ATLANTIC CITY LAND CASINOS BATTLING
16 January 2009
Revenue continues to fall off in New
Jersey....Indiana, too
Atlantic City's revenues continued to fall in December,
according to the latest statistics from New Jersey, with
the gambling centre's 11 land casinos showing an
accelerated decline over the previous year. The casinos
won $302 million from gamblers in December, down 18.7
percent, exceeding the 15.1 percent decline set in
September.
Throughout 2008, Atlantic City's casinos won 7.6 percent
less from gamblers than they had in 2007, and prior to
that, casino revenue had increased every year since
gambling was legalised in the area back in 1978.
Joseph Weinert, senior vice president of consultants
Spectrum Gaming Group commented: "Over the last two
years, about $600 million in gross gaming revenue has
disappeared from Atlantic City." He added that 3 300
casino jobs had been the human cost of the two year
decline.
Gambling commission officials attributed the adverse
results to a number of factors, including the nation's
serious economic woes, growing competition in
neighbouring states and smoking bans.
Atlantic City's decline coincided with the opening of
slots parlours in Pennsylvania and New York that have
siphoned away gamblers. Slot machine revenue fell 9.6
percent to $3.13 billion, and table games brought in
$1.41 billion, down 3 percent.
Only one casino — Harrah's Resort Atlantic City — showed
an increase for the year; its revenue rose 4.9 percent.
The two biggest declines were posted by casinos owned by
Colony Capital, the Atlantic City Hilton Casino Resort
at 18.3 percent and Resorts Atlantic City at 16.3
percent.
The news from Indiana is not much brighter, thanks to
the prohibitively high gasoline prices last summer, and
the impact of the recession.
Statewide figures released last week by the Indiana
Gaming Commission showed revenues at Indiana's 11
full-service casinos fell 8 percent to about $2.5
billion last year, compared with $2.7 billion in 2007,
while admissions fell 6 percent. It was the first time
that statewide revenues and attendance for the
full-service casinos have fallen from the previous year,
contradicting the conventional wisdom that casinos were
recession proof.
Adding to revenues, which totalled $2.67 billion
throughout 2008, was the introduction in June last year
of slot machines at Indiana's two horseracing tracks.
Slot machines at the two horse tracks, Hoosier Park near
Anderson and Indiana Downs in Shelbyville brought in
nearly $195 million through December.
Mike Smith, president of the Casino Association of
Indiana, said: "Obviously the economy has taken a big
toll on Indiana casinos. It's taken two more casinos to
do the same amount of business that 11 casinos did.";
The Courier-Journal of Louisville reported that
Horseshoe Southern Indiana, formerly Caesars Indiana,
saw its gross revenues decline 9 percent in 2008, while
admissions sank by 12 percent. The Harrison County boat
drew nearly 367 000 fewer visits from patrons in 2008.
The newspaper reported that analysts and gambling
executives have opined that the recession has hit all
forms of legalised gambling, including horse racing and
some state lotteries.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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