Author: Casino Connection Staff

D.C. Looking at Sports Betting

A council member in the District of Columbia says officials are currently gauging the support for institution of a sports betting program through the D.C. Lottery, and says betting could be in place by the end of the year if the support is there.

The D.C. Council rejected a previous attempt to institute multi-game parlay betting on NFL games, amid condemnation from the professional sports leagues. However, in the wake of the Supreme Court decision removing the federal ban on sports betting, district officials are considering implementing wagering, a D.C. Council member told the Washington Post last week.

“I think the world today is a vastly different world than it was even 10 years ago for gambling in the District of Columbia,” D.C. Council member Jack Evans told the Post. “Anytime there was any talk of casino gambling in the District of Columbia, it was very strongly opposed, largely by the religious community. Fast-forward 15, 20 years, the world is different. Maryland has a casino less than a mile away from the District of Columbia, the MGM Grand, and Maryland is rife with gambling everywhere. So the idea of religious institutions being opposed, I think, is long gone now, certainly in Maryland.”

Evans said if the support is there, he ideally would like to see sports betting “by the end of the year.”

“Virtually every state in the country has gambling, and many of them have casino gambling, and for Congress to say you can’t have gambling in the District of Columbia when virtually every jurisdiction has gambling now would be completely hypocritical,” he said. “I don’t think that’s a stumbling block, either. So I think we can do what we think is best for the city.”

Sports betting is illegal in the District of Columbia under an early 20th century law that makes it illegal “to bet, gamble, or make books or pools on the result of any trotting race or running race of horses, or boat race, or race of any kind, or on any election or any contest of any kind, or game of base ball.”

The current D.C. statute expands the betting ban to include “football, baseball, softball, basketball, hockey, or polo game, or a tennis, golf, or wrestling match, or a tennis or golf tournament, or a prize fight or boxing match, or a trotting or running race of horses, or a running race of dogs, or any other athletic or sporting event or contest.”

MGM Buys Empire City

MGM Resorts International has bolstered its growing presence in East Coast gaming with the acquisition of Empire City Casino in Yonkers, N.Y.

The combined cash and stock purchase, which will give the Las Vegas-based gaming giant four major casinos in the Mid-Atlantic and New England states when it’s completed next year, is being pursued as a joint venture with the company’s real estate investment trust, MGM Growth Properties.

And it leaves no doubt that MGM intends to be a leading competitor for all sectors of a greater New York City gambling market numbering some 16 million potential customers.

Chris Grove, managing director of sports and emerging verticals for Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, said it “signals a certain confidence that online poker and sports betting will move forward in New York.”

The state could generate as much as $1.2 billion in sports betting revenue annually if the tax rate were below 10 percent and gamblers had access to mobile as well as brick-and-mortar locations, according to a 2017 report by Oxford Economics.

The Senate is considering a comprehensive measure to put the industry in operation, and a companion bill is expected to be introduced in the Assembly, but doubts have been expressed by Governor Andrew Cuomo and others that a deal can be done before lawmakers adjourn the end of this month.

MGM is paying $850 million, $260 million of it in stock, for Empire City and the adjoining Yonkers Raceway. Located just 15 miles from Times Square, the casino portion houses 5,200 slot and electronic table game positions and posted $70 million in EBITDA on $230 million in revenue in the 12 months ended March 31. No live tables are permitted at his property or at Resorts World New York City at Aqueduct racetrack, a facility that MGM once targeted for development but eventually turned down.

MGM will sell Empire City to MGM Growth for $625 million and lease it back for $50 million a year. The balance of $225 million pencils out to 11.5 times adjusted earnings, a steep price for a property with no hotel and little by way of non-gaming attractions, according to some on Wall Street, although MGM says that will drop to more like six times when cost synergies and new growth opportunities are factored in.

Those opportunities aren’t limited to sports betting either. As analysts point out, there is little overlap with MGM’s current customer base, which increases the potential to market Empire City players to the company’s other resorts on the East Coast and on the Las Vegas Strip.

It also positions MGM to cash in on New York City’s lucrative Asian market if Empire City receives permission to host live table games. MGM tried to buy into that market a year ago with a $1.3 billion stab at Sands Bethlehem that failed to come off and has agreed to add $50 million to Empire City’s purchase price if tables games are approved there in the next four years. Sands Bethlehem was recently sold to Wind Creek Hospitality, the gaming development are of Alabama’s Poarch Band of Creek Indians.

“This property essentially gives you that population base that’s coming from New York City and gives you access to those people,” said Colin Mansfield, a gaming, lodging and leisure analyst with Fitch Ratings.

It was with one eye on the Asian market that MGM last year proposed a $675 million casino on the waterfront in Bridgeport, Conn., at the same time it was developing a $960 million resort casino slated to open later this summer in nearby Springfield, Mass.

“We believe that there is significant unmet demand in the region, which is why we’ve been enhancing our presence in the Northeast,” MGM spokeswoman Debra DeShong. “We will be opening a resort in Springfield, Mass., have been advocating for a process that would allow for a competitive process in Connecticut, and now we’ve invested in Yonkers. We’ve long believed this is an underserved area.”

UK Advertising Watchdog Warns Gambling Firms on Targeting Children

The UK Advertising Agency has sanctioned some online gambling operators for ads that cited fairy tale themed games, which could appeal to children.

The complaints were made by the group Fairer Gambling and related to promotions by Fun88.co.uk, Letou.co.uk and ProgressPlay owned m88.com. Three of the complaints focused on m88 and ads featuring the games Fairytale Legends Red Riding Hood, Fairytale Legends Hansel and Gretel and Fairies Forest.

The association said the site allowing the games to be played on demo mode before players signing into the site. In response, m88.com began requiring age verification to play the games on demo mode and reportedly removed graphics depicting fairies and other children’s characters.

The company also released a statement saying it was policy prior to launching any game that its graphics were thoroughly reviewed to make sure they do not attract children. The group also said that addressing all responsible gambling issues with their business partners was an essential and substantial part of their commercial agreement. Any breach of that policy, authorized m88.com to terminate the agreement with their business partners.

The association acknowledged the company’s response, but still ruled that “the ads must not appear again in their current form.”

 Also sanctioned was Fun88.co.uk and letou.co run by TGP Europe for complaints that the sites also contain gambling content that could appeal to children. A total of eight complaints were received about the operators including one featuring an animated polar bear titled Santa Paws.

The company also said the demo version of the games were only available after the consumer had logged into the site and gone through age versification.

The authority upheld six of the eight complaints ruling that the ads must be removed from the site as they had a specific appeal to youths and appeared on unrestricted parts of the site. Again, the ads can no longer be shown in their current form.

The sanctions come as the UK government continues to put the heat on gambling firms as a bipartisan group of Parliament ministers is pushing to have gambling ads carry warnings similar to those on cigarette ads. The ministers are also calling for a ban on gambling ads during live sports broadcasts.

The group includes Shadow Culture Secretary Tom Watson and former Tory Minister John Hayes and wants to ban ads that suggest gambling is “fun.”

The group said in a press statement that “the onus of social responsibility remains subject to the self-regulation of the licensee is not working” and current regulations are being flouted “without fear of meaningful sanction”.

In an open letter to Culture Secretary Matt Hancock, the group urged for measures to ensure “greater compliance, fairness and social responsibility in the advertising and licensing of gambling.”

“Gambling advertising should be consistent with other types of addictive or harmful products to public health such as cigarette packs, by featuring clearly identifiable health warnings that cannot be absorbed into an advert’s overall design,” the letter read. “The wording of gambling advertisements is a problem because words such as ‘win’ and ‘fun’ are emphasized rather than ‘harm’, thus normalizing the idea of gambling as a leisure pursuit rather than an addiction.”

The letter also addressed ads during live sporting events with the group saying that the “current exception to the watershed that permits gambling adverts during live sporting events needs to be closed.”

“We think the only way of closing the current loophole is a comprehensive ban on gambling advertising during live sporting events, including TV ads, billboard ads and clothing sponsorship,” the letter read.

In a related story, the UK Gambling Commission’s newly appointed chief executive Neil McArthur said he will push for more diversity in the gambling industry in his first major speech in his new role.

“I’m particularly pleased to be here to speak about diversity and inclusivity as we need more diversity in the gambling industry. For example, I am struck by the fact that after 12 years I am still a relative newcomer compared to many of the people I meet from the industry, he said.

“As I have said before, the challenges we all face is how to balance consumer choice and enjoyment against the risks gambling can create and its impact on wider society?”

McArthur urged industry leaders to think differently about inclusion and diversity, which should be developed as corporate strengths.

“Key to moving beyond group thinking is diversity—not recruiting from the same pool. Moving beyond what looks, sounds and feels like us to be diverse in terms of backgrounds, ages, opinions. It’s this diversity that will create challenge, scrutiny, which in turn leads to the best thinking, the new ideas and the brave steps forward. “The initiatives that change the world come from this kind of thinking and without diversity of input at every level within your organization you simply do not get that.”

PokerStars Shuts Down Hong Kong Betting

PokerStars has abruptly shut down real-money play for Hong Kong players in what appears to be a repositioning of The Stars Group in Asian Markets.

In an email sent to players this week, The Stars Group said it had “taken the decision to withdraw the option of real money play for residents of Hong Kong from Wednesday, May 23.”

According to Inside Asian gaming, the company didn’t offer a reason for withdrawing from the market, but said “the Stars Group frequently reviews commercial and regulatory developments around the world.”

The move comes after an announcement by Hong Kong-listed casino investor International Entertainment Corporation that it had signed a collaboration agreement with The Stars Group subsidiary Lucky Genius Limited to operate land-based live events and poker rooms under the branding of PokerStars in certain Asian countries, according to Inside Asian Gaming.

“The Stars Group has entered into an agreement with Hong Kong-based International Entertainment Corporation to license the PokerStars brand for land-based live events and poker rooms across Asia. IEC, a publicly listed company, will hold the sole and exclusive rights to run PokerStars branded events in certain Asian countries as mutually agreed by The Stars Group and IEC, which will be operated through a subsidiary,” the company told the news site in a press statement.

The decision also follows a crackdown on online poker applications by the mainland Chinese government, which announced last month that poker will no longer be recognized as a competitive sport and that the promotion of Texas Hold ‘em via social media applications would be banned.

The ban requires all apps offering any form of social poker game to be shut down and removed from app stores by 1 June, with social media channels such as WeChat will also be banned from promoting any form of Texas Hold ‘em product, the report said.

Russia Tightens Online Gambling Payment Laws Ahead of World Cup

Russia has begun enforcing its ban on Russian credit institutions and payment systems in the country transferring money from individuals to illegal bookmakers, casinos and totes.

The law was approved in November and went into effect May 27 as part of the run-up to the World Cup.

A blacklist of prohibited gambling sites and resources will be regularly updated by the Russian Federal Tax Service.

The tax service has not announced how it will track illegal bookmakers and lotteries and said it has no statistics on the volume of transfers to illegal sites. However, all online casinos, bookmakers and lotteries based outside Russia and accepting bets from Russian citizens will fall under the new law.

Russia has licensed about a dozen bookmakers receiving payments via TSUPISes online gambling processors, which is required under the new law.

Broadway on the Boardwalk

Back by popular demand, Broadway on the Boardwalk returns to Kennedy Plaza this summer! Hosted by “One Funny Mother”, Dena Blizzard, this concert series features performances by the current casts of the hottest musicals on Broadway today!

Dates: July 9, 16, 23
Time: 8:00 pm
Place: Kennedy Plaza
(on the Boardwalk between Mississippi and Georgia Avenues)

Monday, July 9, 2018
• Chicago
• Waitress
• Sponge Bob Square Pants


Monday, July 16, 2018
• Anastasia
• A Bronx Tale Musical
• Summer: Donna Summer Musical
• Getting the Band Back Together

Monday, July 23, 2018
• Wicked
• School of Rock
• Beautiful: Carole King Musical
• Kinky Boots

Mardi Gras AC

The flavor of the Big Easy comes to Kennedy Plaza every Wednesday from 7:00 p.m.-10:30 p.m. for 12 weeks, beginning June 20th. Tony Mart’s will present concerts by some of the greatest Classic Rock, New Orleans Rhythm and Blues, Reggae, Funk, Blues Rock, Roots Rock, Americana and world music performers on the scene today.

June 20th
New Orleans’ Dirty Dozen Brass Band
World’s Most Famous Brass Band


June 27th

The Billy Walton Band
Gary US Bonds & The Roadhouse Rockers

Multi-million selling Rock Star performing “Quarter to Three” and “Down to NOLA”

July 4th
Vini “Mad Dog” Lopez & The Billy Walton Band
Grammy winning Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Drummer from Springsteen’s E Street Band
 
July 11th
Marcia Ball & Her Band
One Award winning Grammy Nominated Swamp Boogie Piano Queen

July 18th

Third World
One of the greatest Raggae band performing their hit “Now That We Found Love
Special Guests: The Coconutz

July 25th
“The Weight” Tribute To The Band
Featuring performers who played & recorded with the original BAND members

August 1st
Johnny Sansone’s Jersey Gumbo
Starring George Porter, Jr. & John Fohl of Dr. John’s Lower 911 Band?

August 8th
John Cafferty & Beaver Brown
Million selling original “Eddie & the Cruisers” soundtrack artists

August 15th
Shemake Copeland Band

Chicago’s Grammy nominated Queen of the Blues

August 22nd
AC Airshow Funkfest Spectacular
Tribute to Amy Winehouse performed by “Remember Jones”
New Orleans Funk Star Ivan Neville & Dumpstafunk
 
August 29th
20 Performers re-enacting “Mad Dogs & Englishmen”

Tribute to Joe Cocker, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Leon Russell
Performed by Remember Jones

September 5th
Four-time Grammy Winning “Maestro” Taj Mahal
Living legend of World Music Caribbean & American Blues
From Woodstock ’69 to Atlantic City Concert Finale 2018!
Special Guests: Patty Blee and Ernie “T” Trionfo

Atlantic City Food Truck Festival

The Claridge Atlantic City presents the Annual Brighton Park Food Truck Festival Saturday, June 23 – Sunday, June 24, 2018.

You won’t want to miss this summer event which will include food trucks, beer and bands! This family friendly event will also have bounce houses, face painters, and more. Sample a range of culinary dishes from American comfort food to seafood, barbecue, desserts, and more from the area’s top food trucks.

Where: Brighton Park, The Boardwalk and Park Place

Times:  Saturday 12:00pm – 8:00pm
             Sunday   12:00pm – 6:00pm

Visit:  http://claridge.com/entertainment/2018-food-truck-festival/

             

Palm Restaurant Atlantic City presents Falsetto’s Murder

The Dinner Theater Series at The Palm Restaurant in the Tropicana Atlantic City will feature Falsetto’s Murder June 15 at 7:00pm.

It’s not personal, it’s business. When someone at the “waste management convention” whacks Tony Falsetto, everyone is a suspect. But who would want Tony to sleep with the fishes? His long suffering wife, Carlotta, who was tired of his philandering ways? His girlfriend, Natasha, who has been giving massages behind his back? When the Falsettos want to go to the mattresses, this family business gets ugly. As a member of the convention, you could be selected to introduce Tony. Or you might just find yourself as a member of the family as Uncle Junior.

As entertaining as they are delicious, these evenings feature a three course menu, dinner theater performance, and complimentary valet parking for just $85 per person, plus tax and gratuity.

Reservations Required: Call Barbara Bermel 609-344-0483 or bbermel@thepalm.com

Carrie Underwood and Pitbull at the Hard Rock

The Highly anticipated Grand Opening of the Hard Rock Casino Hotel Atlantic City will feature performances by Carrie Underwood, Friday, June 29 and Pitbull, Saturday June 30 with showtime at 8:00 p.m.

Carrie Underwood will be the first to perform in the all new Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena. She rose to fame as the winner of the fourth season of American Idol. This launched her into superstardom, selling more than 64 million records worldwide and recording 26 #1 singles, 13 of which she co-wrote.  Earlier this year, she released and co-wrote the hit anthem “The Champion” for Super Bowl LII and most recently co-produced and co-wrote her powerful new single, “Cry Pretty.”

Grammy Award-winning global superstar Pitbull will bring his style and music to the Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena to continue the grand opening weekend celebration Saturday June 30. His single “Timber” featuring Kesha was a chart topper around the world, while his smash hit “We Are One (Ole Ola)” with Jennifer Lopez and Claudia Leitte became the official theme song for the FIFA World Cup in 2014. Another stellar year in 2017 included the release of his tenth full-length album, “Climate Change,” a second co-headlining U.S. tour with Enrique Iglesias, the release of his first-ever “Greatest Hits” and a new Spanish single.

Visit: https://hardrockhotelatlanticcity.com/entertainment  

4th of July Fireworks & Events at the Jersey Shore

The Jersey Shore is the place to be this 4th of July, with events and fireworks displays all along the coast. Whatever your plans, have fun and be safe this Independence Day.

ATLANTIC CITY

Join Borgata Casino Hotel & Spa for a fireworks spectacular in celebration of 4th of July and Borgata’s 15th Birthday! Fireworks begin Wednesday, July 4 at 9:20 p.m. Public viewing area opens at 6 PM at the north entrance lot of Borgata. You can also enjoy the display from the new Borgata Beer Garden, which features live music and a variety of craft beers.

In addition to their weekly Saturday night Fireworks displays, Tropicana will offer a fireworks spectacular on Wednesday, July 4, 2018 at 10:00 p.m. over the beach and Boardwalk! The show, designed by Fireworks by Grucci, will be displayed from the beachfront and will include intricately designed scenes and vivid effects including Grucci high aerials and grand illuminations. 

In addition to fireworks enjoy Tropicana’s Multimedia Light & Sound Show on the Boardwalk for FREE! Daily at 9 p.m., 9:30 p.m., 10 p.m., 10:30 p.m., 11 p.m.

Another great place to see the fireworks in the Marina District is on the Deck at Golden Nugget Atlantic City, which will feature a Total Tito’s Takeover from July 3-8 with $5 Tito’s Handmade Vodka at every bar and restaurant ($1 from each Tito’s Handmade Vodka sold goes directly to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital). 

 

 

MARGATE

Just a few blocks downbeach of Atlantic City the town of Margate will put on their annual fireworks display beginning 9 p.m. at Huntington Avenue Beach. The event is sponsored by the Margate Mothers’ club. For info visit MargateHasMore.com.

 

OCEAN CITY

 

The Ocean City Music Pier, at 825 Boardwalk and Moorlyn Terrace, is the place to be July 4th with a fireworks display beginning at 9 p.m. The fireworks follow a long day of events including:

• July 4th Bike Parade
• Pie Eating Contest
• Kite-flying Competition

and more! Visit OceanCityVacation.com.

 

STONE HARBOR

Stone Harbor will host its fireworks early on Monday, July 2. Its Independence Day festival begins with a jazz and blues concert by Eddie Morgan & Rebirth featuring Shawn Ashley at 7:30 p.m. The fireworks will follow at 9:30, able to be seen from any beach end. The concert will be held at the pavilion at 95th Street beach; StoneHarborNJ.org.

 

SEA ISLE CITY

The fireworks at Sea Isle City will be launched from an Ocean Barge near the 50th street beach, which is where you’ll enjoy the best view of the 9 p.m. show on the Fourth. VisitSICNJ.com.

 

WILDWOOD

Head to the beach at Pine Avenue for the best view of the Wildwood Fourth of July fireworks display, though it will be visible from almost any spot on the boardwalk. The show begins at 10 p.m. on Wednesday. DOOWW.com.

In addition to fireowrks Wildwood has a slew of events scheduled, including:
• Sports Card, Toys, Comics & Collectibles Show
• FREE Wildwood Crest Summer Concert Music Series
• Independence Day Parade and Patriotic Pooch Parade

For additional information about the Wildwoods, visit www.WildwoodsNJ.com or call 800-992-9732.

 

CAPE MAY

Look out for two fireworks displays in Cape May this week. On July 3, fireworks will be viewable from the Delaware Bay near North Cape May around 9 p.m. The following day, head to the Cape May beach in front of Congress Hall (200 Congress Place) for another display at 9 p.m. CapeMay.com.

 

INLAND: HAMMONTON & MILLVILLE

For activities located inland but close to the Jersey Shore check out Hammonton & Millville.

Hammonton Independence Day Parade
Wednesday 7/4 11am

This all-American family tradition is in its 3rd year and 2018 will be even bigger! Want to be a part of it? Groups, civic organizations, athletic associations, dance troupes and more email Brooke@downtownhammonton.com to register. Individuals can simply show up with their patriotic bikes, wagons and pets! Visit the event page on Facebook.

Millville Fireworks Festival
Wednesday, July 4th

Race your way to New Jersey Motorsports Park for the City of Millville’s 4th of July Festival on Wednesday, July 4, 2018. The festival begins at 5:00 pm with fireworks beginning at 9:00 pm. The festival is FREE & open to the public!

The event will feature live music with The Rollers & NJ Premier DJ, ticket giveaways, a pizza eating contest, a kids craft zone, vendors, monster truck rides, inflatables, food trucks, & MORE! You will definitely want to come early to enjoy all the fun that is scheduled!

 

 

40 years of Gaming in Atlantic City

Want the long view on Atlantic City’s casino industry? Talk to Dan Heneghan.

When casinos were first floated as a way to revive the fading shore town, Heneghan was a reporter for the Press of Atlantic City. He was there 40 years ago, when Resorts Atlantic City opened. He saw the mobs who stood in line for hours to get inside the town’s first legal gaming hall. He eventually worked the newspaper’s casino beat, and he’s still around, as public information officer for the New Jersey Casino Control Commission.

More than almost anyone, Heneghan knows AC. He’s seen it survive more ups and downs than the Steel Pier’s Wild Mouse roller coaster.


Throw Out the Lifeline

Few remember today that New Jersey gaming was originally conceived as a statewide industry. That plan that was nixed by voters in 1974, but when the legislation confined casinos only to Atlantic City, the referendum passed. Everyone knew the city needed a break.

“Atlantic City was down and out,” says Heneghan. “There was a joke at the time that if the casino referendum failed, the last one over the bridge could turn out the lights. The city was a shambles—slums with an ocean view.”

Though the shore resort still sputtered to life during the summer, it emptied out after the Miss America pageant in September.

“There would be virtually nothing open all winter,” says Heneghan. “The city was clinging to life, hoping against hope that something positive would happen.”

That something was casinos. The Committee to Rebuild Atlantic City (known, without irony, as “CRAC”), promised an experience totally unlike Las Vegas, with “continental-style casinos patterned after those in Monte Carlo and the Caribbean,” and nary a slot machine in sight.

“They created this impression of James Bond-type casinos with ladies in evening gowns and men in dinner jackets, making bets in French,” says Heneghan with a laugh. As everyone knows, what Atlantic City got was “enormous gambling halls chock-full with slots and tables, with people in T-shirts and jeans shoving each other.

“There was a glamorous aspect to it,” says Heneghan, “but it was also mass pandemonium with these intense crowds. You heard more than one tale of a gentleman who refused to leave the blackjack table when nature called, because he didn’t want to lose his seat.”

The casinos could not empty their slot machines fast enough, he says, and the soft count took 23 hours to tabulate. The city was almost literally rolling in dough.

 

The Gold Rush

Steve Norton wasn’t surprised. An executive with Resorts International, which had developed casinos in the Bahamas and the Caribbean, Norton was shipped north to check out Atlantic City’s viability as a casino market. He found pent-up demand for gambling that convinced him the idea was a sure bet.

“Adding lottery and racetracks, there was more money being wagered in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania than in California, Arizona and Nevada,” says Norton, who eventually became executive vice president of Resorts International in Atlantic City. “When the racetracks in New York City closed down, there were 30 buses a day running from Manhattan to Charlestown, West Virginia, taking people to the track.”

At the time, Caesars and Bally’s (then MGM) were tops in Vegas, generating about $80 million each per year. “When I told the New Jersey Casino Control Commission that we would exceed $200 million in the first year, they thought I was nuts,” he says. “We took in $245 million.”

The gold rush was on.

“There was this incredible euphoria,” says Heneghan. “It knocked the sense out of a lot of people, who thought the streets would be paved with gold.”

Within 13 months, the city’s second casino, Caesars Boardwalk Regency, had opened, followed by Bally’s Park Place. By 1981, there were nine casinos on the Boardwalk. Then the industry sputtered.

“You went from a place where you couldn’t count the money fast enough to the fourth quarter of 1981, where every property lost money,” says Heneghan. “Supply had grown much faster than demand.”

Bus marketing helped. Under that program, which started at Resorts, up to 1,000 buses a day packed with happy gamblers rolled in from Philadelphia, North Jersey, New York and Baltimore. The day trippers got a free ride, a roll of quarters, and sometimes a buffet. They helped the casino industry continue to expand.

In 1980, Harrah’s was the first casino to open off the Boardwalk, in the city’s Marina District. Tropicana came next. The Trump era began in 1984. Eventually, the T-word was emblazoned on three gaming resorts in town: Trump Plaza, Trump Castle (later Trump Marina), and finally, the $1 billion Trump Taj Mahal in 1990, called “the eighth wonder of the world” by the hyperbolic business mogul.

When the Borgata opened in 2003, its sparkling gold tower, Dale Chihuly glass sculptures and upscale experience made the schlock-heavy Boardwalk casinos look a little tired, but those properties soon stepped up their game.

For 28 straight years, from 1978 through 2006, casino revenues grew every year. It seemed the casino industry, like the housing market, just could not lose.


Tumbling Dice

In 2007, four new casinos were planned for Atlantic City, representing a total investment of $9 billion. As late as November of that year, a giddy report from NBC News said, “By 2012, you might not even recognize this place.”

That’s when the hammer hit. The Great Recession coupled with new Pennsylvania casinos brought the gravy train to a screeching halt. Three of the four new casinos were shelved, four of the existing casinos closed, and more than 8,000 people lost their jobs.

The only casino completed at the time—the $2.6 billion Revel, which was scaled back from two towers to one—opened behind schedule, closed inside two years, stood vacant for a while, and then was bought for pennies on the dollar by a Florida developer.

Glenn Straub’s wacky plans for the property, which he renamed Ten, included an recreational center with “frozen mountains, half pipes and motocross tracks,” charity mud runs featuring “girls in pink tutus,” rodeos, and a cryotherapy chamber, a la Michael Jackson. At various times, Straub announced that Revel would become an academic institution for geniuses and a sanctuary for Syrian refugees.

Thankfully, Straub is now part of Atlantic City’s colorful, turbulent history. In January, he sold Revel-slash-Ten to a Colorado investor who plans to reopen it as the Ocean Casino Resort. That should coincide with the reopening of the former Trump Taj Mahal as Hard Rock Atlantic City. The eight casinos that survived the recession are once again making money, and the state’s online gaming industry has helped fill the coffers too.

There are concerns the new properties will sound the death knell for weaker properties in town, but for the first time in a decade, the forecast for Atlantic City looks mostly sunny. According to a 2017 article in USA Today, the city, “left for dead for the last 10 years, is having a revival.”

In that article, the late state Senator Jim Whelan, mayor of Atlantic City from 1990 to 2001, summed it up when he said, “Atlantic City is like Dracula—you can’t kill it, no matter how hard we try.”


40 Years and Counting

Joe Kelly, president of the Atlantic City Chamber of Commerce since 1997, says the city has proven its hardiness, and also learned its lessons. “For 30 years in Atlantic City, every year was better than the last—that’s a really long period of time to grow,” says Kelly. “When gaming was added to other jurisdictions, the demand dropped and we went through that adjustment period. We improved our product. We added to it. We’re coming back.”

The city’s new mayor, Frank Gilliam, agrees. “As online gaming continues to grow with sports betting, I see the gaming industry thrive in Atlantic City as it’s done for 40 years. The new casinos set to open in Atlantic City can only continue to enhance the gaming landscape.”

Former New Jersey Superior Court Judge Steve Perskie, author and principal sponsor of the original New Jersey Casino Control Act, says Atlantic City’s future “is not dependent on how many new casinos there are. There have to be other reasons for people to come—shops and restaurants and nightclubs. It’s my hope that, over the course of next 10 years, the state makes a significant investment in terms of promoting Atlantic City. It’s always been a spectacular site for conventions and meetings, and while the facilities are first-rate, the marketing is not.”

Norton believes the biggest key to a resilient marketplace is more and better commercial air service to and from key cities like Atlanta, Houston and Dallas.

In retrospect, with all the ups and downs, with pockets of poverty still blighting the town, and with the seesawing nature of the gaming industry, have casinos proven a good bet for Atlantic City?

“The answer to that—as it was in years 10, 20 and 30—is yes, without a doubt,” says Perskie. “Atlantic City would be off everybody’s radar, it would have disappeared from a commercial point of view, if not for the fact that the people of New Jersey chose to legalize gaming 40 years ago.

“While indeed the experience of Atlantic City in the last 10 years has been difficult, the words of Mark Twain come to mind. Reports of Atlantic City’s death are greatly exaggerated.”

Score Another Victory for Elaine Wynn

Elaine Wynn has won another key battle in her campaign to remake the board of directors of Wynn Resorts, forcing the resignation of two long-time directors just days before the company’s annual meeting last week.

Wynn, whose proxy fight to purge the board of Steve Wynn loyalists was backed by the leading corporate governance agencies, prompted Idaho real estate investor John Hagenbuch to quit rather than face a disputed re-election at the May 16 meeting. His departure was quickly followed by the resignation of former Nevada Gov. Robert Miller, whose seat was not up for re-election until 2020.

Since the sexual harassment scandal that toppled her ex-husband nearly two-thirds of the board has changed hands. Ray Irani and Ted Virtue quit shortly after Wynn resigned as chairman and CEO in February. Alvin Shoemaker is leaving at the expiration of his term in 2019. The company also has added three outsiders, all women, as independent directors: former White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers and business leaders Betsy Atkins and Winifred Webb.

Elaine Wynn, who was herself ousted from the board in 2015 in the midst of a legal battle with her ex over control of her stock, emerged as the company’s largest shareholder after Steve Wynn sold his entire interest in Wynn Resorts in March.

In a steady stream of letters to shareholders in the run-up to the meeting, Ms. Wynn voiced concern that the company was considering selling a multibillion-dollar resort under development near Boston to quell an ongoing investigation by Massachusetts regulators into the sexual harassment allegations. She wanted all nominations for directorships reopened, claiming the board was still tainted with cronies of her ex-husband who may have known of complaints about his conduct toward the company’s female employees, which reputedly dated back years. Rebuffed in that attempt, she zeroed in on Hagenbuch, a close friend of Steve Wynn’s whose seat on an internal committee investigating the claims represented a conflict of interest, as she saw it.

The committee, headed by the board’s other female director, Pat Mulroy, the Las Vegas Valley’s former water-use czar, reportedly has interviewed more than 100 people and reviewed some 3 million documents as part of the probe.

Nevada regulators are also investigating the allegations.

Ms. Wynn termed the departure of Hagenbuch “a good step towards establishing the ‘New Wynn,’ but there remains more work to be done.”

Sources tell GGB News, Elaine Wynn’s ultimate goal is to oust CEO Matt Maddox and install herself and chairman or CEO, restoring the Wynn name to respectability.

MGM Buying Back $2 Billion of Its Shares

MGM Resorts International plans to buy back $2 billion of its shares.

Coming off the completion of a $1 billion repurchase announced last September, the new round of buy-backs equal about 10 percent of the company’s current market value. They come as the Las Vegas-based gaming giant is enjoying soaring profits from some $6 billion in investments in new and remodeled casinos and hotels in the U.S. and Macau, a cycle set for completion later this year with the opening of a $950 million resort in western Massachusetts.

MGM expects those projects to boost cash flows by as much as 39 percent to $3.9 billion by 2020 on revenues forecasted to hit $14.5 billion.

The company said it plans to spend about $2.1 billion in maintenance capex over the next three years, including upgrades to The Mirage and Bellagio on the Las Vegas Strip, which will leave it with a projected total of $5 billion in free cash flow for share repurchases and dividends, debt reduction, acquisitions and expansion into new markets, notably Japan.

Atlantic City Casinos Take First Quarter Hit

Three straight monthly declines in casino revenue to start 2018 resulted in Atlantic City casinos suffering an 11.7 percent drop in operating profit for the first quarter compared to 2017.

The city’s casinos saw the declines as a series of winter storms battered the East Coast this year, but the figures still comes as two new casinos are about to re-open in the resort. In June, the Hard Rock Atlantic City is scheduled to open on the site of the former Trump Taj Mahal. On the same day, Junes 28, the Ocean Resort casino is scheduled to open on the site of the former Revel casino.

That has analysts worrying that the city can’t sustain such an expansion in operating casinos. However, city officials and some analysts feel the openings could re-invigorate the city’s market.

“The numbers make it pretty clear it wasn’t a great quarter for the casinos,” said James Plousis, chairman of the casino commission in a press statement.

Plousis, however, said a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision allowing states to legalize sports betting could also be a boon to the city moving forward.

According to an Associated Press analysis of figures released by the state Division of Gaming Enforcement, the Borgata had the highest operating profit for the quarter at $45 million, which was down more than 27 percent from the same period last year.

Harrah’s was next at $28.4 million, up 18.7 percent from a year ago, and Tropicana was third at $17.4 million, up 6.5 percent.

Caesars had an operating profit of $12.5 million down 38 percent from 2017. The Golden Nugget’s $10 million operating profit was up 61.5 percent from a year ago.

Bally’s, at $6.2 million, was up 38.2 percent from last year’s first quarter, and Resorts fell to a profit of $1.6 million, down from $4 million in the same period last year.

Online only companies were mixed with Caesars Interactive-NJ posting an operating profit of $2.9 million, up nearly 39 percent from last year, while Resorts Digital fell to an $815,000 operating loss after a $570,000 operating profit in the first quarter of 2017.

In some other Atlantic City notes, some planned events for the upcoming summer season were announced.

Live Nation announced pop singer Demi Lovato will perform July 26 as part of the city’s BeachFest Concert Series. The three-year, $6 million agreement requires Live Nation to bring at least six beach concerts or events that attract 30,000 attendees or more to the resort, according to the Press of Atlantic City.

The series opens July 1 with country music star Sam Hunt and ends July 29 with electronic dance music duo the Chainsmokers.

Also, The Miss America Organization announced that the 2019 Miss America Competition will air live on ABC Networks on Sunday Sept. 9 from the city’s Boardwalk Hall.

The pageant’s future in the resort was clouded by a recent scandal involving e-mails from top pageant officials criticizing former pageant winners. That caused some local legislators to call for cancelling the pageant’s contract with Boardwalk Hall.

However, the pageant has replaced most of its board and top officials and the state Casino Reinvestment Development Authority—which operates Boardwalk Hall—decided to honor the agreement for this year’s pageant.

Hard Rock Atlantic City Receives New Jersey Casino License

Hard Rock Atlantic City has received licensing by the New Jersey Casino Commission to re-open the former Trump Taj Mahal casino, keeping it on track for and announced June 28 opening.

The neighboring Ocean Resort—formerly the failed Revel casino—has also targeted June 28 as an opening date. Combined, the two projects will restore as many as 6,500 of the 11,000 jobs Atlantic City lost when five of its 12 casinos went out of business since 2014, according to an analysis by the Associated Press. Those closings included the Revel and Taj Mahal.

“What we have in store is going to blow people away,” said Jon Lucas, chief operating officer of Hard Rock International. “It’ll be a boost for the reinvention of Atlantic City.”

About 23 executive members of the casino were also approved for key casino employee licenses before the commission. Several of the casino’s top-level executives, including Hard Rock International Chairman Jim Allen, property President Matt Harkness and principle investors Joseph Jingoli and Jack Morris were present for license hearings, according to local reports.

The licensing was helped by Hard Rock’s previous interest in building a casino in the resort in 2015, which led to the issuing of a statement of compliance—a preliminary step in the licensing procedure. The Hard Rock never went forward with its earlier plan to build a $465 casino project in the city.

Hard Rock, however, has completely transformed Donald Trump’s former Indian-themed casino which opened in 1990 in a reported $500 million refurbishment.

“We could have just re-carpeted and put up some memorabilia. But we want to grow Atlantic City rather than just moving people from an existing facility,” James Allen, CEO of Hard Rock International told the commission.

The property recently saw the installation of Hard Rock signs around the facility and officials also announced the hiring of its 3,000th employee. Atlantic City native Leonard Coleman, 54, was the announced as the 3,000th employee, and will begin as a Craps Dealer, according to local reports. Hard Rock officials said they still have about 500 open positions to fill at the casino.

The Hard Rock is putting a strong emphasis on live entertainment unveiling a $30 million entertainment budget for the property’s first year that includes more than 300 nights of live music, comedy and drama. Some announced headliners to open the schedule include Carrie Underwood (June 29) and Pitbull (June 30).

The Hard Rock also opens with no debt having been self-financed by Hard Rock International and its local investment partners, Allen said. The casino also plans to enter the New Jersey online gambling market and offer sports betting if the U.S. Supreme Court upholds New Jersey’s challenge of a federal sports betting ban.

Meanwhile, Ocean Resort officials have confirmed that the casino at the former Revel property will also open June 28.

In a statement to the local Press of Atlantic City, Ocean Resort CEO Frank Leone said June 28 will be a “culmination of all of our planning and know that this will be a special day for Atlantic City as it turns the page on a new chapter of revitalization.”

Ocean Resort, however, still has to receive casino licensing in the state.

The 6.4 million-square-foot Ocean Resort has been undergoing renovations since the property was purchased for $200 million in January from Glenn Straub’s Polo North Country Club Inc. Casino officials say the refurbishment has created 300 construction jobs and related positions at more than 90 local companies. When it opens, the casino expects to create 3,200 full-time jobs.

The property will include a 138,000-square-foot casino, 160,000 square feet of indoor meeting and convention space, 90,000 square feet of flexible outdoor special-event space and six swimming pools, including a saltwater pool and an ocean-facing sun deck with luxury cabanas, according to the Press.

“Our team has been working diligently since we acquired the property in January and have put a great deal of time and effort into creating a truly unique and memorable destination guest experience,” said Bruce Deifik, chairman of AC Ocean Walk, which owns the casino-hotel in a press release.

In another good sign for the area, a stretch of Atlantic City’s Boardwalk that connects the north Boardwalk with the city’s inlet section has recently been refurbished. The section opened after months of construction that’s been part of a $50 million project expected to extend the walking path to the inlet park at Gardner’s Basin.

Meanwhile, the Borgata Atlantic City—the resort’s market leader—has announced some counter-programming for its marina-based casino as it prepares to celebrate its 15th anniversary.

The casino announced it has booked Dave Chappelle, Cher and Barry Manilow to be part of its celebration this summer.

“As Borgata celebrates 15 years as both leaders and innovators in the Atlantic City market, we are excited to present an entire summer of programming that truly encapsulates what makes Borgata the pre-eminent travel destination on the East Coast,” said Marcus Glover, president and chief operating officer for Borgata in a press release. “Since entering the market in 2003, Borgata has made it our mission to grow and invest in not only our property and product, but our team members and guests; offering an unrivaled experience to anyone who walks through our doors.”

The headliners announced join a summer entertainment schedule that already includes three sold-out shows for Britney Spears, June 19-21; Jerry Seinfeld, July 27-28; and Earth, Wind & Fire on Sept. 2. Other acts announced last week include two shows by Ringo Starr and his All Starr Band on June 1-2, Camila Cabello on July 30 and 10 shows from comedian Sebastian Maniscalco.

Also announced was a full calendar of Savor Borgata Culinary Series events featuring an outdoor food festival, sunset barbecue and exclusive celebrity-chef hosted dinners and tasting events, including a Birthday Bash dinner hosted by “The Chew” co-host and Borgata restaurant Angeline chef and partner Michael Symon, and a Sunset Party with Wolfgang Puck on August 11, the release said.

Caesars REIT to Purchase Caesars Palace Tower, Harrah’s Philadelphia

VICI, the real-estate investment trust set up as part of the reorganization that brought Caesars Entertainment out from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year, announced that it will purchase two more of Caesars’ properties, the Octavius Hotel Tower at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas and the Harrah’s Philadelphia racino in Chester, Pennsylvania.

VICI will pay a net price of $590 million.

The purchase will bring the number of Caesars Entertainment-managed properties under the REIT’s ownership to 22, including Caesars Palace and most of the Harrah’s, Harvey’s and Horseshoe-branded properties. The REIT also owns four golf courses and 34 acres of undeveloped land on the east side of the Las Vegas Strip.

Caesars Entertainment will continue to operate both properties under long-term leases.

“Octavius Tower will strengthen our footprint on the Las Vegas Strip, Harrah’s Philadelphia will bolster our presence on the East Coast by establishing a foothold in a top gaming market,” VICI CEO Edward Pitoniak said in a statement. “As a REIT, we look to enhance our organic growth in the near term, protect against volatility in our rental income over the long term, and incentivize our tenant to invest capital into the real estate to grow and strengthen their own business.”

The Octavius Tower, built in 2012, has 668 rooms. Harrah’s Philadelphia, opened in 2006 as Harrah’s Chester, has 2,450 slot machines and table games adjacent to a harness racing track on the Delaware River. Caesars will pay VICI $35 million a year in lease payments on the tower, and $21 million the first year on Harrah’s Philadelphia, subject to annual increases.

Delaware Tax Relief Could Stall

A familiar pattern is unfolding in the Delaware state legislature, with a measure to grant tax relief to the state’s three struggling racinos easily passing the Senate under the sponsorship of state Senator Brian Bushweller, only to face a skeptical audience in House Speaker Pete Schwartzkopf.

The three racinos—Delaware Park, Dover Downs and Harrington Raceway—have been begging the state for tax relief for years, as they have been struggling against new competition in Maryland and Pennsylvania. So far, the legislature has shot the request down every year since the formation of a blue-ribbon panel of state and industry officials first proposed the tax breaks four years ago.

SB 144, easily passed by the Senate last month, would change the state slot revenue tax from 43 percent to a sliding scale ranging from 32 percent to 43.5 percent, slash the revenue tax on table games from 30 percent to 15 percent, and eliminate the annual $3 million table-game licensing fee.

Last week, Schwartzkopf said in an interview with the Delaware Public Media radio network that the Senate bill represents “a governor’s negotiation” with the casino and horse-racing industries. Citing state Finance Secretary Rick Geisenberger’s estimation the bill would cost the state $15 million in the next fiscal year, Schwartzkopf said the casino tax break should take a back seat to other state concerns.

“We just had teachers in here asking for more money for their classrooms and things like that,” he said in the interview. “(State Rep.) Larry Mitchell just stood up on the floor and talked about how low the salaries are for probation and parole. The more money we give to the casinos takes away from the money we can do to try to fix some of the other problems we have in our state.”

Schwartzkopf also said the U.S. Supreme Court decision eliminating the federal ban on sports betting means the state will be getting more revenue from sports books, which puts the need for the tax break into question.

Bushweller has argued that failing to grant the casinos tax relief puts 3,000 jobs at risk, as Dover Downs and others have threatened layoffs if the tax structure is not altered.

Pennsylvania Lottery Begins Keno in Bars and Restaurants

The Pennsylvania Lottery has launched its first new game under the state’s gaming expansion approved in 2017 with a live Keno game offered in bars and restaurants.

“We pride ourselves on responding to market conditions,” lottery executive director Drew Svitko said in a press release. “We recognize the opportunities presented by new technology and the need for modernizing our operations and points of purchase and the way we’re delivering products.”

The lottery’s processor generates a new draw every four minutes. Players can watch the draws live or online at palottery.com and on the lottery’s mobile app.

According to Svitko, Keno will pay players about $0.65 for every dollar wagered, similar to lottery’s current return.

“Pennsylvania Lottery Keno players are going to love this exciting, new way to play and win,” said Svitko. “Although you can play Keno at any lottery retailer, it’s the first game we’ve specifically marketed to businesses where adults gather to have fun—such as bars and restaurants.”

Players will also have the ability to monitor and limit the amount of money they wager or the amount of time they spend wagering through their online accounts, Svitko said. Players must be 18 years of age or older and physically be located within Pennsylvania to play.

Keno is the first phase of the Pennsylvania Lottery expansion, Svitko said. Players will soon be able to set up online lottery accounts and purchase 10 to 15 different games.

“These games are meant to appeal to a new audience,” Svitko said. “These are a lot closer to a game like Candy Crush than what people are accustomed to in a game like Powerball. These are meant to be engaging, entertaining, relevant games. We have fewer young people playing now than we would like.”

The expansion will also include the eventual introduction of Xpress Sports, which allow players to place bets on fantasy outcomes in simulated football games and auto races.  Like Keno, wagers will be limited to local bars and restaurants.

Plans Unveiled for New Downtown LV Resort

Las Vegas developer Derek Stevens has submitted plans to the city for a new 777-room hotel and casino on Fremont Street, the first ground-up resort project proposed for the Downtown area in years.

The site is a block-long stretch along the Fremont Street Experience formerly occupied by the Las Vegas Club, Mermaids casino and the Girls of Glitter Gulch strip club. Stevens, who owns the D Las Vegas and the Golden Gate on Fremont Street, had the buildings torn down last year to make way for the new resort.

Plans for 18 Fremont, as it’s titled currently (a reference to the project’s address), call for more than 117,000 square feet of gaming space, a sports book, a hotel tower that will rise 459 feet above the street, a nightclub and rooftop lounge, a pool and spa, several restaurants, meetings and events space, a rental car facility and a pedestrian bridge over Main Street to connect it with a parking garage with space for more than 1,500 vehicles.

“It’s going to blow the lid off of everything,” Mayor Carolyn Goodman said.

The city Planning Commission is scheduled to review the project this week before sending it City Council for approval in June. The height of the hotel tower also will require approval from the Federal Aviation Administration.