U.S. LAND CASINOS STILL IN DECLINE
13 November 2009
But perhaps not as steeply as before
September '09 numbers from the Nevada Gaming Control
Board show winnings from gamblers at land casinos in the
state declined in September for the 21st month in a row.
Land casinos statewide won $911 million from
gamblers during the month, a 9 percent decrease compared
with the same month in 2008.
Taxes collected on
the September revenue totaled $54.3 million, a 14.6
percent decline from the same month a year ago. For the
fiscal year that began July 1, the gambling win has
decreased 10.3 percent.
The September figure was
the amount left in land casino coffers after gamblers
wagered $11.6 billion at slot machines and table games,
a decline of 4.2 percent from the same month in 2008.
However, taking a positive view, officials noted
that the numbers marked the second month in a row where
declines have stayed in the single digits.
August posted the first single-digit decline since May,
said the Board's analyst, Frank Streshley. September was
also the first time since March the statewide casino win
exceeded $900 million, he said.
Casino wins on
the Las Vegas Strip, which account for about half of all
state gambling revenue, fell to $506.4 million, down 3.6
percent, the smallest decline since June 2008.
For all of Clark County, Nevada's population and tourism
hub, the casino win fell to $774 million, down 9.3
percent from $853.5 million won in the same month last
year.
Streshley opined that the Las Vegas Strip
results suggest it will rebound faster than the rest of
the state, as the national and international economies
begin to show signs of recovery. Smaller local markets,
however, will struggle longer, weighed down by Nevada's
record 13.3 percent unemployment rate and weak housing
market.
In Washoe County, which includes Reno,
casino win dropped nearly 6.4 percent to $72.1 million,
marking the 27th month of straight declines for that
area.
Along Lake Tahoe's south shore, casinos
reported a 10.8 percent drop, taking in $21.8 million.
Elsewhere, revenue fell 7 percent in Elko County; 15
percent in Churchill County; and 3.9 percent in Douglas
County's Carson Valley
New Jersey's Atlantic City
land casinos appeared to be displaying a similar
improved trend.
October revenue figures showed a
slower rate of decline for the nation's second-largest
gambling market at around 6.5 percent compared with a
year ago. The latest numbers are anm improvement on the
double-digit declines that have plagued the region's
gambling venues- as much as 20 percent down in March
this year.
October results are only slightly
worse than the September figures, which showed a 5.8
percent decline.
For October, the Atlantic City
land casinos won $323.8 million: $222.4 million at slots
and another $101.4 million at table games.
However, there are fears that gambling developments in
rival states will further increase competition and
negatively impact the New Jersey business. Delaware's
casinos will soon offer table games, and Pennsylvania -
already a threat with its slot parlours - has similar
plans.
"There's more pain coming," said Joe
Weinert, senior vice president of Spectrum Gaming Group,
a New Jersey casino consulting firm. "A lot of the
bread-and-butter customers are gone forever. That money
has gone to casinos in eastern Pennsylvania, and it's
not coming back."
Only two of Atlantic City's 11
casinos showed an increase in revenue in October:
Caesars Atlantic City, which was up 11.1 percent, and
the Showboat Casino Hotel, which was up 11.2 percent.
For the first 10 months of the year, casino revenues
are down 13.5 percent compared with last year.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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