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Binion's negative cash flow widens

First-quarter losses widened at one of the most recognizable casinos in downtown Las Vegas.

Binion's posted a negative cash flow of $682,000 for the quarter, an increase from first-quarter losses of $609,000 in 2006.


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  • Operators MTR Gaming of Chester W.Va., blamed "softness in the overall downtown Las Vegas market."

    But the company didn't offer any ideas to turn around the casino.

    Chairman Edson Arneault didn't even mention Binion's in written comments about the company's financial performance, choosing instead to comment on racing, card rooms and casino operations in West Virginia and Ohio, among other ventures.

    According to the earnings statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission Binion's net revenues were down $1.4 million to $15.1 million for the quarter, a difference of 9 percent.

    The development of the Pres- que Isle Downs race track and casino in Erie, Pa., hurt overall cash flow for MTR, according to the earnings report.

    The report blamed $2.9 million in pre-opening costs at Presque Isle for a 14 percent decline in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization to $12.5 million for the quarter.

    MTR did, however, post an overall increase in net revenue of 13 percent to $107.1 million.

    Even before MTR bought Binion's for $20 million in 2004, the 56-year-old casino fell on hard times. In 2004 gaming regulators swooped in on Binion's Horseshoe, founded by Nevada gaming pioneer Benny Binion, and forced a shutdown to ensure former owner Becky Binion Behnen could pay mounting debts.

    Harrah's later bought the property primarily for the Horseshoe name and the lucrative World Series of Poker.

    It sold the casino a month later to MTR, which rechristened the property Binion's Gambling Hall and Hotel last year.

    Binion's isn't the only downtown casino having trouble. Downtown gaming win has declined or remained flat every year for more than a decade. In 2006 it declined 3.6 percent to $630.4 million and was in decline during the last seven months of the year.

    In March, William Robinson Jr., vice president and chief operating officer of Speakeasy Gaming, a subsidiary of MTR which runs Binion's, told the Nevada Gaming Control Board the casino would recover but probably not to the level it enjoyed during its heyday.

    "I don't know if we'll get back to where it was when Jack Binion (Benny's son) ran it, but we're going to try," said Robinson, who was before the board for approval for a key employee license.

    He told the board the company planned to remodel the casino.

    "We want to get Binion's back to where it used to be," Robinson said then.

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    Jimmy wrote on May 25, 2007 05:06 PM: Dollar for dollar, the downtown is suffering greatly since there are more feebies that are given from the strip casino than the downtown one. If downtown wants to lure customers, it needs to do what the Golden Nugget is doing which is to spend million upgrading its facilities and giving out comps to best players which is MUST in this competitive world of gaming business. Strip casino knew that and it is reaping benefits from it already. It needs to play catch up just like our Auto industries.


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    Jack wrote on May 19, 2007 04:49 AM: The reason downtown vegas is losing business is because of there blackjack games,at one time they had the best blackjack rules in America.they then put in 6-5 blackjack and some more bad rules.Thats when they went SOUTH.


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    Bob wrote on May 17, 2007 08:46 AM: I used to drop at least a grand a year at the horseshoe playing blackjack. But, after Harrahs bought the place and then MTR took it over, the majority of Blackjack tables became 6 to 5 payoffs for blackjack and I refuse to play there now. I now lose my money at the 4 queens.


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    Steve Miller wrote on May 16, 2007 09:43 AM: Tear down the canopy and re-open historic Fremont St.

    Just before approving the privatization and closure of historic Fremont Street in the early 90's, the City Council established a "contingency fund" of $12 million set aside in a Denver bank for the tearing down of the canopy and restoration of the street for vehicular traffic. The location of this money is today unknown, and the "Fremont Street Experience" is a complete financial disaster. The pipe dream of Steve Wynn and ex-Mayor Jan Jones is killing our city's core. Jones, after she left office and became an executive with Harrah's, removed the Horseshoe name from downtown to later be used by her company on the Strip. She also moved the World Championship of Poker to one of her Strip venues. Wynn walked away (or should I say ran?) from his Golden Nugget where Frank Sinatra once appeared, and concentrated only on the strip. With him he took our nationally televised New Year's Eve party, and our city's only parade route. With that much damage done by people who we thought cared about our city's historic downtown gaming district, it was inevitable gaming revenues would take a drastic decline. - Former LV City Councilman Steve Miller