TOUGH YEAR FOR NEVADA LAND GAMBLING
20 February 2009
Nevada revenues fell almost 10 percent in 2008 -
and almost 19 percent in the fourth quarter alone
Worried land gambling industry operators are concerned
that a pronounced and sustained downward trend in
revenues at Nevada land casinos could continue into 2009
following a tough 2008 that saw revenues decline by 9.7
percent - with the fourth quarter plunging 18.9 percent.
Hotels Online published Nevada Gaming Control Board
statistics to back up its claim that 2008 has been the
worst on record for Nevada gambling businesses, with the
following month-by-month table:
Nevada Gaming
Revenues by the Month
2007 vs. 2008
January 2007: $1,117,140,888. January 2008:
$1,064,089,670 - down 4.75 percent
February
2007: $1,056,372,522. February 2008: $1,014,823,745 -
down 3.93 percent
March 2007: $1,054,779,360.
March 2008: $1,038,751,381 - down 1.5 percent
April 2007: $1,053,249,753. April 2008: $1,000,112,698 -
down 5.05 percent
May 2007: $1,143,445,674. May
2008: $ 969,943,776 - down 15.2 percent
June
2007: $ 959,985,424. June 2008: $949,316,713 - down 1.1
percent
July 2007: $1,145,965,863. July 2008:
$997,344,346 - down 12.97 percent
August 2007:
$1,016,480,268. August 2008: $934,120,078 - down 8.1
percent
September 2007: $1,058,687,112.
September 2008: $1,001,072,500 - down 5.44 percent
October 2007: $1,165,187,189. October 2008:
$904,960,377 - down 23.3 percent
November 2007:
$982,108,428. November 2008: $836,787,265 - down 14.80
percent
December 2007: $1,095,421,697. December
2008: $887,997,753 - down 18.94 percent
12
months 2007: $12,848,824,178. 12 months 2008:
$11,599.320,302 - down 9.7 percent
Casinos
statewide won $11.6 billion from customers during the
year, Hotels Online reports, a drop of 9.7 percent when
compared with the $12.8 billion won from gamblers in
2007; making the decline the sharpest in state history,
according to figures released Wednesday by the Gaming
Control Board this week.
On the Strip, casinos
won $6.1 billion in 2008, a decline of 10.6 percent
compared with the $6.8 billion won in 2007.
The
control board has been collecting and reporting monthly
gaming revenue figures since 1984, but senior research
analyst Frank Streshley said the statewide 2008 decline
was only the third time in 53 years that annual gaming
revenues fell.
In 2001, gaming revenues declined
1.3 percent compared with 2000, which had been the
largest ever year-over-year drop. A year later, gaming
revenues fell 0.3 percent.
The Strip's gaming
win decline in 2008 was the largest since 2001, when
casino revenues fell 2.1 percent.
"Obviously,
the 2001 numbers were impacted by 9/11," Streshley said.
"The economy has had a much more devastating impact than
anything we've ever experienced."
Several
analysts don't think Nevada and the Strip will fare any
better during the first part of 2009.
"The
challenging macroeconomic factors will continue to take
their toll on the Las Vegas Strip due to the detrimental
impact that the slowing national economy is having on
consumer discretionary spending," Deutsche Bank gaming
analyst Andrew Zarnett told investors Wednesday.
Jacob Oberman, an analyst for CB Richard Ellis's
Global Gaming Group in Las Vegas, said the casino
industry won't recover until home prices stabilise
nationwide. Consumers want to feel comfortable in their
personal lives before they get out and travel, he said.
"2009 will continue to be difficult,
particularly until the 2009 American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act begins to trickle through the economy,"
Oberman wrote in a report. "With home prices that will
remain substantially weaker in 2009 than in 2008,
especially during the first several months of the year,
leisure demand and spending will be significantly
weaker."
On Tuesday, the Las Vegas Convention
and Visitors Authority said visitation to Las Vegas fell
4.4 percent in 2008 and was off 11 percent in December,
the fourth straight month of double-digit declines.
JP Morgan gaming analyst Joe Greff said the Strip's
gaming revenue and visitor volume declines came "despite
significant hotel room discounting."
Greff said
the gaming revenue results are actually worse than they
appear "given the accounting method used for slot
revenue recognition that counted slot win from Nov. 29
and Nov. 30 in the December results."
In
December, gaming revenues statewide fell 18.9 percent,
Nevada's 12th straight monthly decline and the 13th
month out of the past 14 that gaming revenues fell. The
state's $888 million in revenues during December was the
second lowest monthly take this year.
On the
Strip during December, gaming revenues fell 23.2 percent
to $474.2 million.
Gaming revenues statewide
declined 5.4 percent in the first six months of 2008 and
14 percent over the last half of the year. In the fourth
quarter (October, November and December), gaming
revenues statewide fell 18.9 percent.
On the
Strip, gaming revenues fell 5.2 percent from January to
June and 15 percent from July through December.
"By far, the fourth quarter was the most challenging the
gaming industry has ever faced," Streshley said.
The declining revenues in December affected
statewide gaming taxes for the month. The state
collected $35.8 million, a decline of 22.7 percent
compared with $46.3 million collected for the same time
period a year ago. So far in the fiscal year, gaming tax
collections are off almost 16.2 percent.
According to the state, the economy kept gamblers from
spending like they had in the past. Customers wagered
$125.5 billion on slot machines statewide in 2008, 8.8
percent less than in 2007. Almost $29.8 billion was
wagered on table games, 5.8 percent less than a year
ago. Strip casinos saw table-game betting decline by 5.2
percent, and slot machine wagering fell 10.1 percent.
In Clark County, gaming revenues fell 9.9
percent in the year. Downtown Las Vegas gaming revenues
were off 8.1 percent, the third decrease over the past
four years. Meanwhile, the area known as the balance of
Clark County (down 7.2 percent) and the Boulder Strip
(off 10.5 percent) suffered their first annual gaming
revenue declines ever.
Washoe County gaming
revenues fell 11.4 percent to $930.1 million, the first
time the Northern Nevada community saw revenues drop
below $1 billion since 1997.
The Gaming Control
Board figures were followed by more weak numbers from
Global Betting and Gaming Consultants, which reported
that during the last 12 months, the 50 largest gambling
companies saw $140 billion wiped away from their total
value.
“The economy has gotten a lot worse than
most people expected, and it’s unlikely to improve in
2009,” Warwick Bartlett, the head of the international
gambling consultancy said.
He said the biggest
losers were the casino operators Las Vegas Sands Corp.
and MGM Mirage, who have seen values fall by 93 percent
and 88 percent, respectively.
Asian sources have
recently reported that Macau casino tycoon Dr. Stanley
Ho and his firm Sociedade de Jogos de Macau were equally
mauled by recession, some sources claim by as much as 89
percent (see previous InfoPowa report).
Bartlett
says that the world's largest gambling company by market
capitalisation is now OPAP S.A., the monopoly provider
of sports betting services and numerical lotteries in
Greece.
“It is perhaps surprising that OPAP and
Greece are under threat from the liberalisation of
gambling laws across Europe, but the market is telling
us that they expect OPAP to maintain its monopoly,” the
consultancy said in a statement.
GBGC observed
that United Kingdom-based public companies Rank Group
and William Hill, once listed as the seventh and eighth
largest gambling companies, have now fallen to 36th and
20th, respectively.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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