In an industry rocked by recession, Atlantic City's
casinos look especially grim.
In this 11-casino market, total revenue is in its third
consecutive year of decline, several casinos may change
ownership, and several projects have been delayed or
postponed.
Trump Entertainment, which owns three
casinos, has been delisted from Nasdaq and is in
bankruptcy.The private
Tropicana Atlantic City declared bankruptcy
as well.
The two casinos owned by
Colony Capital have defaulted on their
mortgages. Four casinos are owned by
Harrah's Entertainment ,which has had to
initiate debt exchanges with lenders to ease pressure on its
balance sheet.
Keep reading to find out about the mixed dealings at the
11th casino, Borgata.
Atlantic City is being hit not only by the recession, but
also by more gambling opportunities in neighboring states. It
offers a lesson in why equity and bond investors must check
not only balance sheets but also an industry's competitive
environment.
Unpleasant results
Disappointment is a common theme in casino markets,
including in Las Vegas, where the biggest names --
MGM Mirage (NYSE: MGM),
Las Vegas Sands (NYSE: LVS), and
Wynn Resorts (Nasdaq: WYNN) -- as well as
smaller names like
Station Casinos still have
too much debtand
too few customers.
In Atlantic City, the second-quarter hotel occupancy rate
fell to 84.6% from the year-ago period's 91.3%. Proving that
optimism still trumps reality, Atlantic City had nearly 1,000
more hotel rooms than in the year-ago period.
Casino revenue for July was 12.7% lower than in July 2008.
Revenue for the first seven months of the year was down 14.9%
from the same period last year.
More challengers in more states
The first Atlantic City casino opened in 1978, making
this city the East Coast gambling destination. It remains the
second-largest U.S. market, with $4.55 billion in casino
revenue last year, according to the American Gaming
Association.
However, that figure was 7.6% below 2007, and 2007's
revenue was 5.7% below Atlantic City's peak casino revenue in
2006.
Atlantic City has had to share bettors' dollars with
casinos and racinos (racetracks that offer slot machines and
video poker terminals) that have sprung up in Delaware, New
York, and Pennsylvania. Competitors include companies that
don't operate in Atlantic City, such as Las Vegas Sands,
which
recently openeda slots-only casino in Bethlehem, Pa., and
Dover Downs Gaming & Entertainment (NYSE:
DDE), in Deleware.
And it will get worse. Pennsylvania regulators have
granted licenses for two Philadelphia casinos that haven't
been built yet.
Big-name finance, big changes
The biggest headliners in Atlantic City these days
aren't singers and comedians but rather financiers.
There's Donald Trump, trying to reacquire the company that
he steered into bankruptcy
five years ago.Trump Entertainment and its predecessor
company have filed for bankruptcy protection
three times,most recently in February.
There's
Carl Icahn,leading investors in the purchase of the
bankrupt Atlantic City Tropicana.
Even
Michael Jacksonmakes an appearance via Colony Capital, a
real estate investment firm that holds the loan on the late
entertainer's Neverland Ranch in California. Affiliates of
Colony Capitalown the Atlantic City Hilton, which
recently defaulted on its mortgage and is negotiating with
lenders, and Resorts Atlantic City, which previously
defaulted on its mortgage. The state's casino control
commission is reviewing a request for Resorts' lenders to
take over the property.
More bad news
These ownership developments come at a time when some
companies have postponed or delayed plans to build in
Atlantic City. Continued... |