ATLANTIC CITY LAND CASINOS SUFFER A TOUGH APRIL
15 May 2009
AC casino revenues fell 14.2 percent in April
2009
Business Week reports that Atlantic City land casinos
continued to battle the recession in April 2009, with
the 11 casinos drawing 14.2 percent less revenue than a
year ago. However, like recent Vegas numbers, there was
a glimmer of hope in the fact that the decline was not
as great as that in March 2009, when the Atlantic City
casinos took a record breaking 19.4 percent knock.
Mark Juliano, chief executive officer of Trump
Entertainment Resorts opined: "It's up a little bit from
the bottom; that's a good way to look at it. The economy
is still a major factor."
In April, the casinos
won $313.6 million, the Business Week report reveals.
Slot revenue, Atlantic City's bread-and-butter, fell
14.9 percent to $220.6 million. Table games brought in
$92.9 million, down 12.5 percent from a year ago.
Every casino in the city experienced a decline in
April, led by three of the most beleaguered gambling
houses. Trump Marina Hotel casino, which is due to be
sold in less than three weeks to a New York developer,
was down 27.9 percent. Resorts Atlantic City, which
stopped making interest payments on its loans last fall
and is trying to avert a foreclosure bid by its lender,
was down 24.9 percent. Its sister property, the Atlantic
City Hilton Casino Resort, was down 24.7 percent.
The Tropicana Casino and Resort, which filed for
bankruptcy earlier this month so it can be sold at
auction, was down 20.8 percent. Trump Plaza Hotel and
Casino was down 20.2 percent, and Bally's Atlantic City
was down 17.6 percent.
Caesars Atlantic City was
down 16 percent, Harrah's Atlantic City was down 15.5
percent, and the Showboat Casino Hotel was down 7.2
percent.
The Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort was
down 2.2 percent, and the Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa was
down 0.3 percent.
Juliano said: "The properties
that have renovations completed over the last year or
two are doing better than those who have not."
For the first four months of 2009, the casinos won $1.3
billion, down 15.7 percent from the same period in 2008.
Atlantic City is in the third straight year of
revenue declines that began in late December 2006 when
the first of several slots parlors in Pennsylvania and
New York opened, stealing some of Atlantic City's most
reliable and profitable customers.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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