From bad to worse

British Reuters lays out a dire scenario for casino bonds, the second-most-distressed sector of the junk-bond market (only media firms are doing worse).

"We believe it probably hasn't hit its bottom," is the grave verdict of Moody's Investors Service analyst Keith Foley. His formula for highest risk: lone-property operators with heavy debt burdens. Stateside, this would seem to spell "Las Vegas Sands," where debt is approaching $10 billion and Palazzo has been a dud, at least by the benchmarks expected of a new Strip megaresort. (Morgans Hotel Group, which staked its future on the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, probably ought to be worrying, too.)

So far, one could argue that recent wave of casino bankruptcies has had a Darwinian effect, singling out the bottom-feeders (Columbia Sussex) and market laggards (Greektown). The deeply distressed bond status of Trump Entertainment Resorts may portend yet another visit to Chapter 11, but Station Casinos' bonds are doing little better.

Other danger signs identified in the article include …

• Debt-to-cash flow ratios of 9- or 10-to-1 (five times in excess the ratio deemed "investment grade"); Harrah's Entertainment, with its $29.7 billion buyout tab, is singled out, a poster child for …

• LBOs conducted "at the worst possible time."

• "Financing for casinos is also in dire straights [sic], a concern for companies that depend on expansion to drive growth," like Isle of Capri, at least under its previous regime.

Well worth repeating: "With this heinous act of sheer unadulterated corporate greed and disregard for customers, Harrah's has proven that they don't care at all about our 'fun' regardless of how they have sold the concept of gambling being 'paying for entertainment.' This is all about Harrah's making Harrah's a profit even if Harrah's spokesmouth Gary Thompson tells Liz Benston in the LV Sun that the games were removed because they weren't popular with players. Wheel of Fortune? Not popular with players? How truly out of touch are these numbskulls?" — Chuck Monster of VegasTripping.com, inveighing against Harrah's decision to start removing IGT's Wheel of Fortune from its casino floors.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Donald Trump, Harrah's, Isle of Capri, Morgans Hotel Group, Sheldon Adelson, Station Casinos, The Strip, Wall Street | Comments Off on From bad to worse

Quote of the Day

“The foundation of every successful company is its employees. We certainly recognize the value and hard work that each employee at the Tropicana has provided throughout the years and continues to provide every day. I look forward to getting to know and working with all of the Tropicana employees. Currently, we are in the process of evaluating the appreciation programs that have been in place to find ways to improve upon them, but we will also develop new programs where there were none before.” — Atlantic City Tropicana Casino & Resort President Fred Buro, in an interview published in February 2007, shortly after Columbia Sussex took control of the property. By year’s end, there would be 900 fewer employees left to “appreciate” … including Buro.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Trop sale stumbles forward … sorta

If Justice Gary Stein, the state-appointed trustee for the Atlantic City Tropicana Casino & Resort, isn’t the most inept public servant in America, it’s not for lack of effort. Add nepotism to his string of failings, as his ever-less-credible pronouncements now emerge from the mouth of his son, Martin Stein, a lawyer who has apparently joined Dear Old Dad at the public trough.

The Steins’ latest bit of boobery involves not re-starting the bidding process for the Trop until sometime (as yet unspecified) after Labor Day and then having it wrapped up on Oct. 16, six weeks later. Their excuse for this foreshortened timetable is that advisers Moelis & Co. are “just beginning their work,” even though they’ve been on the payroll for over a month and a half. I’m not necessarily saying the Stein-supervised process is slow, but I’ve seen glaciers that moved faster.

The Steins also continue to evince boundless optimism that they’re going to get better offers the second time through the process. Considering that Atlantic City’s revenue numbers have continued to weaken and the economy has not improved, I’d sure like a sniff of whatever “happy dust” they’ve been inhaling. Of course, the blame ultimately redounds to the New Jersey Casino Control Commission for appointing Justice Stein to perform a task for which he has proven, by all outward appearances, manifestly ill-equipped.

On other Trop-related fronts, the prospect that Tropicana Entertainment may renege on Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Harrah's, Indiana, MGM Mirage, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, The Strip | Comments Off on Trop sale stumbles forward … sorta

This is news?; plus Station/Harrah's/Echelon notes

Way back when Vestin Group made a loan to the Castaways that exceeded the doomed casino's appraised value (as revealed by a Vestin-commissioned appraisal that miraculously emerged when the Castaways filed for bankruptcy*), I did some digging into Vestin's financials. As of late 2003/early 2004, roughly one in four of Vestin's high-interest/high-risk loans was non-performing. There was some other odd stuff going on, too, but Greenspun Media — my main freelance outlet at the time — ultimately didn't want to hear about it.

Flash forward four-plus years and Greenspun's crosstown rival is belatedly discovering that it's the same old same-old at Vestin. Which, had a few daily-paper business reporters done their jobs sooner, might have saved a Vestin investor or two from taking it in the shorts. I wonder if they're still on the hook for Vernon Downs, that long-suffering racino in upstate New York into which Vestin threw tens of millions of dollars?

* — the loan was initially made on the basis of a Castaways-supplied appraisal whose valuation was contingent upon a series of contingencies all falling into place.

Station Casinos isn't staggering under its newly acquired debt burden the way that Harrahs' Entertainment has been (see sidebar). While Station picked a bad time to lever up and one layoff is usually one too many — at least if you've ever been in those shoes — it's commendable that Station is concentrating its economies at the corporate level, rather than taking it out on customer service. The same cannot be said of some rival firms.

Speaking of Harrah's, it's actually getting some reporters to buy into its spin that a doubling of its debt-servicing costs (to $468 million) wasn't the reason it lost almost $98 million last quarter.

Let's see … You go from being $237.5 million in the black, this time last year, to $97.6 million in the red — a $335 million-plus swing, roughly $235 million of which is gobbled up by increased interest payments on your $29.7 billion debt load — and that's not your main problem? (coughbaloneycough)

After beating up on the Dogpatch Daily, I'd like to make partial amends by pointing out an excellent piece of enterprise reporting that raises additional questions about Boyd Gaming's due diligence when assembling its Echelon team. The problem? An excessively leveraged General Growth Properties. (Too much debt? Where have I heard that before?)

"A closer look at General Growth then could have shown potential for trouble down the road," writes Benjamin Spillman of Boyd's May 2007 recruitment of GGP. One of his sources, BoomBustBlog.com continues to keep tabs on insider transactions at GGP which, says blogger Reggie Middleton "smack of desperation on the part of the CEO and CFO."

The gracefulness with which Boyd extracted itself from a deteriorating situation at Echelon might not have been necessary had the company been a little choosier on the way in. Maybe Morgans Hotel Group and GGP were the best dance partners Boyd could find; or perhaps it noted Morgans' limited borrowing capacity and GGP's heavily encumbered balance sheet, then hoped for the best.

In the end, it was that choice of partners that would let Echelon down. Morgans squandered money on the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino (the phrase "mid-life crisis" suggests itself) it should have been putting toward less-sexy Echelon, and GGP's business model clearly wasn't built for adversity. KVBC-TV recently described the company's Shoppes at Palazzo as "struggling," so we may see some additional fallout ripple down the Strip. Let's hope not.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Harrah's, Morgans Hotel Group, Station Casinos, The Strip, Wall Street | Comments Off on This is news?; plus Station/Harrah's/Echelon notes

Trop turnaround?

While the New Jersey Casino Control Commission continues to bobble the sale of the Atlantic City Tropicana, at least its stewardship has arrested and perhaps finally the property's decline. While a 5.5% decline in business is nothing to crow over, only Caesars Atlantic City lost less ground, down 4%.

Of course, nobody did remotely as well in dollar volume as the newly augmented Borgata. Whatever struggles Boyd Gaming has experienced in cracking the top, er, echelon on the Las Vegas Strip, it's had the rest of the Atlantic City market playing catch-up, mostly without success, for five years now.

As for the Trop, its gambling revenues are still just keeping pace with Showboat Atlantic City, a property with 7% fewer slots and half the poker/table game capacity. So, while the NJCCC has largely stanched the bleeding, the problem of an attenuated market share remains. Thanks, Columbia Sussex. Don't let that doorknob hit you on the way out.

But the Trop's doing way better than Trump Marina, whose owners — coming off a wretched quarter and not yet having booked the $316 million they're getting for Trump Marina — are merely considering using the money to pay down debt. After all they could "look elsewhere for growth opportunities" — like Panama. (I kid you not.) That's quintessential Donald Trump: Don't address your problems; just run away.

(Presumably the new "Chairman" tower at Trump Taj Mahal is supposed to evoke the glowering, orange-haired Trump himself. But, if you grew up in the Sixties, "the Chairman" was Mao Tse-tung or maybe — if you were just a few years older — the Chairman of the Board himself, one Francis Albert Sinatra. I guarantee that no one will ever call Trump "the Chairman." Ever.)

Golden Heartland: Coming soon-ish to a Kansas near you?

Golden Gaming's PR peeps contacted me to very politely dispute my characterization of Golden as a probable also-ran in the Kansas casino sweepstakes (see "Don't tax me, bro!"). They pointed to CEO Blake Sartini's 15 years in the upper ranks of Station Casinos, his 40-tavern operation in Nevada, the Pahrump Nugget and a trio of Black Hawk, Colo., casinos (with an aggregate of 778 slots and no table games).

I would respond that Golden's most imposing rival in Kansas, Mohegan Sun, probably has a larger installed slot base in its Connecticut casino alone (a mind-boggling 6,199 one-armed bandits) than Golden probably has in all its 40-plus properties rolled together. That Colorado is the minor leagues, casino-wise. That all those taverns, nice as they are (and they're some of the very poshest in Nevada), amount to one big-ass slot route — no disrespect intended. And that we're talking about a $600 million casino-resort contract — far, far bigger than anything Golden has attempted.

Bottom line: I still think Golden is very much the underdog in Kansas. In fact, I'm even more convinced of it. Which isn't to say it won't pull off a stunning upset. But, given the scale of operation that the State of Kansas wants to see, Mohegan Sun's resumé makes the most logical fit.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Colorado, Columbia Sussex, Donald Trump, Harrah's, Kansas, Station Casinos, Tribal | Comments Off on Trop turnaround?

More bankruptcies predicted

Financial Week weighs in the casino industry's current doldrums, amplifying the newly recurrent refrain that the revenue diversification which we thought would shield Las Vegas and other destination markets from the bad times is instead increasing its exposure to same. A gentleman over at RateVegas.com/blog was asking why Boyd Gaming said Echelon didn't "make sense" without its retail-mall and boutique-hotel components.

I was a bit stumped for an answer. Aesthetically, Echelon might have looked lopsided if it had opened without those amenities. But, with a bit more foresight, Boyd might have advisedly split the project into phases and mothballed the more troubled southern half before any significant work was done. (Sort of the way Sheldon Adelson once planned to launch successive "Venetian" and "Lido" resorts — a plan that came a-cropper betwixt the Venetian's craptacular opening, the '01 recession and the post-9/11 blight.)

Such a bifurcation of Echelon would have left the core of the project, including the casino and the Anschutz Entertainment Group-steered concert hall, intact. Hugh Jackson's previously-cited analysis that Boyd got caught up in emulating CityCenter and consequently bit off more than it could chew seems especially pertinent to this aspect of Echelon's freeze. Or, as my Mom used to tell me at the buffet line, "Your eyes are bigger than your stomach."

Of course, we don't have access to whatever financial models Boyd used to determine that the mall, and the Mondrian and Delano hotels planned by attention-deficient Morgans Hotel Group were essential to project's fiscal health. Morgans' contribution can't have been that integral, seeing as Boyd stated publicly that it wasn't necessary that Mondrian and Delano open alongside the rest of Echelon. (Of course, that was back when there was still a slim hope that Morgans could raise the money, so positive thinking was the order of the day.)

Boyd ultimately made the right call and is, again, to be congratulated for going through with what could have been a humiliating decision. I just can't help wondering if coming to that realization sooner might have meant keep at least part of Echelon moving forward for the time being.

Does this look like a $5 billion project to you?

Further down in the Financial Week piece, it forecasts bankruptices for Indiana's usual market laggard, French Lick Resort & Casino, and for Herbst Gaming, which has missed two interest payments. (News that got little, if any, play around here.) Meanwhile, Elad Properties and IDB Group must know something we don't, because they've got their Plaza project budgeted at $4.75 billion-$6.75 billion, once land costs are backed out.

Whatever crystal ball they're using, some folks in Las Vegas would like to borrow it, probably starting with Jim Murren. After all, Moody's is predicting we're going to have endure another year of this slump before the good times return.

Knee-jerk Journalism 101. Our local papers don't usually make it a practice to deride the very conventioneers upon whose patronage we're so reliant. However, exceptions are annually made for the people attending the porn-industry show and the ones who turn out for the Star Trek Convention at the Las Vegas Hilton.

Hence the Las Vegas Sun is treating us to the obligatory "Let's make fun of these strange Trekkies" story. What really puzzles me is that a story about a concert that took place on Saturday didn't run until Tuesday morning. Evidently the rapid-response capabilities of a Web-based business model are as nothing when pitted against human indolence.

Update: The Las Vegas Review-Journal's Doug Elfman shows how this kind of story can and should be done. Bravo, Mr. Elfman.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Herbst Gaming, Indiana, Morgans Hotel Group, Sheldon Adelson, The Strip, TV, Wall Street | Comments Off on More bankruptcies predicted

Quote of the Day

"Something which is fairly unique to a city the size of Las Vegas, is that the decisions of one or two individuals have the power to destabilize the entire city. We’re a one trick town … with only a few magicians." — Blogger 'Vegas Rex' on the Echelon shutdown (with video).

Posted in Boyd Gaming, The Strip | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Case Bets: Luxor, Excalibur, Cannery East

MGM Mirage has provided a little more insight into just how much it’s doing in terms of spending on renovations to Luxor and Excalibur. “We are spending around $100M in improvements on each of these properties this year, and we have invested millions more since the 2005 merger,” writes a company representative (emphasis added).

You could argue that Excalibur needs a lot more than that — or maybe just some well-placed dynamite — but it’s good to see something being done. It’s an open secret that Mandalay Resort Group let things slide at its Strip properties while MGM’s buyout was in progress, leaving the new owners with a lot of remedial work to do.

Out-of-towners who haven’t seen Eastside Cannery arising along the Boulder Strip may enjoy this funky montage of its nightly light show. The building is an extremely striking addition to the eastside, dominating the landscape for miles around much as Sam’s Town used to do. Poor Sam’s Town: It used to look so monumental and now it’s dwarfed by the upstart down the street. (For the record, Cannery Casino Resorts only manages Rampart Casino and it’s [CCR] being bought out by Crown Ltd., not Melco PBL.)

Posted in Boulder Strip, Boyd Gaming, Cannery Casino Resorts, James Packer, MGM Mirage, The Strip | Comments Off on Case Bets: Luxor, Excalibur, Cannery East

Don't tax me, bro!

Guess who's kvetching about his property tax bill? Why it's our old buddy, Columbia Sussex CEO William J. Yung III — or at least his surrogates at Horizon Vicksburg. It's been the better part of a year since Yung announced the sale of this riverboat to Nevada Gold, yet the deal still hasn't closed. (Too bad, because the promise of that $35 million was being used to palliate angry debtholders last winter.)

Even though Olympia Gaming and Las Vegas Sands have bailed out of their respective pursuits of casino ownership in Kansas' Wyandotte County, two Vegas-based companies are still in the running. Pinnacle Entertainment has a lot of irons in the fire already and its wait-and-see attitude toward Atlantic City development may not be what the Kansas Lottery Gaming Facilities Review Board (now there's a mouthful!) wants to hear. Golden Gaming's experience, a brief stint at the Vegas Hard Rock Hotel & Casino aside, is of the small-scale variety, which may also provoke skepticism.

While tribal powerhouse Mohegan Sun is hurting on the Uncasville homefront lately, it's coming off a solid performance in Pennsylvania. I like its chances. Cordish Cos., whose pursuit of the Atlantic City Tropicana was recently rebuffed (for no good reason), is obviously itching to get into the casino industry in a big way. Perhaps its proven track record as a developer will outweigh its inexperience in the casinosphere.

Posted in Atlantic City, Columbia Sussex, Kansas, Mississippi, Morgans Hotel Group, Pennsylvania, Pinnacle Entertainment, Sheldon Adelson, Taxes, Tribal | Comments Off on Don't tax me, bro!

Robbing Luxor to pay (for) CityCenter?

No sooner had MGM Mirage brass sprayed Wall Street’s fire during yesterday’s earnings call than comes a new scare: Glenn Hausmann of Hotel Interactive Inc. reported that “A variety of industry suppliers who wished to speak off the record have told Hotel Interactive that the company has been diverting cash from planned renovations at Excalibur and Luxor into the CityCenter project.

A source at MGM responds that Hausmann’s got it half right, that spending reductions are taking place, but: “The changes in project spending are not as a result of diverting funds to CityCenter.” The source adds that Hausmann has subsequently spoken with MGM and stricken the paragraph in question, which had followed the quote by MGM CFO Dan D’Arrigo.

Luxor is a potentially problematic situation because it’s still in the middle of a big retheming (or, more accurately, a revision). The spending slowdown might explain why the switchover of the Titanic exhibit from the Tropicana is taking so long. And somebody should clue in the Trop that Bodies is over at Luxor now, regardless of what the Trop’s Web site says.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, MGM Mirage, The Strip | Comments Off on Robbing Luxor to pay (for) CityCenter?

Sands: More is sometimes less

One of the advantages of availing oneself of Las Vegas' public-transit system is that affords me plenty of time to read corporate filings. Such was the case this morning, when I spent some quality time belatedly curling up with Las Vegas Sands' 2Q08 report.

There's been some scattered evidence, here and there, that Palazzo and Venetian are leeching off one another instead of devouring others' market share. For instance, their combined operating income only slightly exceeded that of hard-hit Sands Macao during the first six months of 2008.

But LVS' decision to mulch together several categories of Palazzo/Venetian revenue clouds the picture of each megaresort's impact on the other. Instead of clear-cut comparisons between Venetian and Palazzo retail, entertainment and F&B revenues, LVS offers some cumed numbers for both properties, followed by two paragraphs of uninformative bombast.

The Venetian: older but (performing) better

The most interesting sentence in the entire filing was this disclosure: "The Venetian's occupancy of available guestrooms decreased to 90.6% [in 2Q08] … as we chose to spread a portion of The Venetian's booked business over the 7,100 total suite inventory of the combined Venetian and Palazzo complex." If that means what I think it means, LVS was shifting bookings to Palazzo to bulk up the latter's occupancy rate, which clocked in at 93%. (Venetian occupancy was 101% a year ago.) Although Venetian ADRs were just smidgen higher than Palazzo ones, the latter produced 2% more revenue per room. Overall, a 51.7% increase in rooms brought a 52.6% uptick in room revenues. So far, so good.

Despite a comparable number of table games (131 to 128), Venetian absolutely clobbered Palazzo there, generating 37% more win per table. At the slots, the older property came out 22% ahead, largely by dint of having 300 more machines at its disposal.

The opening of Venetian Macao appears to have really kneecapped Sands Macao. Hotel occupancy actually rose but ADRs plummeted 32%. Slot win per machine was up 16%, perhaps because 305 machines had been yanked from the floor, but slot business was still competitive with Venetian Macao. Table play was better (+14% per table) at Venetian Macao, though, even with a significantly higher number of gambling positions.

Lesson: Sometimes more is more. (Does this make Sands Macao the de facto 'slot joint'?)

In a month Four Season Macao opens, whereupon things should get very interesting. The mid-sized (by LVS standards) Marina Bay project in Singapore is pegged for a 4Q09 debut, but management's official statements are vague about the opening date for Sands Casino Resort Bethlehem. Going with LVS there was one of the relatively few decisions Pennsylvania's gaming commission got spectacularly right, selecting a developer who had the cattle to go with the hat.

Remember: A rival bidder was cheapskate Columbia Sussex, parent of insolvent Tropicana Entertainment, and heaven only knows what a mess the Bethelehem project would be if the Keystone State had gone that route. It might make the Don Barden trainwreck in Pittsburgh look like a mere fender-bender.

It's a metaphysical certainty that, regardless of when it opens, Sands Bethlehem will be the poshest of the Pennsylvania casinos, setting the standard for any that follow. It not only extends the LVS brand (however you define it) into new markets, the cash flow will provide a reassuring hedge against growing (over?)exposure in Macao.

Also, with debt creeping upward — but still well short of backbreaking Harrah's-like levels — and early retirement of same down 62% in the first half of '08 (and practically nonexistent in 2Q08) LVS could definitely use the extra money.

Curtains for downtown arena? Bits and pieces of the acreage accumulated for the REI Neon arena/condo/casino/anything-else-you-can-think-of project are being peddled off. I have to agree with the Sun's editors here and add that I've suspected for a while that REI Neon was but a stalking horse for opening up what used to be (part of) the Arts District to casinos.

Then again, anybody foolhardy enough to build a casino out on that fringe of downtown Vegas would be so isolated from both the Strip and the downtown gaming district that he'd be unlikely to scare up the needed critical mass of traffic. Besides, I don't know if you fellows behind that stalking horse have noticed, but the casino-centric business model has already been tried downtown and found wanting. The word "diversification" mean anything?

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Don Barden, Downtown, Harrah's, Macau, Pennsylvania, Sheldon Adelson, The Strip, Wall Street | Comments Off on Sands: More is sometimes less

Isle reduces risk in Florida

As we’re seeing, it’s not always a bad idea to scrap or delay an expansion. Such is the case with Isle of Capri‘s decision to allow the expiration of an agreement with Florida Gaming Corp. to turn Miami Jai-Alai into a slot parlor. Isle couldn’t even be bothered to announce the news. (Can’t imagine why.)

With the various Seminole casinos ramping up their offerings something fierce, Isle has its hands full defending market share at Pompano Park. The non-tribal Florida market just hasn’t been the bonanza anyone expected and Boyd Gaming‘s decision to hold off converting its own jai-alai fronton now appears prescient. Wall Street reacted favorably, with ISLE continuing to trend upward.

Perhaps we should have foreseen this. The Seminoles had a track record, a customer base, a brand name (Hard Rock) — and now they have table games. Newcomers to the market had a tough row to hoe before and now it looks darn near impossible, unless the Seminoles have to revert to Class II gaming (and that’s unlikely to happen anytime soon). Florida Gaming Corp., meanwhile, will try to find other takers for its faded fronton. Good luck with that.

Bury this in Boot Hill. It looks like yet another Kansas casino proposal may be about to bite the dust. Butler National Corp., a manufacturing concern that’s trying to take a flier into casino ownership (shades of Galaxy Entertainment, right to down to renting the Navegante Group braintrust) is pitching a low-budget, smallish (800 slot) casino. Trouble is, Butler’s a wee bit short on cash and needs an equity partner who will rescue the project but agree to take a back seat.

From Rick Alm‘s description, this is a Hail Mary play by a penny-stock company — a big red flag. However, the Boot Hill Casino that Butler is proposing for Dodge City sounds far more aesthetically appealing that the tacky-looking, theme-park-ish competing proposal. But the latter has the not-inconsiderable advantages of a larger upfront investment and previous in-house casino experience.

If would-be casino operators keep dropping out at the present rate of attrition, the lottery commission’s selection process will become downright Darwinian.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Florida, Isle of Capri, Kansas, Tribal | Comments Off on Isle reduces risk in Florida

Case Bets: MGM Mirage, Ameristar, Penn National

It almost goes without saying right now that any earnings report is going to come in slightly below Wall Street’s consensus. That’s just the way the dice are bouncing these days. Such is the case with MGM Mirage, where Strip revenues are down 6% year/year, but JP Morgan finds some pleasant surprises in the Beau Rivage and MGM Grand Detroit numbers.

The Strip results also bear out what Majestic Research has been diligently reporting all along — a separation between MGM’s highest-tier properties, Bellagio and Mandalay Bay, which continue to ascend to the top (+14.4% at M’Bay) while the others lag, “especially the lower end.” MGM’s buyout of Mandalay Resort Group looked better on paper than the Harrah’s Entertainment/Caesars Entertainment one because MGM’s risk was spread between all price categories, including the bargain niche. Who could have foreseen this turn of events?

But there are glimmers of light at the end of the tunnel, particularly with regard to Continue reading

Posted in Ameristar, Colorado, Detroit, Harrah's, Illinois, Indiana, MGM Mirage, Penn National, The Strip, Wall Street | Comments Off on Case Bets: MGM Mirage, Ameristar, Penn National

Ola, Amigo!

As of yesterday, I'm a newly minted Amigo card holder, having joined Station Casinos' spinoff players club for its Fiesta properties. (Chalk up a very modest victory for Fiesta's spirited marketing efforts.) Why Station, having put nearly a decade of effort into building up Boarding Pass, went and pulled it from the two Fiestas in favor of a new card without any brand equity … well, that's a puzzler.

Perhaps its a way of repositioning the Fiestas for sale, though this is a heckuva time to be peddling assets, even if Station has a trainload of debt to pay down. If that's the case (and I'm 101% speculating here), Station wouldn't be the only company in town to discover that it missed the boat when it came to offloading non-core assets.

Whatever the case, I now have $6.63 in "Samurai Master" winnings to show for my shiny new players card. Yup, "whale" is my middle name.

But what to make of Fiesta Henderson? An "Amigo" here and an El Pollo Loco there, and it's still about as Latin as Nelson Mandela in a  sombrero. In the older part of the casino floor the African decor ill-advisedly chosen by original owner Ameristar Casinos is still luxuriating about at every turn. It's not hard to see some of the reasons why, in its original incarnation as The Reserve, this was a rare Ameristar mega-goof, one which has apparently scared the company off the Vegas market to this day.

When it opened, in early 1998, The Reserve was operating in the shadow of Sunset Station (which was also bigger, more fashionable, and a lot closer to where the people were). Even by locals-casino standards of that time, The Reserve had a small casino floor, rendered dark and claustrophobic by the Trader Horn design scheme, with its big fake trees and heavy canopies. Station has considerably enlarged the place and substantially upped the number of amenities. The Station-built side is airier and more appealing, if visually nondescript.

If you look at it from Station's standpoint, with two flagship properties on the Boulder Strip, it made sense not to knock themselves out re-doing The Reserve. They were endeavoring the best of a bad situation: agreeing to take a dud casino off the hands of Craig H. Neilsen so that Station could make a quick getaway from Missouri, where Ameristar assumed control of Station's scandal-brushed riverboats. So what's now Fiesta Henderson arrived on Station's doorstep as sort of a red-headed stepchild and the trick was to make it thrive without eating into business at favored sons Sunset or Boulder Station.

As for the "Fiesta" brand, it was one that George Maloof had grown into marquee value up in North Las Vegas. Unfortunately, Station didn't seem to know what to do with it after buying Maloof out, so now "Fiesta" is just a means of designating casinos that don't rate the "Station" moniker but which are a healthy cut above a Wildfire or a Lake Mead Lounge, to say the least.

So I'm left figuring out where Fiesta Henderson fits into the grand scheme of things. If Arizona Charlie's Boulder has gotten too dingy for you, I can definitely see the appeal. But there's no question that nearby Sunset Station is the infinitely superior casino-hotel product, unless you crave a more a laid-back experience, away from the teenybopper crowd, in which case Fiesta Henderson might float your boat.

Kudos to Fiesta management, by the way, for recycling all the used paper from its bingo rooms. The question for other casinos in town is: Why aren't you doing the same?

Speaking of themed casinos, former bargain-casino mogul Gary Primm is back in the news these days, as though to remind us who we have to thank for New York-New York, home of — among other things — the Strip's most dysfunctional sports book. (You have to sit in the slot stools on the other side of the corridor to see the TV screens without requiring the services of a chiropractor.)

MGM Mirage is in the process of effecting an upgrade on the property, one of several they've had to perform in order to gradually de-Primm-ify it. NY-NY was far from the worst of the hyper-themed casinos (Excalibur, anyone?) but it wasn't until the tail end of the cycle, when Paris-Las Vegas was rolled out, that it seemed possible anyone (the late Arthur Goldberg, in this case) could go that route and wind up with something stylish.

Posted in Ameristar, Boulder Strip, George Maloof, Harrah's, MGM Mirage, Station Casinos, The Strip | Comments Off on Ola, Amigo!

Man Bites Dog Dept.

A Republican senator running for reelection on the strength of his good relationship with … Sen. Barack Obama?!? Between that and the strong possibility that Sen. John McCain could win the presidency and yet see the national GOP sustain tremendous losses, it’s the topsy-turviest election year I’ve ever seen.

Silliest Echelon Objection Yet. While Boyd Gaming‘s decision to mothball Echelon for a year has played to across-the-board raves in the financial community, not everyone agrees. A union exec pouts that the unfinished project will be an “eyesore” that will affront the delicate sensibilities of visitors. (Having 800 of his men suddenly idled surely plays more than a peripheral role in Mr. Ross’ sudden concern for aesthetics.) Heck, there are several eyesores along the Strip already — and they’re open for business.

Update: An analyst for BMO Capital Markets seconds the “eyesore” sentiment regarding Echelon, adding “embarrassment” for good measure. But his overall verdict can be summed up as, Better a loss of dignity now than a loss of money further down the road.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Election, Politics, The Strip, Wall Street | Comments Off on Man Bites Dog Dept.

Boyd Has Brass Balls

Yesterday, I got a hint that Something Big was going to be announced in today’s Boyd Gaming earnings report. Little did I suspect it would be the completely unprecedented (in my recollection) step of halting a megaresort project in mid-stream and taking 9-12 months to see how the tourism and credit markets shake out. This was a gutsy call, one certain to provoke depression in the local media and perhaps panic investors.

To its great credit, Wall Street not only rolled with the news, it even heaved a collective sigh of relief, rewarding Boyd with a 20% stock price increase in a single day’s trading. Seems that analysts not only doubted Boyd’s ability to pull the project off but feared it would capsize the company, never mind adding to a coming capacity glut along Las Vegas Boulevard. (Perhaps those are the same analysts who want Boyd to sell the land — worth as much as $3 billion — and quit the Strip.)

If I had to guess — and I do, because Boyd is being a bit coy about the timeline of its decision — I’d hazard that it was General Growth Properties18-month postponement of the High Street mall component that forced the issue. The planned mall anchors the southeast corner of the project and its absence would leave a conspicuous gap, to put it mildly. Then subtract the Mondrian and Delano hotels on the property’s south side, and you’ve wiped the slate clean of most everything on the left side of the above rendering (borrowed from VegasTodayAndTomorrow.com).

Morgans Hotel Group has thrown in the towel on obtaining financing for its two-hotel commitment, making Morgans the skunk at the picnic. It played tattle-tale, rushing out the news of Echelon’s freeze 90 minutes prior to Boyd’s own announcement. The high-end hotelier even had the gumption to issue a press release implying that it was Boyd’s fault the pieces didn’t come together. Boyd came through with its equity, in the form of the land, but Morgans could never get its ducks in a row.

In a sense, the fate of the Mondrian/Delano component was sealed when playboy (ex-)CEO Ed Scheetz went haring off course and bought the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, for reasons still unclear. (It goes with the rest of Morgans’ portfolio about as well as white shoes with a charcoal gray business suit.) Maybe Scheetz felt a need to outdo predecessor Ian Schrager.

Ed Scheetz, master of disaster

Extended to the limit by its Hard Rock purchase, not to mention a costly series of upgrades and expansions, Morgans seemed to lose sight of its preexisting commitment to Echelon. Instead of wrapping up financing for Mondrian and Delano while the markets were still flush, the company dithered around with trying to fix a property (the Hard Rock) that wasn’t broken and pursuing a Nevada gaming license.

Boyd has indicated that it’s in ongoing talks with Morgans, but that sounds like whistling past the graveyard. Morgans was the first of Boyd’s joint-venture partners to drop the ball, long before GGP did, and Boyd would be well shot of the hotelier that can’t make up its mind. Even now, after initially talking about jacking up ADRs and repositioning the Hard Rock for Morgans’ customer upscale base, it’s done a full 180 and is going into business with porn stars.

If you can filter out the anti-casino rhetoric, Hugh Jackson has an interesting take on What Went Wrong: “... over the years, as Boyd kept making noises about what it would ultimately do with the Stardust site, the company’s eyes just kept growing and growing, and the obsession to become one of the cool kids on the Strip became, well, palpable. It was almost as if Boyd somehow felt that its hitherto dependable revenue model …. was somehow inferior, or distasteful, and in any case not snazzy and glamorous …”

That analysis assumes that something like Stardust 2.0 would cut it on today’s Strip and I don’t for a minute think it would. Just remember what an anachronism the New Frontier became: a stinky dive that was like a B- or C-level locals joint that had been supersized and mistakenly plunked across from the stylish Desert Inn. I don’t know if Boyd bit off more than it could chew (at least in an inflationary market driven by myriad rival condo and hotel markets) but its JV partners sure did.

With Borgata and Water Club in Atlantic City, Boyd has proven twice over that it can execute a high-end property. And even if it were to throw in the towel on Echelon (possibly forever dooming the company to second-tier status in the eyes of the industry and media), this is the worst time to fling 65 acres or so of Strip land onto the market, especially with other properties — Riviera, Tropicana, San Remo/Hooters — going begging.

It took some cojones to make this move. But it was the right one and it’s good to see Wall Street lining up in support.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Morgans Hotel Group, Riviera, The Strip, Wall Street | Comments Off on Boyd Has Brass Balls

Ameristar: What makes sense?

Perhaps this is what happens when you outsource your business coverage to India, but Reuters had a story yesterday positing MGM Mirage and Harrah's Entertainment as two of the likeliest buyers for Ameristar Casinos.

Uhhh, I hate to break this to Reuters, but MGM just came up $3 billion and change short on CityCenter and Harrah's is debt-strapped. So I'd say they've got their hands full. How either one would be able to swing an Ameristar acquisition is an open question. Harrah's also faces redundancy issues, as it already owns riverboats in three of Ameristar's key markets — Council Bluffs, Iowa, and St. Charles and Kansas City, Mo. Why MGM would feel a sudden hankering for Black Hawk, Colo., plus a brace of casinos in Jackpot, Nev., is even more of a poser.

Reuters' third suggestion, Boyd Gaming, seems a lot closer to the mark. With Echelon temporarily in the deep freeze and Boyd's Blue Chip riverboat leaking market share, a passel of regional casinos in markets where Boyd doesn't currently operate could provide welcome cash flow, shore up the company against its current non-presence on the Strip, and expand the web of properties from which Boyd could funnel players into its downtown Vegas cluster or (eventually) Echelon. Of course, Boyd may still be smarting from a failed Kansas City venture a decade ago, but Ameristar's assets are proven performers.

Besides, it's a company that could use some helmsmanship, having seemed to drift since the demise of CEO Craig H. Neilsen. Although paralyzed from the neck down and often bed-bound (which I've heard resulted in some very unconventional corporate meetings), Neilsen achieved more from the neck up than most able-bodied people do in their entire lifetimes. His successor, ex-Harrah's exec John Boushy, tried to sell the Ameristar people on a change of corporate culture but they didn't want to hear about it. So, given an evident leadership vacuum, a change of ownership makes sense.

Unless Penn National wants to take its $1 billion-plus in "mad money" and go after Ameristar, there aren't too other many potential acquirers abroad in the land. James Packer has already sworn off. Pinnacle Entertainment would rather build than buy. Tribal giant Mohegan Sun has been flexing its financial muscle of late and rates as a longshot candidate (but just came off a wretched second quarter). Beyond that … who knows?

Posted in Ameristar, Boyd Gaming, Downtown, Harrah's, James Packer, MGM Mirage, Mississippi, Missouri, Penn National, Pinnacle Entertainment, The Strip, Tribal, Wall Street | Comments Off on Ameristar: What makes sense?

America's biggest celebrity

Sen. John McCain‘s presidential campaign rolled out a unique tactic this week: complaining that McCain’s opponent is more popular and famous. I suppose you could call it “out of the box” thinking, though it seems a tad whiny to me.

(McCain’s ad about Hispanic-Americans shows a far nobler side and is notable for its sobriety and lack of flash. It also takes some cojones to run it, given the virulent anti-Latino sentiment that infects much of the GOP “base” (in multiple senses of the word), especially here in Nevada.

But the McCain people have it all wrong. America’s heftiest celebrity is 44-pound stray cat Princess Chunk, the heaviest domestic pussycat in the world. This exemplar of avoirdupois is already scheduled to appear on Good Morning America and Live with Regis and Kelly. Surely the Today show is chomping at the bit to get in on the action. News of the giant feline has made headlines at least as far as Australia — although I seriously doubt that an American cat-caregiver would say, “how do you lose a 20-kilo cat?” (Journalistic license, mayhap?)

Even Princess ( Captain) Chunk’s gender is a source of confusion, so we may to settle on plain old “Chunk.” Or “Powder,” its given name. And, in a “ripped from the headlines” touch worth of Law & Order, it turns out that Chunk/Powder is just the latest victim of the nationwide foreclosure crisis. Powder’s elderly owner found herself out on the street and turned the poor — if portly — kitty loose, which is why it was found lumbering about Voorhees, N.J., which sure is getting its 15 minutes of fame.

Anyway, it looks like the behemoth feline will soon find a new home — and if he/she/it doesn’t, maybe Mandalay Bay can give it a comfy domicile. Chunk/Powder might even outdraw that other big bruiser, the Komodo Dragon.

Posted in Animals, Current, Election, Pets, Politics, TV | Comments Off on America's biggest celebrity

Honey, I shrank Lake Las Vegas

Saying that a potentially ruptured pipe could drain Lake Las Vegas and turn it into one big-ass mud puddle in the desert conjures up quite an image. It’s also effective rhetoric if you’re trying to stampede the bankruptcy court into approving a $127 million loan, no questions asked (or at least answered). If asked to make a bet, I’d place my wager with the Nevada state engineer who puts the chances of a big sucking sound at Lake Las Vegas “way out there.” (The big sucking sound that is the resort community’s financial future is another matter entirely.)

And, if it does happen, the first thought that sprang to my mind was the same one that Steve Friess had, namely that the A-list likes of Celine Dion and Natalie Gulbis won’t be any too thrilled “to live around a big, smelly pit full of stuff that reckless boaters have been pitching overboard for years.” Heck, I tried wading out there recently and the lake water is pretty dodgy as it is.

Lake LV is starting to look like the second coming of The Resort at Summerlin, which some may remember as Swiss Casinos‘ vastly overbudgeted venture into the suburban Vegas market. (Its casino is now managed by the Cannery Resorts folks.) Problems like excessive cost and executive hubris aside, R@S failed in large part because it tried to create a market out of thin air: Palm Springs-style golf vacations which would involve coming to Vegas but staying well away from the Strip. As a business model, it didn’t live up the hype.

I’ve held off saying this for a long time, but Lake LV displays some of the same symptoms. It’s too close to the Strip to qualify as a getaway and yet far enough away to make it a real hassle if you want to stay out there and yet still experience Sin City at its finest. (The jury’s still out on whether similar factors will dampen Red Rock Resort‘s high-end aspirations, making it “just” an extremely swanky locals casino with fantastic meeting facilities.)

Not to put too fine a point on it: It’s a pain in the ass to get to Lake LV and some of that appears to be literally by design. Its landscaping and narrow, winding approach connote exclusivity, as does much else there (like the flighty retail offerings). You half-expect snipers hidden in the rocks to pick off vehicles deemed insufficiently chi-chi. So the local market is unlikely to embrace or even have much use for it. After all, you’d have to be a mighty hardcore player to drive all the way out to Casino MonteLago (above) when it entails bypassing numerous gambling options, including Fiesta Henderson, to get there.

Palms Springs is Palm Springs in large part because it is isolated. You couldn’t achieve something like that, say, just 17 miles outside of San Diego. Same with Lake LV, R@S, etc. Being simultaneously of and yet slightly away from Las Vegas isn’t working out so far. Lake LV wants to be a tourist magnet and a hideout for the super-rich, but having it both ways is proving a tightrope act without a net — or maybe just without a lake, if that pipe doesn’t hold.

Penitentiary Station. Did you know that inmates at the Nevada State Prison (the former site of the Warm Springs Hotel) used to be allowed to gamble? It’s true (see sidebar). Then some spoilsport went and outlawed it in 1967.

Now, it seems to me that with the state facing a revenue crunch and a governor who’d rather close prisons than raise taxes, that our lawmakers have been overlooking an opportunity: Bring back the craps games in the Big House! Heck, throw in some slots while you’re at it. Make the holds real tight, too, because it’s not like your customer base can take its business elsewhere.

Besides, it might shut up all those soreheads who write to the newspaper to complain that prisoners get paid to make license plates, etc., instead of being used as slave labor or as fodder for medical experiments. Convicts’ wages would just be going right back into the state treasury — after United Coin or whomever takes its cut, of course. Maybe it’d be the business opportunity that snaps slot-route operator Herbst Gaming out of its doldrums. Why, it’s a state/private sector win-win!

And I thought my cats were heavy. You could put my threesome on the scale together and they’d still be outweighed by 44-lb. Princess Chunk, found “waddling around” Voorhees, N.J., last weekend. Sounds like some feral cats — well, one anyway — have been eating even better than ones who have a predictable source of food and three squares a day.

Posted in Animals, Herbst Gaming, Lake Las Vegas, Pets, Station Casinos | Comments Off on Honey, I shrank Lake Las Vegas

We're no Pyongyang!

A story about an unsightly, unfinished ziggurat in Pyongyang, North Korea afforded an architecture critic an opportunity to throw a roundhouse right at Las Vegas. Lumping it together with Shanghai as the bad-architecture capital of the world, California Polytechnic State University (San Obispo) Architecture Dept. professor Bruno Gilberti couldn’t single out a single Vegas property for opprobrium, lumping the entire Strip together as something that “has no authentic sense of place and is thus more than a little soulless.”

Well, unlike Gilberti, I can nominate a single-worst building in Las Vegas and it’s … Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, Columbia Sussex, Downtown, Harrah's, Michael Gaughan, Stanley Ho, The Strip | Comments Off on We're no Pyongyang!