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Nevada gaming revenues down 11.6 percent in March

If you’re looking for some positive news within March’s 11.6 percent decline in Nevada gaming revenues, we have some. The drop was the 15th straight month gaming revenues have tumbled in Nevada and the sixth consecutive month of double-digit declines. However, the percentage drop was the lowest during the past six months and the smallest monthly percentage decrease since September, when revenues fell 5.4 percent.

The total gaming win of $918.2 million, compared to $1.038 billion in March 2008, was the largest single month total since September ($1 billion).


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  • Gaming revenues fell 9.8 percent in all of Clark County but North Las Vegas had $31.9 million in gaming revenues, a 9.7 percent jump that was attributed to the November opening of the $675 million Aliante Station.

    “The percent decline this month is a sequential improvement from recent months, which is consistent with recent commentary from Las Vegas operators that the market may have begun to stabilize,” Susquehanna gaming analyst Robert LaFleur told investors Thursday after the Gaming Control Board released the monthly totals.

    On the Strip, casino revenues fell 12.3 percent to $456.1 million, compared with $519.8 million reported a year ago. The Strip numbers reflect the December opening of the $2.3 billion Encore.

    Frank Streshley, chief of the control board’s tax and license division, said the feedback he has heard from casino operators is that signs are pointing toward some stabilization in the local market. He said the March statewide decline was below the average monthly decline for the previous five months.

    Meeting and convention cancellations have slowed and advance hotel room bookings have increased, an indication that potential customers are considering trips to Nevada.

    “We’re still reporting 2004 gaming revenue type numbers, so we have a ways to make up,” Streshley said. “Going forward we’re going to be comparing numbers where gaming revenues declined in the double-digit range every month. So, it seems we’re getting close to the bottom, or very, very close.”

    Analysts are debating different signs of market stabilization. Jacob Oberman, the director of gaming research for the Global Gaming Group of CB Richard Ellis, said in a note to customers that several factors need to be reached before he’s ready to say the Las Vegas gaming market has stabilized.

    “The answer to that question depends on the definition of stabilize.” Oberman said. “If the definition is that year-over-year comparisons have dropped the most they are going to drop, the answer is probably yes. If the definition is revenues improving on a seasonally adjusted basis in the rest of 2009 compared to first quarter of 2009, the answer is maybe.”

    Oberman called the March results “a pretty decent month for Strip gaming revenue.”

    For the first three months of the year, gaming revenues compared to a year ago are down more than 14.7 statewide and almost 17 percent on the Strip.

    Gamblers wagered $10 billion on slot machines in March, a decline of 13 percent from a year ago, and $2.2 billion on table games, a drop of 7.8 percent. Together, the total amount wagered was off 12.1 percent.

    Baccarat wagering was up 28.6 percent during the month, although, the hold percentage was just 7.2 percent, 3 percentage points below the normal hold percentage, meaning the baccarat win of $33.5 million was down 4.5 percent.

    “The casinos essentially played unlucky as players won more than they normally do,” LaFleur said. March didn’t include many special events, other than the annual NASCAR race and the March 1 opening of the $1 billion M Resort.

    The new casino is located in Henderson and its revenues are figured into the Boulder Strip category, which includes the Boulder Highway casinos and Henderson. For the month, Boulder Strip reported gaming revenues of $79.4 million, a 4 percent decline which was the second lowest decline in Clark County numbers.

    Washoe County recorded its 21st straight month of declining gaming revenues. Overall, the Northern Nevada county was down 23.3 percent while casinos Reno were off 26 percent.

    Gaming taxes based on March revenues declined 8.7 percent from a year ago. The state collected $74.7 million in gaming taxes, compared with $81.8 million in the same month last year. For the fiscal year, gaming tax collections are off more than 15 percent.

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

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    Report abuse

    neimanblows1 wrote on May 07, 2009 07:40 PM: I blame Bush.


    Report abuse

    Steve T wrote on May 07, 2009 04:13 PM: Dandin: by your logic that NV casinos should pay the average tax rate that other states have theirs pay, maybe we need to institute a state personal income tax that is the average of personal income taxes that other states have. There is a huge differnce between Nv and other states. Chicago and suburbs have a population in excess of 4 million, but there are only five casinos within driving distance, and there are no video poker machines in bars or grocery stores. Other state's casinos enjoy a near monopoly that is granted by the state. It's entirely different.


    Report abuse

    Dandin wrote on May 07, 2009 01:07 PM: Nevada casinos are lowering the room prices, which also lowers their taxes paid. Yet Nevada casinos pay the lowest "gaming" tax of all 50 states. Maybe having them pay at least an average tax on gaming revenue would help. BUT NEVADA ALSO DESPERATELY NEEDS TO DIVERSIFY its sources of revenue. BILLIONS of DOLLARS more would come to Nevada if it would have the feds finish the nuclear waste storage facility, charge for shipping the waste to Nevada, require the feds to build a modern nuclear waste recycling plant on site, recycle the nuclear waste, have the feds also build a modern nuclear power plant on site to re-use the recycled nuclear waste, then charge for the power, then charge for the storage of the re-used and recycled nuclear waste material that is left, now down to about 90% less, which now has less than a 1000 year life and is easier and safer to store. ALL technologically feasible and safe, despite the fears of those who are less educated. And it is more fiscally productive than the oil from Alaska.
    Add to that the huge amount more of solar, wind and geothermal energy that this state could produce and sell. Like in Alaska where every resident each year gets several thousand dollars in a dividend check from the the oil companies, we could enjoy the same in Nevada from the energy.
    And if all of the BAILOUT monies, federal loans, etc., had been given to every working person in the entire US, about 10-20 thousand dollars each, the US population could have stimulated the economy far better than the Banks, corporations, and feds are doing. And most if not all could have staved off foreclosure for a year or two more.


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    Cheryl wrote on May 07, 2009 01:03 PM: I flew back into Las Vegas yesterday (5/6/09) and I had to WAIT for a TRAM at the airport. I have lived here since 1957 and traveled a lot. I have never had to wait for a tram at the airport because there were so many people. I am sorry I don't believe the casinos are being honest. The local casino I frequent is always busy and it's hard to find a parking place.
    I don't see a recession here in Vegas.


    Report abuse

    Penny Player wrote on May 07, 2009 12:12 PM: Here's a simple solution, if these large hotels and casinos would drop there ROOM rates to a LOW LOW price that would equal MORE AND MORE PEOPLE in places spending money on other things like GAMING and Booze this is where they make the real money as it is! Via Las Vegas the city I love


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    HERE IT COMES NEVADA--- wrote on May 07, 2009 11:25 AM: Get ready for a-

    MASSIVE
    INCREASE IN
    TAXES!!


    INCLUDING

    Higher Sales Taxes, New Service Tax, Huge Increase to Modified Business Tax


    OUR LEADERS WILL BE `COURAGEOUS’, `BOLD, & `PROGRESSIVE’ AND NEVADA TAXPAYERS WELCOME THESE NECESSARY INCREASES WITH OPEN ARMS.


    Report abuse

    Mark wrote on May 07, 2009 10:31 AM: Yes, get rid of the casinos, then we can pay a 7.5% income tax. Then we can raise our sales tax that all those tourists use to pay into. Then we can tax lots of other stuff now that those pesky tourists are not contributing to our tax base getting nothing out of it but a good time.

    Why should Steve Wynn make money off those tourists when I can just pay my own way. I am more than willing to pay $4,000 to $5,000 a year out of my pocket just so those big shots don't make their money.


    Report abuse

    RjC wrote on May 07, 2009 09:45 AM: Yes we are overbuilt and the trickling loss of local population will only impact on monthly negative figures. Two bit town, here we come!


    Report abuse

    Peter Romano wrote on May 07, 2009 09:35 AM: Mabel & Bob,

    could not agree with you more. Vegas is going nowhere. It is here to stay.. Gambling and having a good time is in the blood of our country. Question for everyone, if the casino business provides $75million a month in revenue and with a state of just under 3 million people where is all the money going?


    Report abuse

    2zero wrote on May 07, 2009 09:22 AM: "The one bright spot was NLV"....?

    The increase in NLV was the direct result of the new Stations/Greenspun casino. Not the result of increased gaming, but rather, a shift from other area's and the result is a net decline.

    When (if) City Center opens there will be a short term bump (increase) in gaming but when the novelty of the new property is gone there will simply be a shift from other casinos based on room costs and overall customer preference.

    Face it; we over built. Can Vegas "recreate" itself, I do not know but it seems unlikely.

    What happens here........LOL.


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