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Snoqualmies roll dice with new casino

Posted by admin in Casino News

SNOQUALMIE — For nearly 50 years, the Snoqualmie Indians were unrecognized by the federal government, partly because the tribe of 600 didn’t have a reservation of its own.

But Thursday night, the tribe arrived with a bang when the Snoqualmie Casino opened its doors.

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The high-tech, 170,000-squarefoot casino is just off Interstate 90 on the Eastside and 30 minutes from downtown Seattle. It’s one of the state’s snazziest gaming venues, built on a reservation created especially for it.

Most important, said Snoqualmie tribal administrator Matt Mattson, the casino could transform the way the tribe’s members live.

Within a few years, Mattson hopes to create a health care center to cater to the needs of the tribe, which was federally recognized only in 1999.

And Mattson dreams of creating better housing and educational opportunities for Snoqualmie young people.

“It’s about raising the standard of living of all of our members,” Mattson said.

With the economy in freefall, nobody knows how successful the casino will be. The tribe borrowed hundreds of millions of dollars to make the casino happen.

“We are definitely concerned about the economic conditions, but we’re still optimistic,” Mattson said.

Other tribes are concerned about the state’s quivering casino market as well.

The softening economy spurred by the collapse of the housing and credit markets is flattening years of skyrocketing revenues for Washington Indian casinos, according to gaming experts.

The issue is sensitive to tribal governments because gaming is often their primary source of revenue, funding things such as essential health services and local schools.

“Gaming is absolutely essential to tribal economies. On most reservations, there are no other economic drivers,” said Ernie Stebbins, the executive director of the Washington Indian Gaming Association, which lobbies for the industry.

Gambling relatively new

Though large-scale Indian gaming has been in Washington state for more than a decade, it was only around 1998 that revenues began to really take off.

That year Gov. Gary Locke signed an agreement allowing machine gaming for the first time. Today, slot machines remain banned, but gamblers can use mechanical machines that resemble slots.

Experts say machine gaming has driven the rapid increase in net gambling income among state Indian casinos over the past 10 years, which has rocketed from $159 million to more $1.3 billion annually, according to state statistics.

Those revenues, in turn, are poured into tribal economies, where the money is desperately needed.

Gaming revenue was essential, for instance, in allowing the Tulalip Tribes to create a homeless shelter and health care facilities and to fund education expenses for any member who wanted to go to college, said Tribal Chairman Mel Sheldon. The first casino on the tribe’s reservation, in Snohomish County, was opened in 1992.

“It has increased our standard of living. We’re no longer the very, very poor,” Sheldon said. “We’re making improvements with better quality housing, education opportunities and also jobs.”

In some cases, the impacts have been practically instantaneous. The Kalispel Tribe’s Northern Quest Casino in Spokane County helped the tribe increase secondary school spending by $300,000 between 2004 and 2006.

There are problems in analyzing how the national economic downturn could affect the state’s 27 casinos, and by extension, the 22 tribes that rely on them for revenues.

Because large-scale tribal gaming is still relatively new — the first large Indian casino wasn’t built in Washington until 1991 — nobody knows exactly how gamblers will react to the economic crisis.

But gambling is not as resistant to a downturn as once thought, experts say. Gamblers don’t necessarily bet more as their financial woes increase.

“Tribal gaming, like all other casinos, is subject to economic cycles and is not recession-resistant. The idea that casino gaming is recession-resistant is a myth that never had any foundation in fact,” gaming industry expert Eugene Christiansen said in an e-mail. “Gaming is being hugely impacted by the current recession and credit crisis. If the economy continues to contract, gaming will continue to shrink.”

It’s particularly difficult to analyze Indian casinos’ performance because their financial data are generally not public record. The state aggregates the data annually but does not release financial information on individual casinos.

Tribal administrators emphasize that Indian casinos are more resistant to economic problems because they attract visitors mostly from their immediate areas. And the state as a whole has been less beset by troubles in the economy than other parts of the country.

But already, some casinos in Washington are creating contingency plans to deal with flattening revenues, which could affect the overall tribal economies.

Senior Tulalip officials have been holding meetings to address a dip in revenues, although Sheldon, the chairman, attributes the dip mostly to striking Boeing workers taking a break from gambling.

At the Lucky Eagle Casino in Thurston County, owned by the Chehalis Confederated Tribes, officials are also deciding how to deal with sagging revenue, although they won’t say by how much.

“Right now it’s a little too early to tell with the trending where revenue is going,” said casino general manager John Setterstrom. “But we’re forecasting into next year we’ll be flat or see a decrease. I think we’ve been in something of a bubble, a little slower to react to the economic problems than the rest of the country.”

Ron Charles, chairman of the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe on the Kitsap Peninsula’s northern tip, said revenues are flat at the tribe’s casino, called The Point.

“Gaming is the first economic development I’ve seen on reservations that really works,” Charles said. “The tribes are really dependent on it. It needs to stay strong.”

Experts are in charge

After the Snoqualmies’ long slog to get permission and cash to build the casino, Tribal Administrator Mattson says he’s putting his faith in a team of gaming experts who are running the building.

And those officials insist that they have a strong business plan that will ensure the Snoqualmie Casino’s success.

The casino’s location is underserved, said vice president of marketing Matt Gallagher.

“Looking beyond gaming, this is more of an entertainment venue than just a casino,” Gallagher said. Recently, executives took Seattle P-I reporters on a tour of the facility. They pointed out the poker area, the luxurious cigar lounge and the blackjack tables.

They showed the reporters where superstar Jessica Simpson will perform Friday night.

Then they put a positive spin on the economic situation. Yes, the economy is soft, but things will be fine, they said.

“People want a good time, and they just want to have fun,” said Michael Barozzi the chief executive of the Snoqualmie Entertainment Authority, which operates the casino. “Everybody hopes for a perfect economy, but they’ll still need to enjoy themselves no matter what.”

P-I reporter Moises Mendoza can be reached at 206-448-8247 or moisesmendoza@seattlepi.com.

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Century Casinos Announces Date of Third Quarter 2008 Earnings Release and Conference Call

Posted by admin in Casino News

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Nov 07, 2008 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ — Century Casinos, Inc. (NASDAQ Capital Market(R) and Vienna Stock Exchange: CNTY) announced today that the company will release its earnings for the third quarter of 2008 on Monday, November 10, 2008, at 9:30 a.m. Eastern Time (”ET”) and 3:30 p.m. Central European Time (”CET”) respectively.

On Monday, November 10, 2008, Century Casinos will host its Q3 2008 Earnings Conference Call, at 12:30 p.m. ET and 6:30 p.m. CET respectively. Participants are advised to dial in 15 minutes in advance. US domestic participants please dial +1-800-894-5910, all other international participants please use +1-785-424-1052 to dial in. The conference ID is “Quarter3″. To just follow the call, or a recording of the call, please visit our website at http://www.cnty.com/corporate/investor/financial-results/.

About Century Casinos, Inc.:

Century Casinos, Inc. is an international casino entertainment company that owns and operates the Womacks Casino and Hotel in Cripple Creek, Colorado, the Century Casino & Hotel in Central City, Colorado, the Century Casino & Hotel in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, and the Century Casino Millennium in the Marriott Hotel in Prague, Czech Republic. The Company also operates casinos aboard the Silver Cloud and the vessels of Oceania Cruises. Through its subsidiary Century Casinos Africa (Pty) Limited, it owns and operates The Caledon Hotel, Spa & Casino near Cape Town, South Africa, as well as 60% of, and provides technical casino services to, Century Casino Newcastle, in Newcastle, South Africa. Furthermore, the Company’s Austrian subsidiary, Century Casinos Europe GmbH, holds a 33.3% ownership interest in Casinos Poland Ltd, the owner and operator of seven full casinos and one slot casino in Poland. The Company continues to pursue other international projects in various stages of development.

For more information about Century Casinos, visit our website at http://www.centurycasinos.com. Century Casinos’ common stock trades on The NASDAQ Capital Market(R) and the Vienna Stock Exchange under the symbol CNTY.

This release may contain “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on the beliefs and assumptions of the management of Century Casinos based on information currently available to management. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking statements include, among others, the risks described in the section entitled “Risk Factors” under Item 1A in our Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on March 17, 2008. Century Casinos disclaims any obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statement that may be made from time to time by it or on its behalf.

SOURCE Century Casinos, Inc.

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Las Vegas Sands signals it may not survive downturn

Posted by admin in Casino News

CHICAGO (MarketWatch) — Shares of Las Vegas Sands crumbled more than 33% Thursday after the one-time high-flying casino company said it will likely violate debt covenants this quarter, raising the specter that it might not survive the current economic crisis.

In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Sands  told regulators that the size of its debt is now above the agreed maximum leverage ratio. And, if it can’t drum up more financing, the company said it could well default on its IOUs.

Shares of Sands plummeted $3.81 to close at $7.85. The stock had been rebounding lately on hopes that Adelson and his family would pump some of their own cash into the company to fund ongoing developments and operations. After running up to as high as $150 last year, the stock cratered at $4.32 last month.

The company’s auditors, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, said in a filing that if Sands does default on debt covenants, lenders could demand to be repaid sooner, something that “raises substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern.”

The economic meltdown has battered Las Vegas particularly hard as customers stay away in droves and the ones who do arrive spend less. In addition, Sands’ properties in Macau have been hurt by new restrictions on visas for gamblers arriving from mainland China.

Further, casino operators rely on huge loans to fund aggressive expansion plans and the credit crisis has all but dried up the money tap forcing companies like MGM Mirage and Boyd to postpone or scale back some of their more ambitious development projects.

“The good times for the gaming industry are over — at least in the short-term outlook,” said Joseph Weinert, a senior vice president at Spectrum Gaming, an industry consultancy. “As we see with Las Vegas Sands, even the titans of the industry are having to make major concessions with respect to their financial structures, development plans and operations. This industry is not for the timid right now.” End of Story

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Casino operator Crown loses $6bn

Posted by admin in Casino News

THERE are tough times ahead for the casino sector, where former media mogul James Packer now has the bulk of his investments.

Crown Ltd has lost $6 billion in value since last December and problems with new Chinese government restrictions on visitors to Macau.

While there have been solid results so far this year for Crown’s Australian operations, the group’s offshore expansion plans appear less certain of delivering much growth.

But analysts saw the results as better than rival Tabcorp’s and a solid foundation for the next year.

Crown chief executive Rowen Craigie said yesterday at the group’s annual shareholder meeting — from which media were barred — that there would be “some dislocation” over the next 18 months. “Crown’s operations are diversified and located across different markets. This diversification assists in the mitigation of some of the risks associated with economic downturns in particular regions,” he said.

“While some of the markets in which those businesses are located may see some dislocation in the next 12 to 18 months, taking a two to three year view we believe they are likely to return to steady growth trends.”

But Crown’s Australian operations continue to be its best business.

“Recent trading at our Australian casinos, Crown Melbourne and Burswood, continues to be solid. Combined revenue from table games (excluding VIP commission program play) and gaming machines from July 1 to October 21, 2008, is up 4 per cent on the previous corresponding period last year,” Mr Craigie said.

“Year-on-year growth in international VIP commission program play has been very strong over the same period.”

But he added there had been some “softness” in a few areas such as low-end slots, corporate functions and hotel bookings.

Crown’s earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation grew by 8.2 per cent in 2007-08 and the group said it expected solid EBITDA growth this financial year despite expecting a more difficult trading environment and ongoing renovations.

“For 2008-09, we forecast 5.3 per cent EBITDA growth on 4 per cent revenue growth for the two domestic casinos,” said Citi analyst Jenny Owen.

Mr Craigie noted new measures by the Chinese Government to slow down growth in Macau, where Crown was building its second casino, due to open next year. “The Chinese Government has also been making changes which impose some restrictions on the ability of some Chinese citizens to obtain visas to travel to Macau,” Mr Craigie said. “These changes are targeted at moderating the extraordinary growth in Chinese visitor numbers. We have seen the impacts of the latest restrictions in September with year-on-year gaming revenue growth for the month declining by about 3 per cent.” Still, the news and continuing stock market slump sent Crown shares continuing their downward spiral, off 18c to close at $6.30. The stock has fallen from $14.27 since it was split from Mr Packer’s media investment group Consolidated Media Holdings last December, wiping about $6 billion in value off the group.

While a raft of US-based casino stocks have fallen, many analysts believe Crown is undervalued. “Given weakness among peers, Crown were questioned on acquisition intentions,” said Ms Owen, who had a price target of $11.

“Crown highlighted strength of their balance sheet relative to peers but the most important projects are the completion of domestic casino upgrades, and integration of Cannery.”

The comments on the gaming business came only a day after Mr Packer cut ties with his family’s 90-year-old media empire.

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