to take over Loews Cineplex Entertainment and he's already signaled that, should the ploy of lending to Columbia Sussex be rebuffed, he'd pursue low-hanging fruit on the Isle of Capri and Harrah's Entertainment vines. $100 million won't get him very far, but if he ups the ante then Isle needs someone to bail it out of its overseas over-extension and Harrah's could use a near-term cash infusion, too.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Harrah's, Isle of Capri | Comments Off on Trop Trojan Horse barred from gates

This just in …

So Tropicana Atlantic City trustee Justice Gary Stein wants to toss the existing bids for the property … possibly because better ones are being dangled before him. As a consequence, he wants to restart the clock, which would push the deadline for a Trop sale into October. With Columbia Sussex‘s appeal of its New Jersey license denial still hanging fire, a longer timeline for the sale is a fait accompli anyway.

While a New York investment group ($950 million), Colony Capital ($850 million) and Cordish Cos. ($???) are believed to have bid on the Trop, it remains unknown whether there are more — or fewer — bids on the table. After all, Colony’s 2006 bid for Aztar Corp. turned out to be just hot air, so there’s no assurance its trigger finger has proven stronger this time ’round.

If Stein is hearing offers in the neighborhood of $1 billion or more, that’d run a cart and horses through Tropicana Entertainment co-President Scott Butera‘s contention that, by selling the Trop in the present economy and in within a set timeframe, the New Jersey Casino Control Commission is driving down the price of the asset. Actually, yesterday’s sale of Trump Marina put paid to that argument, as the highest known bid for the Trop ($950 million) is more than three times the amount being paid for the Marina.

Turning to Trump Marina, while it’s hard to think its fortunes could get much lower, it’s worth noting that Trump Entertainment Resorts was reduced to selling it to a company (Coastal Development) whose main claim to casino cred is that it’s the plurality shareholder in the Suffolk Downs racetrack.

These aren’t the days to be learning on the job in Atlantic City. Even Columbia Sussex had a modicum of casino experience and look how badly it screwed the pooch. (Coastal’s “Margaritaville” deal is a first step in the right direction, though.)

As for Coastal buying the Marina at an 11X EBIDTA multiple, instead of the standard 7X ($200 million), at least analyst Justin Sebastiano says what I only dared think: The high multiple is a way of ‘stashing’ a litigation settlement within the sale price. Ironic that Trump and Coastal fell out over a Hard Rock franchising deal. Many years back, Donald Trump had a deal in place with the Rank Organisation to re-brand the then-Trump Castle as a Hard Rock hotel — an accord that fell apart the night before it was to be formally announced.

Greektown joins Columbia Sussex … in Chapter 11, that is. Seems the tribally owned Detroit casino has gotten quite a bit overextended in its borrowing. The giant sucking sound that is MGM Grand Detroit vacuuming up customers can’t be helping, either. Greektown is profitable but just barely.

On a more practical level, Greektown’s current facility is cut-rate, and overcrowded with tables and slots. Despite a few gestures at Gilded Age plush and the convenience of being right on the People Mover, Greektown exudes “second tier” and is in danger of being selected out by escalating competition — making it all the more imperative that the half-billion-dollar permanent casino-hotel get finished. If Stanley Ho built a U.S. casino, it would be Greektown.

Overseas, University of Macao economics professor Fong Ka Chio predicts that Guangdong Province‘s cutback on visa applications to Macao may boomerang. The Chinese government has made no secret of its desire to have a Macanese economy that’s less casino-centric (60% of GDP). However, Fong says this latest market intervention may be counterproductive, resulting in a 7.5% casino-revenue drop that could drive casino operators to scrap future projects.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Detroit, Donald Trump, Macau, MGM Mirage, Regulation | Comments Off on This just in …

The curse of Columbia Sussex

Unsecured Tropicana Entertainment creditors are opposing Columbia Sussex's effort to borrow $67 million in operating capital (which would push existing creditors even further toward the back of the queue). The Wilmington, Del., bankruptcy court has yet to rule.

Whoops. By filing Chapter 11, ColSux put its Casino Aztar riverboat — lock, stock and accounts receivable — under the purview of the bankruptcy court. Which means a delay of the $220 million sale to Reno-based Eldorado Resorts. Not only that, the court would have the discretion to tinker with the terms of that sale. (And check out the third comment below the story.)

Flashy new marketing be damned, the Los Angeles Times' Richard Abowitz checked into the Las Vegas Tropicana and discovered the same old malaise — maybe worse. Yes, the escalator to "Bodies" is still broken "and has even grown some advertising." (On CEO William J. Yung III's gravestone, it will read: "Maintenance? What's that?")

Worse yet, "it took an hour of waiting in line to check in" — on a Wednesday afternoon, due to a dearth of check-in staff. Abowitz's conclusion: "The bankrupt casino is sure letting customers feel the pinch of its reduced workforce." In all, Abowitz's outlook is as bleak, if not bleaker, than when he stayed at the Trop last December and found it to be "a warehouse with gambling." And I can attest personally to his contention that the air there is "literally and figuratively stale." Sort of like its management philosophy.

Now they tell us. When Toni Braxton was riding high at the Flamingo, and splashed across the western façade of the building in a va-va-va-voom "building wrap," I asked Harrah's Entertainment if customers were trying to get, say, a room nestled within Mega-Braxton's "cleavage." Came to the answer: Oh no, no; hasn't happened. Today, however, at the end of an announcement that Braxton's Flamingo gig is prematurely finis, we read: "In fact, the Flamingo was said to get frequent request [sic] for rooms with windows at strategically placed body parts of the singer."

If you think the Trop is bad, check out this customer review of Hooters Hotel & Casino. The descriptions of lackadaisical service and spare amenities are redolent of imminent closure, while the room decor could stand as the textbook definition of "fugly." But the kicker is the noisy, broken air conditioner. With video. Hilarious. Or tragic, depending on your perspective.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Harrah's, The Strip | Comments Off on The curse of Columbia Sussex

Bargains? Shhhhhhhhhhhh!

Liz Benston takes a look today at the newest message from the Las Vegas Convention & Visitors Authority and finds the LVCVA “thinks it’s bad form to make references to ‘affordable’ and ‘cheap.'” Oh yes, God forbid anybody should think there are deals to be found here (though there are) when they could spend that money closer to home, perhaps at one of the finer tribal casinos. Harrah’s Entertainment has a nice one in SoCal, I hear.

UNLV’s Prof. Jeff Voyles, says (in Benston’s paraphrase) that “it would be disingenuous for Las Vegas to market itself as a bargain because room rates will bounce back and the Strip will be punctuated by expensive, high-rise hotels bargain seekers can little afford.”

Yes, but that’s partly how we got into our present pickle: by creating both the perception and the reality that the Strip isn’t meant to be affordable anymore (which may account for the newfound market strength in Downtown, especially as Strip bargain plays bit the dust).

Also, I don’t mean to disrespect an academic — the parlor sport of choice among the low-forehead types at the Dogpatch Daily — but Voyles seems off base when he says, “We can’t change our market segment based on a dip in the economy.” Seems to me these are precisely the circumstances that would dictate a change in positioning. Principled talk of “sustaining the growth that we have” is fine (even though recent declines in gambling revenue and visitation make me want to ask, “What growth?”), but the bottom line — so to speak — involves putting fannies on slot stools and in poker chairs, to say nothing of hotel beds.

(MGM Mirage would seem to tacitly disagree with Voyles, seeing as it’s just created the position of “President of Marketing-Customer Development. It’ll be filled by Joe Brunini, whose brief will be to “identify emerging customer markets and create methods of attracting new audiences.” My congratulations to Mr. Brunini, who started in the business as a dealer in Atlantic City 28 years ago.)

In this respect the Bad Timing Award goes Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, California, Downtown, Harrah's, LVCVA, Marketing, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Station Casinos, The Strip | Comments Off on Bargains? Shhhhhhhhhhhh!

The promo from Hell

In a radical departure from hallowed Columbia Sussex tradition, the Las Vegas Tropicana has discovered the concept of the promotional allowance. Presumably Tropicana Entertainment co-prexy Scott Butera gets credit for talking boss William J. Yung III into doing some risky, out-of-the-box type things like … marketing and even — Gasp! — promos, some of them fairly proactive. I mean, we’re talking about the company that yanked out the “free slot pull” promo two days after taking over the Trop, back in early ’07.

Nah, my only beef (and “beef” is the operative word) with the Sunday-Thursday “Roll 4 Gas” promo is that three of a kind gets you a free buffet for two. Seriously, is this a promo — or a punishment? I’ve eaten at that buffet. It’s the worst I’ve had in town and you could grow a beard waiting for your server to put in an appearance. To add insult to injury, prices have gone up quite a bit — 22%, in fact.

The Trop could put its own spin on the Wal-Mart slogan and go with, “Always rollin’ up prices.” Except that the disembodied yellow dot-head would have to wear a frown in place of a smile.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, The Strip | Comments Off on The promo from Hell

Harrah's: Digging to China

Given the recent freeze-out on new casino operators in Macao, executives at Harrah’s Entertainment might as well be sporting T-shirts that read, “I spent $577.7 million in Macao and all I got was this lousy golf course.” And, in light of Harrah’s considerable debt load, CEO Gary Loveman will have the unenviable task of advising tight-fisted co-owners TPG and Apollo Management what to do next with their expensive piece of Chinese real estate.

They could gamble on hunkering down for a few years, taking a low near-term return while waiting for Macao supremo Edmund Ho’s successor to possibly liberalize the enclave’s gaming regime, admitting new corporate players. Or Loveman could try to peddle it around — probably at a loss, seeing as the land can’t be rezoned for gambling and he’s dealing from a position of weakness.

(A third option, whereby Harrah’s acts as a passive hotel operator as part of a joint venture in which Wynn Resorts or MGM Mirage owns the casino just seems too transparent and disingenuous to get past the current regime, IMO. It’d be obvious a subversion of the “three-plus-three” arrangement, turning it into 3 + 3.5.)

The fate of the golf course is a pressing question only because Harrah’s latest “Consolidated Summary of Operations” contains some scary-looking numbers. When 1Q08 is compared to 1Q07, interest expense has increased threefold (from $185.8 million to $557.6 million). Pile on $211.3 million in early retirement of debt – to reduce those interest payments – and an 11% decline in income from operations and it’s quite a jolt to the balance sheet. In the 1/28/08-3/31/08 period, combined income of $445.5 million was negated (and them some) by $679.2 million in interest expense and early debt retirement.

Then there’s the matter of the shuffling of properties between Harrah’s Entertainment and Harrah’s Operating Co. According to one analyst, it works like this …

Harrah’s Las Vegas, The Rio, the Flamingo, the A.C. Harrah’s and Showboat Atlantic City, Harrah’s Lake Tahoe, Harvey’s and Bill’s Lake Tahoe are going into the Entertainment portfolio, to be followed by Harrah’s Laughlin and Paris-Las Vegas. But then Bill’s, Harvey’s and Harrah’s Lake Tahoe, and Showboat are re-shuffled into the operating company.

(What? No mention of Bally’s Las Vegas? Hmmmmmmmm. Why does the word “implosion” keep bouncing through my brain?)

In an excellent analysis, Amy Calistri writes, “Reducing interest expense, through the reduction of debt, has to be at the heart of this accounting tangle.” In other words, Harrah’s is positioning itself for a big sell-off, fleeing the Tahoe market and reducing its high Atlantic City exposure, already worsened by good business at Harrah’s Chester. Trouble is, Calistri goes on, casino valuations aren’t what they used to be and potential buyers might still find credit scarce.

(The problem with operator consolidation is that it’s taken a lot of potential buyers off the table – no more Argosys out there — although Ameristar Casinos needs to rack up some debt to reduce its profile as a takeover candidate. Penn National is in a buying mood but, with its private-equity buyout threatening to unravel, it’s got hassles of its own.)

As for the cheese-paring moves that customers are reporting at Harrah’s Strip properties, Calistri warns that “cost cutting and efficiency will only help [Harrah’s] at the margins … Indeed, Harrah’s biggest hurdle toward profitability over the near term is likely to be undoing the debt associated with their acquisition.”

Which is why when analysts float the idea of Harrah’s buying Galaxy Entertainment as a quick means of entry into Macao, I’m tempted to employ one of my Mom’s favorite retorts: “Using what for money?” Galaxy has its problems (like basically learning the casino business on the job) but with no new gaming concessions on the Macanese horizon, its value just shot up considerably.

And then there’s the little detail of a $2.8 billion (with a ‘B’) tribal court judgment against Harrah’s that, if it continues to stand up (much data here), will lumber the company with even more debt and interest. The verdict isn’t really Harrah’s fault: The case dates back to when Arthur Goldberg was alive and running Park Place Entertainment, which became Caesars Entertainment, which was bought by Harrah’s Entertainment, which is contemplating changing its name to …  Caesars Entertainment.

It’s a good thing Apollo and TPG hung onto Loveman, just in case their casino acumen is on par with Apollo’s retail acuity. Earlier this month, Apollo vassal Linens ‘n Things filed for bankruptcy in what Bloomberg called “the biggest leveraged buyout failure since credit-market disruptions began last summer,” and what one analyst characterized as “an utter and complete disaster.” The company will close 20% of its stores, leaving 2,500 people unemployed.

Apollo’s exposure is only (“only”) $260 million, meaning that others, primarily General Electric, are holding most of the bag on this debacle. And maybe the timing wasn’t so good for taking real estate franchisor Realogy Corp. private for $8.5 billion, either. (Bloomberg says $6.6 billion.)

And don’t forget about Harrah’s unraveling international strategy, which was ill-timed at best and possibly a total bust. But that’s a topic for another time …

Posted in Ameristar, Atlantic City, Harrah's, Macau, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Pennsylvania, The Strip, Tribal, Wall Street | Comments Off on Harrah's: Digging to China

R-J to Vegas: "We're Podunk"

Warning: The following blog post contains ridicule of the Las Vegas Review-Journal and a Republican senator with good hair. No actual copies of the R-J were harmed in the writing of this post.

*****

There I was, thinking that I was living in a (mostly) booming metropolis — albeit going through one of its periodic "down" cycles. It's a city that's grown too fast for the infrastructure to keep pace; ditto "quality of life" necessities like parks, libraries and schools, of which we never seem able to build quite enough.

But these are symptoms of growth, as we draw not only a vast number of international visitors but myriad new residents as well (some of them here illegally, it's true). I don't see as many casino-employee name tags anymore of the sort that informed you your check-in clerk was Corazon from Manila, for instance, and that's a pity. They were a tacit tribute to the "Las Vegas dream" that's lured so many here from faraway climes, yours truly included.

So I look out my office window at the third (and counting) tower of the Palms, then turn to the electronic version of the Dogpatch Daily and read that, no, we are not a burgeoning city with a massive resort industry but "a remote desert town built to indulge Americans' fantasies." (I guess overseas fantasists need not apply.) And this from the paper's tourism correspondent! "Remote desert town"? "Indulge … fantasies"? Did they send him to report on Pahrump by mistake?

And then, as if the Average Joe hadn't figured this out already, we get the thunderingly obvious observation, "Every extra dollar would-be tourists cough up at their hometown gas stations and grocery stores is a buck that won't be shoved into a slot machine, slipped to a hotel desk clerk in hopes of a room upgrade or tucked into a dancer's G-string this weekend."

Really? Ya think? Just maybe? Did you omit any clichés there, perhaps? Oh, and if anybody believes an "extra dollar" will be sufficient to get themselves a room upgrade, then their Vegas really isn't showing.

Add Sen. John Ensign (R-Shadow Creek) to the list of Las Vegans who seemingly hate Las Vegas. According to the Las Vegas Sun (which, unlike the Dogpatch Daily, has the mentality of a big-city newspaper), the exquisitely coiffed young senator "isn’t convinced Nevada needs [Congressional] money to handle the hepatitis C crisis." Translation: If you're among the estimated 15,000 people who can't afford a $200 hepatitis test, drop dead.

Other items the Sun says Ensign found "offensive" were 13-week extensions of unemployment benefits and home-heating subsidies for poor people (during a recession, fer crissakes!). “I have always been very consistent about caring about our children and our grandchildren," crocodile-wept the well-heeled Circus Circus heir. Yeah, it's just their parents and grandparents — some of whom probably used to work for your dad — about whom you can't give a rat's ass.

Ensign's also against the Webb version of the GI Bill (as opposed to the competing McCain one) because its financial assistance to former servicemen and -women "would actually weaken our military because it encourages people to get out."

Ah, so that's how we keep our military strong: Not by incentivizing people to serve but by essentially throwing them from the train when they choose to leave. Brilliant! "Re-enlist or face poverty." Heckuva job, Brownie, er, John.

Although I'm not a Republican, the elephant party would have surely done better in '06 and would be more fearsome this year if they had more plain-spoken, principled representatives and candidates like New Jersey's Murray Sabrin. He and I would never agree on environmental issues or the Brady Bill, for instance, but I sure like the cut of his jib, as the saying goes. (His Iraq policy, which boils down to "We won; let's leave," would find a lot of takers, too.)

Check out the audio excerpts, in which Sabrin gets right to the point while opponent Dick Zimmer hems, haws and obfuscates like the Washington hack he is. Sabrin probably won't make it past the primary, which is too bad because he has the makings of a terrific candidate, and would have considerable appeal to Libertarians and proverbial "swing voters." But if you liked George W. Bush you'll love Dick Zimmer.

Posted in Atlantic City, Downtown, Election, Politics, The Strip | Comments Off on R-J to Vegas: "We're Podunk"

Cliché of the Year

"It's hard to pinpoint which one it is, but it's like the perfect storm — they all hit you at the same time." Harrah's Entertainment Eastern Division President J. Carlos Tolosa.

Nothing against Mr. Tolosa but this is becoming the most overused phrase in business. Rub two or more vaguely coincidental economic factors together and, all of a sudden — it's "the perfect storm"! Eeek! Run for the cellar!

Seems we're hearing this wheeze a lot lately … to excuse the collapse of Columbia Sussex, for starters. In Tolosa's case, he's conflating Pennsylvania slot parlors, the recession and a largely ignored smoking ban. There won't be a true smoking ban until mid-October, the impact of the slot parlors should have been seen coming a long way off, and the recession … well, that sort of did take us by surprise. I'll give him that one.

But really, let's shelve "perfect storm" cliché until we have economic conditions that truly befit such cataclysmic terminology.

By the way … Harrah's recently reported diminished profitability in its Atlantic sector, citing the impact of Harrah's Chester"The new casino and the partial opening of a new hotel tower at Harrah's in Atlantic City led to profit gains in the company's northeast region, though profit was lower than it might have been as revenue shifted from Atlantic City properties to Pennsylvania, where gaming is taxed at a higher rate, Harrah's Chief Executive Gary Loveman said Friday."

Ummmmm, you guys at Harrah's are supposed to be the math geniuses of the industry, right? The fellows who built an empire through number crunching par excellence? So didn't you run any, like, economic models on how going into eastern Pennsylvania might sap your Atlantic City market, where you're heavily exposed? Or that there were more cents to the dollar to be extracted from New Jersey, where the tax rate is but a modest fraction of Pennsylvania's? It just seems like you should have seen this Peter-robs-Paul scenario a good ways up the road, so to speak.

Hindsight being 20-20, Harrah's would surely have been better off putting all its marbles on Pittsburgh. Instead, it lurked behind a local stalking-horse group and put its primary effort into (literally) shoring up a racing oval in Chester.

Oh well, if Don Barden's finances continue to quiver like Jell-O, the Harrah's-Backed Group That Isn't Harrah's may get a do-over in Pittsburgh, where it looks more and more like the city fathers backed the wrong horse (and chose an awful site into the bargain).

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Harrah's, Pennsylvania | Comments Off on Cliché of the Year

Quote of the Day

“The Strip has done phenomenally well, but I think there’s a segment of the population that’s kind of getting ignored, the value-conscious customer who really can’t afford the kind of pricing the Strip offers these days.” — Binion’s and Four Queens owner Terry Caudill.

Posted in Downtown | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

The Alystra is toast

OK, so it was a derelict that's been closed for 10 years and unlikely ever to reopen. But the Alystra is now officially "a total loss." Too bad. It was an attractive building that happened to sit in a sort of mini-Bermuda Triangle where no casino could flourish. It also was operated in a manner that brought it afoul of the Nevada Gaming Control Board. There were some flutters of interest 16 months ago, then silence. Since the Alystra had become a homeless hangout, it'll probably be no great mystery how it caught fire.

A bad month for Adelson. First, there was a shaky performance on the witness stand in the Richard Suen/Las Vegas Sands lawsuit. Then a first-quarter loss. Now he's been questioned in a bribery investigation of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's government. Sheldon will probably have to do a little 'splainin' to the Control Board when he gets back from Jerusalem.

Luxor 2.0: A review of the ongoing makeover has been posted at VegasTripping.com. The verdict: "Pharoah's Tomb Meets Airport Bar." Hard to believe that Luxor is already 18 years old — unlike Excalibur, which only looks like it's been around for 30 years or so.

Nathan Burton at the Flamingo. I went. I saw. (And the stunt pictured here does not figure in the act, so caveat emptor.) The magic tricks were sloppily executed — you had to wonder what the coterie of rival magicians in attendance thought of them — and almost made one nostalgic for Hans Klok. For this Harrah's Entertainment ditched Society of Seven?

No warp speed here: A story that broke on the Web last week (and was picked up by LVA's "What's News" page six days ago) finally crept into the pages of the Dogpatch Daily. (UNLV's David Schwartz has a good critique of the situation, though.) The same writer who branded Strip casinos as "monuments to gullibility" now turns his scorn upon patrons of the Las Vegas Hilton's Star Trek attraction — while managing to meet the R-J's two-factual-mistakes-per-story quota and confusing "premiere" with "premier."

But he's not alone. A local publisher mistakes "ringer" for "wringer" in …

An utterly ridiculous column that suggested the Democratic presidential ticket be suggested by a coin-toss. Seriously. It's difficult to decide if this is a bigger insult to Las Vegas Sun readership or to the democratic process itself, this flippant (pun intended) notion of hinging the fate of our country — and perhaps, by extension, the world — on a game of chance. As one Sun reader notes, "I admire your ability to get paid for this."

Since one normally needs to pack a lunch and some No-Doz to finish a Brian Greenspun column (and I couldn't even get through this one w/o skimming), I'll boil down the "logic": "Hillary Clinton has worked harder than any person I know of to become America’s president [and] running for president, and the presidency itself, has to be the hardest job on the planet."

So? Meaning if Greenspun's next-door neighbor worked harder than Hillary Clinton to be on the donkey-party ticket, then he/she would deserve it even more? As Clint Eastwood's William Munny observes in Unforgiven, "Deserve's got nothin' to do with it."

Greenspun cites exit polls as holy writ, whereupon his moving finger moves on to write, "We all know that the polling this year has been wrong at best" (Who's this "we all"? I know no such thing. Do you?) "People, for good or bad reasons, don’t tell the truth to pollsters when it comes to race or gender." Well, if true, that puts paid to those exit polls in which Greenspun places so much stock.

After calling upon the respective campaigns not to "short-circuit the democratic process," out comes the loony coin-toss idea. Why? "We accept the coin toss in every other facet of our lives," quoth the suddenly Solomonic Greenspun. Oh, do we? Maybe that's how they make important decisions at Greenspun Media but I don't think, for instance, that the board of Harrah's Entertainment decided not to accept Penn National's buyout offer because the nickel came up "heads."

Hey, let's have representatives of the Kurds, Shiites and Sunnis over to the Bellagio poker room to decide the fate of Iraq in a game of Texas Hold 'Em, with Halliburton taking a "rake" of the pot. Works for me.

The clue to Greenspun's thoroughly trite and un-democratic "solution" can be found in a passing comment that enfranchisement "for far too long has been a burden to Americans rather than a blessing." I'll leave you to ponder the disturbing — and elitist — implications of that telltale remark.

Posted in Architecture, Boulder Strip, Election, Harrah's, Penn National, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“Tropicana [Entertainment] did not view workers as a valuable commodity and I think they regret it now.”Culinary Union supremo D. Taylor, on the collapse of Columbia Sussex‘s heavily leveraged casino portfolio.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Culinary Union | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Not smoking stunts your (revenue) growth

Let's get one thing clear: Smoking is a noxious habit that's likely to kill you and certain to alienate other people, in my opinion. (I had two grandparents who smoked until the air turned blue, then smoked some more, which may explain my antipathy to the, uh, pastime.)

But … not smoking appears to be bad for the health of casinos, at least in Illinois. April's numbers are out and they're down over 19% — far more than can be plausibly blamed on the recession. For instance:

The biggest loser: It's Penn National's Alton Belle, off by 27%, with an $8 million gross. The rest of the results, as reported by Bear Stearns are as follows (with gross gaming $, when available) …

Harrah's Joliet: -18% ($26.4 million)

Grand Victoria [MGM Mirage]: -18%

Hollywood Casino [Penn National]: -20%

Empress Joliet [" "]: -26% 

Casino Queen: -5.3%

Harrah's Metropolis: -25.5% ($9.8 million)

Pair-A-Dice [Boyd Gaming]: -16% ($9.7 million)

Illinois' smoking ban went into effect Jan.1 and things clearly haven't been the same since.

This Just In … Sheldon Adelson is stubborn. Who knew?

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Harrah's, Illinois, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson | Comments Off on Not smoking stunts your (revenue) growth

Columbia Sussex quickies

Tropicana Entertainment Co-President Scott Butera has really been working the phones — a salutary, welcome change from the truculence and stonewalling reporters came to expect from Columbia Sussex.

(Apparently Las Vegas Tropicana execs were among those left in the dark about the impending bankruptcy, even though the company was clearly ramping up for it well in advance. With a forbearance, a court date and a labor negotiation all impending between May 5-15, the timing of the Chapter 11 announcement looks less and less coincidental by the day.)

Butera tells GlobeSt,com, the company was caught in fiscal triple-pincer movement consisting of an economic downturn that curtail traveling and gambling (i.e., “an unprecedented drop in the debtors’ revenue”), a plummeting real estate market (i.e., a dwindling asset base), and “dislocated” credit markets (i.e., nowhere from which to borrow more), all of which effectively increased the company’s already high leverage.

But when he says that the higher leverage was responsible for the workforce reductions in Atlantic City (over 900 employees), that’s just B.S. — to put it very kindly. As documented by the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, a central point of CEO William J. Yung III‘s “road show” presentation to sell bonds that would finance his Aztar Corp. takeover was the elimination of $35 million or more in salaries (a plan carefully concealed from New Jersey regulators). He also didn’t waste any time bringing out the chainsaw in Las Vegas, either — long before any downturn in the leisure sector was evident.

Butera was also wrong when he said Columbia Sussex was forced to sell its Indiana riverboat. It could have fought the (probable) loss of its license. But if that course of action was contemplated, it wasn’t for long, as Yung pledged to sell Casino Aztar to pay down debt immediately after his New Jersey license was yanked.

And, if you’re a fan of irony, you’d have to enjoy Butera’s description of the NJCCC as “arbitrary and capricious” — the exact same words the NJCCC used to describe the decision-making process at Columbia Sussex. Coincidence? I think not.

According to GlobeSt.com’s Brian K. Miller, the Atlantic City Trop sale can’t close escrow until Columbia Sussex’s appeal runs its course. The latter’s case may have merit (especially if employs some of the arguments UNLV’s David Schwartz has propounded in the pages of the Las Vegas Business Press and his DieIsCast.com blog — now sporting a new design).

But if “Attila the Yung” wins, God help the poor Trop employees — and customers. Yung: The Sequel could give new meaning to “back with a vengeance.”

The bottom line of Butera’s ongoing saga of spin, spin, spin is that the blame for this debacle never, ever rests with Columbia Sussex or Bill Yung. It’s always those Family Circus poltergeists “Ida Know” and “Not Me” who are culpable.

Unimpressed with Butera’s analysis is Tom Weston, who argues that the Trop co-president’s analysis is pretty much ass-backwards. Money quote: “But the truth is that Columbia-Sussex operating policies, including massive layoffs and declining standards, caused problems throughout the casino empire long before the New Jersey license was revoked.”

Boardwalk Bargain: Is the bidding process for the Atlantic City Trop still open? Trustee Gary Stein implies as much — or that the two or three known bidders are haggling, seeing a chance to snap up a distressed asset from a bankrupt company at a fire-sale price. Stein’s remark that he’s ready to re-start talks with “interested parties” strongly suggests that he’s lost patience with Cordish Cos., the New York mystery bidders and maybe Colony Capital. Anybody want a little (OK, huge) fixer-upper on the Boardwalk?

An anonymous reader of the Las Vegas Sun (who appears to be an employee of either the Tropicana Express or River Palms, in Laughlin, alleges (see “Discussion”) that management has raised the possibility of cutting employees back to 32 hour weeks, potentially triggering the loss of health benefits.

Then again, an R-J reader once claimed to have official, inside, black-and-white corporate knowledge that Paris-Las Vegas would be split off from Bally’s and one of them would be sold. That’d be a neat trick when you consider that the two casino-hotels share a Siamese-twin sort of physical plant, which was why Hilton Gaming (remember them?) was able to build Paris-Las Vegas for considerably less than a billion dollars.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Indiana, Laughlin, The Strip | Comments Off on Columbia Sussex quickies