Monthly Archives: April 2015

Penn National Gaming to acquire Tropicana Las Vegas for $360m

Regional casino and racing operator Penn National Gaming (PNG) has struck a deal to purchase the Tropicana Las Vegas Casino Hotel Resort.

The Trop’s current owners, who include investor Alex Yemenidjian and Toronto-based private equity firm Onex Corp, have agreed to sell the perpetually money-losing property to PNG for $360m. PNG says it will fund the acquisition through an expansion of its existing credit facilities and cash on hand. The parties expect to close the deal by the end of the year.

Onex paid $250m to acquire the Trop in 2009 and invested another $200m in upgrades over the past four years. PNG says it plans to immediately plow another $20m into renovations and is considering other potential upgrades, including expansion of the Trop’s retail and restaurant offering plus the addition of new hotel rooms.

PNG CEO Timothy Wilmott said the company had been eyeing a number of potential Vegas deals before it pulled the trigger on the Trop. Wilmott called the deal “a prudent transaction to own and operate a premier Strip asset at an attractive price of entry” and fulfilled “an important long-term strategic objective for the company.”

Tropicana Las Vegas Hotel And Casino To Be Sold For $360 Million

Listen Live Welcome to NewsRadio 100.5 KXNT! NewsRadio 100.5 KXNT is dedicated to being the dominant information and talk source for Las [] CBS Sports Radio 1140 and 100.5-2 FM HD2 CBS Sports Radio 1140 and 100.5-2 FM HD2 7255 South Tenaya Way Suite 100 Las Vegas, NV 89113 Business Office: 702-889-7300 Business Fax: 702-889-7373 Maureen Pulicella, General Sales Manager, 702-889-7566, [email protected] Kyle Helmick, Promotions & [] A group of shareholders say they will sell the 58-year-old Tropicana to the casino operator Penn National Gaming Inc. for $360 million.

Wynn Resorts (WYNN) Stock Tanks Following Earnings Miss, Dividend Cut

The company reported that first quarter profit fell to 70 cents per diluted share, less than a third of the $2.32 the company reported earning in the year ago period, and significantly less than the $1.19 analysts were expecting the company to earn this quarter. Revenue for the quarter was $1.09 billion, also missing analysts $1.21 billion expectations.

Nevada casino revenue slips in March despite slots and sportsbook gains

Nevada casino gaming revenue fell in March as pretty much every vertical except slots and sports betting slid into negative territory.

Total gaming revenue was $951.2m in March, down 3.15% from the same month last year. The loss was far more pronounced on the Las Vegas Strip, which saw revenue fall 9.6% to $507m. Nevada has now posted revenue declines in seven of the last eight months. Numbers for the fiscal year to date, which began in July 2014, are down 2.1% to $8.3b.

The reluctance of China’s VIP gamblers to engage in any indulgence that might attract Beijing’s eagle eye had an alarming effect on Vegas’ baccarat winnings, which fell by one-third to $68.1m. Also contributing to the decrease was baccarat hold, which fell to 8.3%, well below the state’s 12% average. Those two factors allowed blackjack to claim top table game ranking with $98.5m, although this was down 7% year-on-year.

Virtually all table games were in negative territory for the month, including craps ($38.7m, -8%), roulette ($24.9m, -18.7%), three-card poker ($13.7m, -10.1%), pai gow poker ($9.2m, -4.8%), mini-baccarat ($6.1m, -42.4%) and pai gow ($1.1m, -43.4%). The only monthly gainers were let it ride ($3.8m, +0.3%), keno ($2.5m, +8.9%) and bingo ($1.9m, +51.6%). Poker revenue – which includes an unknown contribution from the state’s two remaining online poker licensees – fell 6.5% to $9.7m.

Witness says Jamaican lottery fraud scammers threatened her

A retired school teacher from Florida said Tuesday that she lost most of a $100,000 inheritance in a Jamaican lottery fraud and was threatened by scammers who never produced her prize of $1 million and a Mercedes. Lois Bronson, 84, of Hallandale, Florida, testified in the trial of Sanjay Williams, 25, of Montego Bay, Jamaica, who’s accused of buying and selling lists of potential victims in a scheme that allegedly bilked dozens of mostly elderly people out of retirement money.