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Bailout bill's collapse reverberates in valley

Tight credit hurts business; gaming stocks take plunge







Home builder Tom McCormick sees the credit crunch in the gun-shy consumers who refuse to pull the trigger on big purchases.

Alan Waxler, owner of a charter-transportation company, feels it in the extra effort he spends tracking down commercial loans for expansion.


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  • And neither local entrepreneur said he expects business to get any easier following the Monday collapse of a bill in Congress designed to bail out banks flirting with insolvency.

    "We're in such trouble," Waxler said upon hearing news of the failed bailout package. "The strongest economy on Earth is just going down the toilet."

    Added McCormick, president of Astoria Homes: "There's so much fear among consumers. They just want to sit on the sidelines, and I'm not sure what will get them off the sidelines."

    Local business owners weren't merely fretting over the potential for long-term malaise Monday. The city's biggest companies saw huge losses in capital wealth as jittery investors bailed on the country's stock markets.

    Carnage on Wall Street -- the Dow Jones industrial average plunged 777 points after Congress spiked the rescue plan -- visited Las Vegas Boulevard as well, with share prices in local gaming operators taking major hits.

    Wynn Resorts Ltd. fell $7.04, or 8.29 percent, on the Nasdaq National Market to close at $77.93, while Las Vegas Sands Corp. fell $5.15, or 13.46 percent, on the New York Stock Exchange to close at $33.10.

    MGM Mirage, which is still attempting to close the last piece of financing for its $9.2 billion CityCenter development, fell $4.02, or 13.4 percent, on the New York Stock Exchange, to close at $25.99.

    Boyd Gaming Corp. fell 86 cents, or 8.91 percent, on the New York Stock Exchange to close at $8.79.

    Analysts said fears that credit markets will remain tight and concerns that consumers' discretionary spending will continue to slow helped push down gaming stocks.

    "Gaming is a sector that nobody really wants to touch right now," Macquarie Capital gaming analyst Joel Simkins said. "There are some companies that are well-capitalized and will survive during this downturn. Some others are much more exposed and highly leveraged."

    Investors also worry that operators might shelve expansion proposals because of lack of funding. Already, Boyd put its $4.8 billion Echelon project on hold for up to a year, while Pinnacle Entertainment and Harrah's have slowed progress on projects in Atlantic City, N.J., and Biloxi, Miss.

    Boyd Gaming spokesman Rob Stillwell said the markets' reaction Monday reinforced the decision to delay Echelon.

    "It's too early to know what the credit markets will look like a year from now," Stillwell said. "We've said three to four quarters, assuming the economy turns around."

    Investors and analysts have expressed concern about CityCenter, which is still missing about $700 million in financing. CityCenter is expected to open in late 2009. MGM Mirage officials said previously the company was working to complete the last piece of its financial puzzle.

    One source said the bailout delay has slowed financing for projects, but funding is still available.

    One planned Strip project is throwing in the towel, though.

    New York-based FX Real Estate and Entertainment said an Elvis-themed hotel-casino planned for 18 acres on the Strip is now "unlikely" due to the "dislocation and turbulence in the capital markets," according to a Monday filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    FX said it is reviewing its proposal for the development, which would stretch from Harmon Avenue to the Smith & Wollensky building just north of MGM Grand.

    Scarce credit also hurts the smaller businesses that make up much of Southern Nevada's job base.

    Waxler said he's looked for more than a year to move his business, AWG, to a larger site. AWG sits on roughly two acres near Tropicana Avenue and Valley View Boulevard, but expanding the company's 122-vehicle fleet would require at least five acres near McCarran International Airport. In his bid to grow, Waxler faces high land prices and expensive loans.

    "It's practically impossible, because the amount of money needed now to be able to get into a new facility is monumental," Waxler said. "No one is loaning. Just trying to find reasonable money to borrow, and get into a deal, has become a job in and of itself."

    The credit crunch brought one small reprieve to AWG: A project planned for the company's current site faces a questionable future thanks to funding issues. That's bought AWG a little more time to scour the city for an alternative location.

    Consumers also want more time to make big-ticket financial decisions, and Monday's bailout defeat could take even more home buyers out of the game if Congress doesn't develop a different plan, McCormick said.

    Astoria saw strong upticks in home purchases in July and August, McCormick said, only to watch sales fall off after a "cascading of bad news" starting with the Sept. 15 failure of investment house Lehman Brothers.

    "We still have reasonable sales traffic within our neighborhoods, but everyone is saying, 'I don't want to decide on buying until I know what's going to happen,'" McCormick said.

    With Astoria's construction loans scheduled to last well into 2009, Astoria shouldn't need to turn to banks for fresh infusions of cash anytime soon. Still, McCormick's concerned.

    "I used to think we were working our way through this thing, and seeing a light at the end of the tunnel," he said. "But who ever thought all these big institutions were just going to go away? I don't want to be pessimistic. I'm extremely neutral, because there are too many variables out there right now."

    Local bankers said they continued to make loans Monday.

    "It's business as usual here," said Dallas Haun, chief executive officer and chairman of Nevada State Bank, the largest conventional commercial bank with a Nevada charter.

    "We're still making loans," Haun said, adding, however, that the bank is giving extra scrutiny to some real-estate backed loans.

    Similarly, Paul Kadavy, chief executive of Paramount Bank, said he has been busy extending lines of credit and loans that some older banks won't make because of their focus on existing problem loans.

    Borrowers with good credit and proof of income can still qualify for traditional, 30-year, fixed-rate home mortgages, said Brock Davis, president of U.S. Express Mortgage.

    "The (home buyers) are starting to come out of the woodwork," Davis said.

    Davis said the House rejection of the bailout bill, at worse, "may drive rates up a little."

    Yet, Davis said the federal government could restore the ability of banks to make new loans by purchasing delinquent residential mortgage loans that banks cannot sell today.

    With those loans off their books, banks could make new mortgage loans and buyers of securitized loans would start buying new loan packages again, Davis said.

    "You've restored the flow in mortgage-backed securities," Davis said.

    While the bill was characterized as a bailout of Wall Street, "it really does affect Main Street," said Dale Gibbons, chief financial officer of Western Bancorporation, the holding company for Bank of Nevada.

    It has been difficult for publicly held banks to raise capital by selling stock and other securities on Wall Street, Gibbons said. "So banks' ability to borrow and raise capital is curtailed and, as a result, they are not going to be able to make loans to local businesses," Gibbons said.

    Arvin Menon, chief executive officer of Meadows Bank, mentioned another reason for the credit crunch.

    Banks trying to fund a loan typically can borrow so-called federal funds overnight from other banks. Yet, Menon said bankers are reluctant to lend money to other banks overnight for fear that other banks may fail.

    "We remain pretty optimistic that Washington is going to do what's right to stabilize the (investment markets) and restore the confidence of the public," Haun said. "Today, there is no confidence and the anxiety and fear level is high."

    The package hasn't been sold properly to Congress and voters as a bailout for Wall Street, Gibbons said.

    Martin Lobel, a Washington, D.C., lawyer and former legislative aide to the late Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wisc., said the middle class and politicians facing re-election were outraged at the prospect of bailing out Wall Street tycoons.

    "They are going to have to recast it as a bailout of Main Street and not Wall Street," Lobel said. "And I don't know how they are going to do that."

    Review-Journal reporters John Edwards, Arnold Knightly and Howard Stutz contributed to this article. Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at jrobison@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4512.

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    Report abuse

    SamT wrote on October 01, 2008 06:29 PM: Everyone had his or hers collective fill of our Two-party regime, finally?

    Now that we've all been disabused-in the starkest manner-about who truly runs this country, it's high time for something new, totally new.

    If you won't vote for Ron Paul, now, at least spare yourself the indignity of voting democrat or republican.

    No vote sends a stronger message than voting for sellouts.


    Report abuse

    i'm gonna give you wrote on September 30, 2008 07:09 PM: This is part of the end result of Bushy giving you some of your own money back nwhile he went on a spending spree.


    Report abuse

    Alexander Hamilton wrote on September 30, 2008 03:07 PM: F**k James Madison


    Report abuse

    Mike_Heath wrote on September 30, 2008 03:02 PM: "In other words, you're saying, "Watch out, our economy could collapse." We're saying, "Bring it on!""

    Meanwhile, James Madison Madison grins in his grave, content in knowing that Federalist #10 was spot on...too bad our representatives are too afraid and self interested for it to matter.


    Report abuse

    Michael K wrote on September 30, 2008 02:45 PM: Nicely put Common Sense!


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    Common Sense wrote on September 30, 2008 02:37 PM: "The wealthy become super wealthy. The poor remain poor. The middle class gets obliterated."

    That's no prediction of the future. It's an assessment of the present.

    You predict that as more banks fail, the gov't will start printing money to pay depositors. Yet the gov't just proposed printing another trillion dollars yesterday. That's in addition to the 10 trillion dollars they've printed already, which has de-valued our dollar, raised the price of commodities, and indentured our unborn children to servitude.

    We're closer to agreement than you think. Taxpayers want neither the inflation we've already suffered, nor another trillion dollars worth. We especially don't want to pay that bill while the people who caused the problem get to spend the cash.

    Your doomsday scenario has some potential to become real, even though we don't believe it will happen. However, you fail to realize that we really don't mind that possibility. We'd rather tough it out as free people than live comfortably as slaves to a corrupt government and financial industry.

    In other words, you're saying, "Watch out, our economy could collapse." We're saying, "Bring it on!"


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    Tom, Burbank wrote on September 30, 2008 02:21 PM: Memo to mauna loa: inattention to detail and the sense that small things don't matter are contributing factors to the giant mess we're in today. Little things do matter, because the big things are accumulations of the small.

    P.S. I'll tell Kelsey Grammer you're a fan if his last name.


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    Ace Cab wrote on September 30, 2008 02:19 PM: Waxler runs a string of limos - why would you pick him to comment on the economy? His thoughts don't mean squat.


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    Party affiliation does not matter wrote on September 30, 2008 02:11 PM: mauna loser, since you weren't able to figure out what was wrong with your statement the first time I posted it, I'll post it again for you: "Por favor, get you GED ok."

    Can you figure out what you did wrong yet, idiot? You're not smart.


    Report abuse

    2zero wrote on September 30, 2008 01:56 PM: Proverbs 28:8


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