ANOTHER BAD MONTH FOR NEVADA CASINOS
13 March 2009
Casino revenues down 14.6 percent in January,
13th straight month in decline
The economic recession continues to weigh heavily on
land gambling companies in Nevada, according to the
latest official figures reported by Associated Press
this week. Casinos in the gambling state suffered their
13th straight month of declines in January 2009,
reporting $908.6 million for a 14.6 percent drop
compared with January 2008, according to a state report
released Tuesday.
Taxes based on the casino win,
a major revenue source for the state, were down a
staggering 42.3 percent compared with a year ago, the
Gaming Control Board reported. So far this fiscal year,
those revenues are down 20.3 percent.
"We are
seeing a continuation of the very severe downturn in our
economy," Control Board analyst Frank Streshley said.
"And we're comparing the January figures to a soft month
a year ago. That means we're still not at the bottom.
We're still in a declining trend and to try to look
forward to when things will flatten out is very hard."
Streshley told Associated Press that the big drop in
taxes stems in part from credit play during the Chinese
New Year celebration at the end of January. Payment of
the credit in February should mean improved tax
collections in the Control Board's next report a month
from now, he added.
The $908.6 million win in
January was the amount left in casino coffers after
gamblers wagered $12.3 billion during the month,
including $9.6 billion in slot machine bets and the
balance on table games. The betting total is down about
3 percent from a year ago.
The GCB report shows
declines during January in most major markets in the
state, including the Las Vegas Strip which was down 14.8
percent.
Elsewhere in southern Nevada, Laughlin
was off 10.3 percent, downtown Las Vegas declined 22.7
percent, Mesquite was down 15.1 percent, the Boulder
Strip was down 23 percent and North Las Vegas was down
11.2 percent.
In northern Nevada, clubs in Washoe
County, which takes in Reno, were down 0.02 percent.
While that drop was very slight, it was the 19th
consecutive month of declines for the area.
Resorts on Lake Tahoe's south shore reported a 23.7
percent decrease in January compared with the same month
a year earlier.
A statewide breakdown shows that
slots were off 17.5 percent while table games were down
9.2 percent compared with January 2008.
Slots
accounted for $579.2 million of the total win. That
included $274.5 million won by multidenomination slots,
down 10.1 percent. Penny slots were second with a win of
$141.2 million, down 0.8 percent.
Live games,
including poker, accounted for the balance of the
January total. That included $96.2 million won on
baccarat, up 17.2 percent; $94.1 million won on
blackjack tables, down 11.6 percent; $34.9 million on
craps, down 13.7 percent; and $22.1 million on roulette,
down 33.6 percent.
Sports books won $7.9 million,
down 58.5 percent. Poker games won $12.7 million, down
0.8 percent.
"Win" is a gross figure, with no
operating costs or other expenses deducted. It
represents casino revenue only, not hotel, restaurant or
bar revenues.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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