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A Focus On The Future

MGM shrugs off quarterly loss, says CityCenter will spur rebound




For the moment, forget about MGM Mirage's $750.4 million quarterly net loss, $1.17 billion in noncash impairment charges and a revenue decline of 9 percent.

To the Strip casino giant and its investors, the company's third-quarter earnings announcement Thursday was all about CityCenter.


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  • The first component in the $8.5 billion, 67-acre Strip development, the 1,500-room nongaming Vdara, opens in 26 days. The project's retail, dining and entertainment component opens two days later, followed by the nongaming Mandarin Oriental on Dec. 4.

    MGM Mirage executives spent a considerable portion of their hourlong conference call with analysts expressing optimism that the $8.5 billion CityCenter will not only grow the market, but will fuel Las Vegas' economic rebound in 2010. They said the company, which now operates nine Strip hotel-casinos catering to all ends of the consumer spending spectrum, has the necessary data showing that a turnaround has begun.

    "We're not out of the woods and we're not popping the champagne corks like the New York Yankees, but there are signs the market is healing itself," said MGM Mirage Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jim Murren. "We know the market. None of our competitors has the empirical data that we have in front of us because we deal with every type of customer that comes to Las Vegas."

    Murren told investors CityCenter could spur a 5 percent to 10 percent increase in Las Vegas visitor volume in 2010 and a gradual increase in revenue per available room, a nontraditional measurement Wall Street uses to determine profitability.

    Convention bookings into 2010, he said, have increased. The company has booked about 550,000 convention room nights into the third quarter of next year, the bulk of which are at Mandalay Bay.

    Las Vegas history, Murren said, has shown new resorts grow the market. He cited The Mirage's opening in 1989, MGM Grand in 1993, Bellagio in 1998 and Wynn Las Vegas in 2005. None of those resorts, however, opened in the middle of a recession.

    "We believe this opening will truly differentiate ourselves," Murren said. "(CityCenter) is a must-see iconic destination. It's an investment not only for next year, but also for future years."

    Wall Street is still skeptical.

    "We remain cautious on Las Vegas' operating trends heading into a 10 percent supply increase starting next month with CityCenter," Goldman Sachs gaming analyst Steven Kent said.

    To ensure attention, MGM Mirage plans to spend $20 million by the end of December on advertising and promotional activities surrounding CityCenter's opening. In 2010, the company will spend $27 million on newspaper, television and Internet advertising to build the CityCenter brand.

    CityCenter CEO Bobby Baldwin said company projections have Aria, the development's centerpiece 4,004-room hotel-casino that opens Dec. 16, generating $1.2 billion in revenue in 2010. Aria has booked hotel rooms 258 days and has become the Strip's most expensive hotel, booking a room rate that is a premium to Bellagio 80 percent of the time.

    Crystals will open with 47 percent of its tenants in December and expects to be 82 percent occupied by July.

    Baldwin said the CityCenter residential sales employees have spoken with about 700 of the 975 buyers of the project's residential offerings about the 30 percent price reductions announced in October. Condominium sales will begin closing in January at Mandarin Oriental, the all-residential Veer Towers in February and Vdara in March.

    Even with the price reductions, Baldwin said the condominium sales will exceed the company's financial projections.

    Contact reporter Howard Stutz at hstutz@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3871.

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    percolator wrote on November 06, 2009 03:18 PM: 10% Unemployment (U-3), the U-6 number which is the more realistic unemployment number was 17.5%, up from 17% last month. Things are getting worse not better!


    JimmyJam wrote on November 06, 2009 12:57 PM: Um, I don't get it.
    A hotel opening without a theme. Its just a hotel/casino with shops, What's the draw again?
    I've heard a million times "see one casino, you've seen them all". The quirky theme is what go me in the door to point at and to explore.
    I admit the Veer towers look cool, but thats not enough to get me to go check it out.


    rocky wrote on November 06, 2009 08:44 AM: Can I have some of what these MGM guys are smoking?

    How in the HECK do you "grow the market" with your new resort when more than 10% of the US is unemployed? Where do you GET these customers to "grow the market" when they don't even have the money to buy a plane ticket, much less pay for the $15 hamburger and $10 beer in your fancy casino?

    These MGM guys would have made great snake oil salesmen in the old days.