We stand corrected

Stiffs & Georges has to regretfully retract part of last Friday’s “News Flash.” Yes, the Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation (of whom more later) have bought 8.5 acres one block off the Las Vegas Strip. However, the parcel is to the west of Las Vegas Boulevard. The seemingly desirable Skyvue site remains unsold (or at least untransferred) until today. As eagle-eyed Las Vegas Advisor reader Peter Bijlsma writes, “The lot that was sold to The Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation is not the SkyVue site at the Strip. According to the Assessor records they bought the parcel with APN 162-28-202-013 at 95 East Ali Baba Lane. This is the lot between E Ali Baba Lane, Giles St and E Mandalay Bay Rd. Sale price was $12 million. [emphasis added] It’s across the street from The Oasis Apartments complex which was sold to ED-Den Investment Co. LLC. for $15.6 million.”

Posted in Real Estate, The Strip, Tribal | Comments Off on We stand corrected

Quote of the Day

“The volume is incredible. We’ve lost people in their twenties and several in their thirties. Some of these people have zero comorbidities … I don’t see any light at the end of the tunnel right now.”—Alabama-based Dr. David Thrasher on the inexorable spread of Covid-19.

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Borgata’s new look

… and sundry other MGM Resorts International news. Go, Las Vegas Aces!

Posted in Atlantic City, Baseball, Health, MGM Resorts International, Sports, Sports betting | 1 Comment

Shopping the Trop; Nobu no-no

An unnamed hotel-casino on the Las Vegas Strip is being quietly advertised on private-equity forums. It’s listed as a “brand name” property that’s been in operation for over 30 years. The age would seem to suggest The Mirage (born 1989) but it’s too big—3,044 rooms—to fit the description, although nothing else on Las Vegas Boulevard is of comparable vintage. Excalibur? Almost as old but even bigger. No, the casino in question is advertised as having 1,500 hotel rooms, four restaurants and a 48,437-square-foot gaming floor. What hotel-casino fits those specs? Why, our old friend the Tropicana Las Vegas. Number of hotel rooms? Check. Four restaurants? Check. Casino square footage? 45,000 square feet but close enough. Convention and exhibition space? Check and check. Plus, new owner Gaming & Leisure Properties is empowered to flip the place and manager Penn National Gaming gets a cut of the sale proceeds if the deed (pardon the pun) is done in the next couple of years. The anonymous seller may have shaved a few decades off the Trop’s age but you don’t ask a lady how old she is—and the Trop has been around for “30-plus” years.

Prospective buyers? Twin River Holdings is aiming higher. Hard Rock International has been kicking the tires of The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas. What about Maverick Gaming? No, they’re retrenching at the moment. An enterprising Native American tribe perhaps? A North Dakota band just bought the Skyvue site and Mohegan Sun will shortly be at Virgin Hotel Las Vegas. Your move, Foxwoods.

Posted in Affinity Gaming, Boulder Strip, Boyd Gaming, California, CityCenter, Connecticut, Cosmopolitan, Current, Dining, Downtown, Election, GLPI, Hard Rock International, Health, Hooters, Las Vegas Sands, Law enforcement, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maverick Gaming, MGM Resorts International, Mohegan Sun, Nevada, North Las Vegas, Penn National, Planet Hollywood, Politics, Real Estate, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Station Casinos, The Rio, The Strip, Transportation, Tribal, Twin River, Virgin Hotels, Wall Street, Wynn Resorts | Comments Off on Shopping the Trop; Nobu no-no

Quote of the Day

“For the sake of television, the Red Sox and Orioles went though all the traditional pre-game rituals. There was red, white, and blue bunting on the upper deck facade, and four rows of cardboard-cutout fans filled the Monster Seats—it looked a little like the cover of the BeatlesSgt. Pepper album — but the official attendance was 00,000 when Nathan Eovaldi threw a 100 mile-per-hour first pitch to Baltimore center fielder Austin Hays at 7:33 p.m.”—Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaughnessy on an MLB opening day in the era of Covid-19.

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Quote of the Day

“You can’t have climate change without sacrifice zones, and you can’t have sacrifice zones without disposable people, and you can’t have disposable people without racism.”—Sierra Club Director of Strategic Partnerships Hop Hopkins.

Posted in Diversity, Environment | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

News flash

Now we know who has bought the Skyvue site, late of Howard Bulloch and favored hangout of Tiny the Tumbleweed. It was purchased out of bankruptcy by the Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation. More details as they become available. Meanwhile, the Indians aren’t coming to Las Vegas: They’re here.

Posted in Current, The Strip, Tribal | 2 Comments

Case Bets

Something good came out of Washington, D.C. today. (How often can one type that sentence?) Reps. Dina Titus (D) and Guy Reschenthaler (R) introduced bipartisan legislation to repeal the excise taxes and head taxes (a $50 annual levy on every employee receiving bets) imposed by the guvmint on legal sports books. We don’t know how an avaricious Congress will react, but go for it. Or, as American Gaming Association President Bill Miller said, “To absorb the unnecessary burden of these taxes, legal sportsbooks are forced to offer worse odds and payouts or reduce investment in promoting legal betting channels to the public. Furthermore, the head tax serves as an impediment to hiring at a time when providing jobs is critical.” Amen.

By the way, we’re still admiring Miller’s verbal jujitsu before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Intransigence would have gotten him nowhere but, if you read between the lines of Miller’s statement to the committee, he outlines what sort of federal regulation (emphasizing a crackdown on illegal betting sites) the gaming industry will and won’t accept. We hope Sens. Mitt Romney (R) and Chuck Schumer (D) were listening. As for committee chairman Sen. Lindsey Graham (R), he’s so far off on the fringe regarding gambling that his views are probably irrelevant.

Posted in AGA, Caesars Entertainment, China, Dining, DraftKings, Entertainment, GLPI, Golden Nugget, Health, Illinois, Internet gambling, Michael Gaughan, Philippines, Politics, Regulation, Sports betting, Taxes, Terry Caudill, TV, Virgin Hotels | Comments Off on Case Bets

Giant dildo at large in Sin City; Scientific pleases, disappoints

Who was that masked man anyway? A daring thief casually strolled into Deja Vu Love Boutique, made his way over to “Moby,” a giant dildo (approximately three feet long) and walked right out the door with it. The whale-sized self-pleasuring device retails for $1,250 but unless the perpetrator has some very unusual sex planned, its unique nature will make it difficult to fence. That didn’t stop him from tucking it into his car and casually driving off with it. As Huffington Post‘s Ron Dicker reports, “If the crook gets caught, he’ll surely be subject to the penal code.” However, we agree with actress Lexa Doig, our source for the story, who calls him “The anti hero the world needs right now.” As for Deja Vu, it’s getting the kind of publicity money can’t buy—not even $1,250.

“Better than expected” was how Scientific Games spun its 2Q20 results. The company lost $198 million on net revenue of $539 million. Internet-facing spinoff SciPlay, however, benefited from shelter-in-place directives, booking as much as 80% cash-flow growth. The combined companies are hardly paupers, sitting on $943 million in liquidity. Gaming revenue fell 78% ($91 million) but digital and social revenue was up 28% ($239 million). Lottery winnings were slightly impacted, down 9.5% to $209 million. SGMS cut back on operating expenses (-20%) and R&D (-32.5%), while its cost of capital went down 15.5%.

Posted in Architecture, Baseball, Derek Stevens, Downtown, Economy, Internet gambling, Law enforcement, Lotteries, Mohegan Sun, Pennsylvania, Phil Ruffin, Scientific Games, Sports betting, Terry Caudill, The Strip, Wall Street, Wynn Resorts | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“Dr. [Anthony] Fauci is one of the finest public servants we have ever had. He is not a partisan. His only interest is saving lives. We need his expertise and his judgment to defeat this virus. All Americans should be thanking him. Every day.”—Rep. Liz Cheney (R).

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“Extreme” pessimism in Las Vegas; The D pisses for safety

Writing off the 2Q20 results as “less than relevant,” JP Morgan analyst Joseph Greff was guardedly optimistic about Las Vegas Sands, even though management’s conference call “shed little light on the path of recovery in Macau SAR, Singapore or Las Vegas,” the latter being described as “impaired in the near term.” (We’ll say!) Greff’s outlook was buoyed by the lifting of quarantines in China that “will allow for improving [gross gaming revenue] trends in Macau, a gaming-/travel-dependent market that experienced the COVID-19 downturn first and should experience a bounce/recovery earlier, at least in relation to potential recoveries on the Las Vegas Strip and in U.S. business travel lodging markets.” Singapore will be a relative laggard “given airlift dependency and sourcing players from multiple geographies that are also reeling from various travel restrictions.” As for Sin City, “Las Vegas was described in extremely pessimistic terms given that market’s airlift capacity and group/convention dependence, the latter of which was described as a zero for the rest of 2020 and a big segment of its (normalized) profit.” (emphasis added)

Posted in China, Churchill Downs, Derek Stevens, Donald Trump, Downtown, Economy, Health, Las Vegas Sands, Macau, Maine, MGM Resorts International, Penn National, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, The Strip, Tourism, Wall Street, Wynn Resorts | 1 Comment

Caesars: Meet the new bosses; Graham grandstands

VitalVegas got its hands on Caesars Entertainment internal document bearing the grinning visage of COO Anthony Carano. It outlined a restructuring of the company’s top executive ranks into nine divisions headed by an overwhelmingly WASP-y, male cohort. (Soon to become more so: Bally’s Atlantic City‘s Karie Hall is scheduled to be cut loose, while other women head small-fry properties.) The roster will get shorter, as it lists top execs for properties either in the process of being sold (MontBleu) or certain to be jettisoned (Caesars Southern Indiana). Interestingly, no one is named as being in charge of Harrah’s Resort Southern California. In a display of nepotism, CEO Tom Reeg‘s sibling Bill has been placed in charge of a division encompassing five Midwest properties. It’s not a cushy job, though, as he inherits problematic Lumiere Place plus oncoming competition in Illinois. Interestingly, while we thought Twin River Holdings would pluck low-hanging Strip fruit like either the Tropicana Las Vegas or Caesars’ Bally’s Las Vegas (more of which later), VV author Scott Roeben hears they’re kicking the tires on Planet Hollywood (now co-managed with The Rio), which won’t come cheap.

Posted in AGA, Caesars Entertainment, Diversity, Eldorado Resorts, Internet gambling, Marketing, Planet Hollywood, Politics, Problem gambling, Resort fees, Sports, Sports betting, The Rio, The Strip, Tribal, Twin River | 2 Comments

Quote of the Day

“Social isolation and stay at home orders are effective, however, I don’t believe this a sustainable, long-term solution. People can’t spend the rest of their lives stuck in their homes. Until a vaccine is available, stay-at-home orders and social isolation continue to be the best way to slow community transmission.”—Dr. Tom Yadegar, medical director of the intensive care unit at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center.

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History repeats itself, this time as farce

Caesars Entertainment is now Eldorado Resorts‘ bitch and, as Scott Roeben reports, there’s already reason to be concerned, starting with layoffs at Caesars Palace. New CEO Tom Reeg is apparently wasting no time sending employees to the firing squad. He promised $500 million in “synergies” which, as Roeben says, rarely bodes well for the workplace (or customer) experience. Of course, Reeg gave those synergies right back to Louisiana when he promised $500 million in improvements to Belle of Baton Rouge and other Caesars properties. He also committed anywhere from $400 million to $550 million to Atlantic City improvements, money that’s sure to come out of Caesars’ hide somewhere else. Fixing something that wasn’t broken, Reeg actually spent money to create this woozy new logo for the Roman Empire:

Reeg is now committed to pulling $7.2 billion out of his sock drawer as a cash payout to shareholders. Where that money’s really going to come from is anybody’s guess, as super-acquisitive Eldorado is leveraged to its eyeteeth, as Roeben points out, and this is hardly a period in which the casino industry is exactly throwing off free cash flow. Besides, Caesars has extensive rent commitments to Vici Properties and Gaming & Leisure Properties. Perhaps Reeg can recoup a few billion by selling Planet Hollywood (does he have Hard Rock International on speed dial?), maybe a few hundred million for The Cromwell, once Caesars’ pride and joy but now evidently surplus inventory. So much for the boutique experiment. Nor can those regional asset sales come through fast enough. If the economy doesn’t rebound by this time next year, Caesars may be headed for a date with an old flame: bankruptcy court.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Caesars Entertainment, Economy, Eldorado Resorts, GLPI, Hard Rock International, Health, Internet gambling, Las Vegas Sands, Louisiana, Marketing, MGM Resorts International, Ocean Resort, Planet Hollywood, Politics, Sheldon Adelson, Wynn Resorts | 3 Comments

Quote of the Day

“These kids have got to get back to school. They’re at the lowest risk possible. And if they do get Covid-19, which they will—and they will when they go to school—they’re not going to the hospitals. They’re not going to have to sit in doctor’s offices. They’re going to go home and they’re going to get over it.”—Missouri Gov. Mike Parson (R).

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Sisolak victimizes the vulnerable

Steve Sisolak’s new role model.

During the Great Recession, then-Gov. Jim Gibbons (R, above) committed a depraved act by raiding Nevada‘s problem-gambling fund to plug some holes in the state budget. Not to be outdone, Gov. Steve Sisolak (D) is following in Midnight Jim’s footsteps. He has whacked 75% off the pitifully small amount the Silver State sets aside to treat disordered gambling (derived from a surcharge on slot machines), leaving only $500,000. That’s hardly “george.” In fact, it basically abandons to their fate those unfortunate people who are the collateral damage of the state’s signature industry. Anybody who thinks compulsive gamblers should just suck it up or practice stoic self-reliance is cordially invited to go jump in a lake. And if you think that’s a stern judgment, you should see the blistering words that Richard Schuetz has for Sisolak and for Nevada’s cavalier attitude toward the dark underside of the neon glitter.

Posted in AGA, Baseball, Caesars Entertainment, California, Card rooms, Culinary Union, Genting, Health, history, Internet gambling, Jim Murren, Macau, MGM Resorts International, Midnight Jim Gibbons, Nevada, Politics, Problem gambling, Real Estate, Regulation, Scientific Games, Sports betting, Steve Wynn, Tribal | 2 Comments

Casinos unleash Culinary’s wrath

Las Vegas‘ casino industry seems to be behaving counterintuitively, reopening casinos and hotels (Vdara is the latest) at a time when visitor demand is softening. JP Morgan analyst Joseph Greff reports today that, for the July 11-18 period, Clark County casino visitation levels were at 56% of where they were pre-Coronavirus and lower than they had been for the previous month (62%). Las Vegas Strip casino companies seem more than willing to trade hotel capacity for the appearance that things are Better Than Ever. Outside of Nevada, the regional sector also slipped, down by 4% over the same comparison periods. Wrote Greff, “Results, to us, reflect, the resurgence in COVID-19 cases, and while the data in NV doesn’t clearly illustrate this, we believe the LV Strip is underperforming the LV Locals segment.”

Greff continued, “We assess demand levels at casinos by analyzing both the number of visitors and the duration of their visits. We still are seeing median visit length at/above February levels in certain jurisdictions, which we believe is indicative of higher quality, more dedicated players.” Clark County was up 7% (Mississippi did even better, at 9%) while Louisiana players are cutting their visits short, 11% briefer than normal. Time on device in Missouri and Iowa is pretty much the same as before. Explained Greff, “We view this most recent batch of visitation data as a modest step backwards, though not entirely surprising given the continued increase in COVID-19 cases (which has resulted in certain casinos/card rooms re-closing) and a slower/decelerating recovery in credit card spend.”

Posted in Arizona, Caesars Entertainment, CityCenter, Cosmopolitan, Culinary Union, Economy, Eldorado Resorts, Florida, Health, Hooters, International, Iowa, Lake Tahoe, Las Vegas Sands, Louisiana, Macau, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, Paragon Gaming, Politics, Sports, Station Casinos, Wall Street, Westgate LV | 2 Comments

Quote of the Day

“We all have to find a way to become more human—more kind, more thoughtful. Never become hostile, never become bitter. Keep the faith. It all will work out.”—the late Rep. John Lewis, 1940-2020.

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Atlantic City: The fix was in

In a sham ritual (only two of five members were present), the New Jersey Casino Control Commission green-lit the Eldorado Resorts takeover of Caesars Entertainment. Effectively rebuking the recommendations of the Division of Gaming Enforcement, the two commissioners allowed deed restrictions imposed by Caesars remain in place at the Showboat, Atlantic Club and Claridge Hotel. Regulators are sometimes accused of stifling economic development and this would be a clear case in point. What’s more, gaming-entitled Boardwalk land is in finite supply and the NJCCC has effectively reduced it further, in its prostration before Eldorado. NJCCC Chairman James Plousis voiced platitudes that the merged companies “would be in a position to harm fair competition in the Atlantic City market.” Yet it was his idea to leave the deed restrictions in place.

Posted in Atlantic City, Caesars Entertainment, China, Diversity, Donald Trump, Eldorado Resorts, Election, Hard Rock International, Health, Las Vegas Sands, Macau, Ocean Resort, Regulation, Twin River, Unite-Here | 4 Comments

Quote of the Day

“When you see something that is not right, not just, not fair, you have a moral obligation to say something, to do something. Our children and their children will ask us ‘what did you do? what did you say?’”—Rep. John Lewis (D), civil rights leader who died yesterday at age 80.

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