AGA CHIEF GIVES THE LATEST ON LAND CASINOS
20 November 2009
"Main Street is still feeling the heat of the
economic downturn," says Fahrenkopf
When Frank Fahrenkopf, chief of the American Gaming
Association, speaks at the annual Global Gaming Expo in
Las Vegas, both the online and land branches of the
gambling industry look for indicators on the health of
the business and the direction it is taking.
This
year was no exception as Fahrenkopf addressed delegates
to the 2009 event.
He told the audience that
U.S. commercial casinos took in $7.94 billion in revenue
during the third quarter, 5.5 percent less than a year
earlier, and that while economists believe the country
is moving beyond one of the worst recessions in history,
that's not a practical reality for many casinos or their
customers.
"Main Street is still feeling the
heat, in fact, of the economic downturn," Fahrenkopf
said. "The same has to be said very clearly for the
gaming industry."
The Expo itself reflected this
weakness, the gaming exec observed, noting that
exhibitors signed on for roughly 20 percent less space
than last year. Attendance figures were not immediately
available, though Fahrenkopf said organisers hoped 25
000 people would come to the four-day gathering,
compared with 26 500 last year.
The convention
business, or rather the lack thereof, has particularly
hurt casinos in Las Vegas, where revenues fell 27.1
percent for the first nine months of the year.
Associated Press quotes Fahrenkopf as saying that
casinos will likely stay down until more people have
jobs and more discretionary income. And he predicted
that gambling's recovery will lag the general economic
recovery by a few months.
Land casino operators
were nevertheless generally optimistic. “The news is
better,” said Fahrenkopf. "We’re seeing some signs of a
recovery and some have said we hit bottom. It’s still
challenging.”
He noted that in Pennsylvania new
land casinos had opened, and said he expected the
governor would soon sign a bill authorising table games.
This has put pressure on neighbouring Atlantic City in
New Jersey.
One of the interesting elements in
Fahrenkopf's address concerned the results of a survey
the AGA carried out among its subscribers.
Asked
to assess the current business conditions, 44 percent
said conditions were getting somewhat better; 31 percent
thought conditions remained depressed, but were neither
better nor worse; 44 percent thought it would be three
to four years before the industry was back to the
successful pre-2008 levels.
The survey also
touched on Internet gambling, where 39 percent of
respondents opined that the legalisation of Internet
gaming would dominate the news in 2010.
When
asked when the U.S. will sanction at least some form of
online gambling, 50 percent of those surveyed say
legalisation likely will happen during the next year or
two, while about one-third (31 percent) estimate that
three to five years is a more realistic timeframe.
Interestingly, a full 75 percent of survey respondents
think the legalisation of sports betting is “very
unlikely” in the next five to 10 years.
Nearly
one-in-three (29 percent) thinks U.S. online gambling
revenues would reach $18 to $20 billion by 2014 if
online betting were legalised in the U.S. next year.
The gaming chief said that the Internet gambling
issue, on which the AGA has taken a neutral stance due
to differences of opinion among its member companies,
would probably again be discussed at the Association's
December board meeting.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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