Tag Archives: Wynn Resorts

Regional Gaming Expansion Comes With Risks

By Travis Hoium and Erin Miller, The Motley Fool

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Wynn Resorts  Caesars Entertainment , and Foxwoods are battling over a new gaming license in Boston. But is this the right move, considering the competition in regional gaming across the U.S.? In the following video, Erin Miller sat down with Travis Hoium to see who’s making the right moves in Boston and who’s biting off more than they can chew. 

Boston would be a nice addition, but Macau has grown to five and a half times the size of the Las Vegas Strip, and Wynn Resorts is perfectly positioned to capture the opportunity in the region. Is that reason enough for investors like yourself to consider investing in Wynn right now? The Motley Fool answers this question and more in our most in-depth Wynn Resorts research available for smart investors like you. Thousands have already claimed their own premium ticker coverage, and you can gain instant access to your own by clicking here now.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Wynn Takes Another Swing at Boston Gaming

By Travis Hoium, The Motley Fool

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Wynn Resorts is taking another swing at the Boston gaming market, proposing a $1.5 billion resort in Everett, Mass. The lot is an old Monsanto Chemical site on the river just north of downtown Boston. What we know right now is that the resort would be called Wynn Everett, it would have about 550 hotel rooms, water taxis to the airport and downtown, and according to Steve Wynn it will be family-friendly.  

This isn’t the first attempt at gaming in greater Boston for Steve Wynn. A plan to build near Foxboro Stadium was shot down by residents and he had to quickly regroup to submit an application for this new resort by the Jan. 15 deadline.

The other big competing bid is coming from Suffolk Downs and Caesars Entertainment . The group wants to build a casino at Suffolk Downs in East Boston, a similar distance to downtown as Wynn’s proposal. Like Wynn, this is partly a revitalization project to bring more traffic and excitement to Suffolk Downs.  

A third bid for Boston gaming will come from the owners of Foxwoods Resort & Casino and David Nunes. The project would be located in Milford, but little else is known publicly at this point.

A big market waiting to be tapped?
The expansion of gaming in the U.S. has piqued the attention of Las Vegas‘ normal residents. Las Vegas Sands built a casino in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania that has helped drive the state into the No. 2 position nationally, making a tidy profit in the process. Boston may be even more lucrative the proposed sites so close to the city.

The state gambling commission isn’t expected to award the casino license until February, so it’ll be a long wait for those who applied. For Wynn, the resort would be an incremental positive, but the big prize is in Macau. At Caesars, this would be a highlight in the company’s expansive non-Las Vegas properties, but I’m not sure how the company will fund another billion-dollar project with its current debt load.

Macau has grown to five-and-a-half times the size of the Las Vegas Strip, with $33.6 billion of gaming revenue in 2011, and Wynn Resorts is perfectly positioned to capture the opportunity in the region. Is that reason enough for investors to consider investing in Wynn right now? The Motley Fool answers this question and more in our most in-depth Wynn Resorts research available for smart investors like you. Thousands have already claimed their own premium ticker coverage, and you can gain instant access to your own by clicking here now.

var FoolAnalyticsData = FoolAnalyticsData || []; …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

A Brief History of the Gaming Industry

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

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On this day in economic and financial history…

The rich silver mines of Nevada withered as the Great Depression dragged on, leaving the desert state in dire straits as its people picked up and moved in search of elusive opportunities. The Nevada legislature, in a desperate bid to attract fresh capital to its sparsely populated state, finally legalized gambling on March 19, 1931. It was a decision that would have a lasting impact on the state’s character and composition and that continues to affect the global gaming industry to this day.

Within two months, the Meadows Club casino (appropriately named, as “Las Vegas” is Spanish for “the meadows”) opened in Las Vegas. It caught fire and was gone from Vegas by 1942, by which point the city’s famous Strip was taking shape with the construction of the Last Frontier and El Rancho Vegas. After the war, a growing American middle class helped give rise to a number of Vegas gaming icons, including the Sands (opened in 1952 and since replaced by the Venetian Sands flagship casino of Las Vegas Sands after its acquisition by a Sheldon Adelson-led investment group), the Desert Inn (opened in 1950 and the site of Wynn Resorts‘ flagship casino since 2005), and the Riviera (opened in 1955 and still in operation).

MGM Resorts‘ Mirage, which cost more than $600 million to build and which was financed by Wall Street junk bonds at the height of the Drexel Burnham Lambert era, ushered in the era of the modern megacasino when it was completed in 1989. This 100,000 square-foot, 3,000-plus room edifice pushed other casino operators to demolish old landmarks to make way for properly competitive megacasinos of their own. Total room inventory in Las Vegas has more than doubled since the Mirage’s completion to nearly 150,000 rooms as of 2009. That year, despite a deep recession, more than 36 million people visited the Las Vegas region to spend nearly $9 billion on gaming activities — a rate of just more than $240 per person.

Five years after the crash began, Nevada has still not recovered its to pre-recession levels. From 2007 to 2012, the total statewide room inventory increased from 178,000 rooms to 195,000 rooms, but total visitor volume dropped by 5%, airport traffic declined by 13%, and both gross gaming revenue and the average daily rate per person dropped by more than 15%. However, the Las Vegas-based gambling industry had long since expanded internationally, particularly to Macau, which generated a collective $38 billion in gaming revenue across 35 casinos in 2012 versus Nevada’s roughly $11 billion in gaming revenue — much of which comes from more than 100 casinos in Las Vegas alone.

For many companies, successfully capitalizing on a booming Chinese economy is like winning the jackpot. That’s indeed the case for gaming company Las Vegas Sands, which made a big …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Here's What This 220% Gainer Has Been Buying and Selling

By Selena Maranjian, The Motley Fool

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Every quarter, many money managers have to disclose what they’ve bought and sold, via “13F” filings. Their latest moves can shine a bright light on smart stock picks.

Today, let’s look at Passport Capital, which was founded by John Burbank in 2000 and known for combining macroeconomic analysis and fundamental research. Burbank himself is famous for having called the subprime mortgage crisis and reportedly earned a 220% return on it in 2007, though he lost 50% the following year.

The company’s reportable stock portfolio totaled $2.6 billion in value as of Dec. 31, 2012.

Interesting developments
So what does Passport Capital‘s latest quarterly 13F filing tell us? Here are a few interesting details:

The biggest new holdings are Williams and calls on Schlumberger. Other new holdings of interest include Amarin and Exelixis . Amarin is a late-stage cardiovascular-focused biotech company with a promising (and FDA-approved) drug to lower triglycerides, Vascepa. It also has strong support on Wall Street, despite a significant number of shares sold short. My colleague Brian Orelli has wondered why bigger companies haven’t signed on as partners with Amarin. Some wonder whether the company will be acquired by a big pharmaceutical company.

Exelixis, meanwhile, has received FDA approval for its thyroid cancer drug, Cometriq, and has just launched it. That drug may also get approved to treat prostate cancer, and Exelixis is looking at treating more kinds of cancers with it, which could drive more profits. While the company’s future seems promising, its present has led theStreet to downgrade it because of “feeble” EPS growth and lackluster return on equity and operating cash flow.

Among holdings in which Passport Capital increased its stake was Cliffs Natural Resources , an iron and coal specialist that recently slashed its dividend by 76%, while announcing the issuance of 9 million new shares (6% of its current share count). Those moves might boost its long-term health, but they’re not thrilling some shareholders, who see greatly reduced income and share dilution. With its stock down roughly 60% over the past year, though, some wonder whether it’s a good buy now. Cliffs recently announced plans to idle a Quebec iron ore pellet plant, and management is bullish, expecting growth in demand from China and overall pricing improvements.

Passport Capital reduced its stake in lots of companies, including Riverbed Technology, which has been hurt by sluggish IT spending. Many have lost faith in the company, with its shares down 46% over the past year, but its disappointing fourth-quarter results weren’t that bad, with double-digit revenue growth and some strength in its recently acquired OPTNET business. The company does face serious competition, though.

Finally, Passport Capital‘s biggest closed positions included Wynn Resorts and Apple. Other closed positions of interest include Keryx Biopharmaceuticals and Vical .

Keryx investors were hit with disappointing trial results a year or so ago for the company’s experimental colorectal cancer drug perifosine. But in January they …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Why Kirk Kerkorian Is Important to MGM Resorts

By Travis Hoium, The Motley Fool

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News yesterday that Kirk Kerkorian has intentions to raise his stake in MGM Resorts isn’t something investors should sweep under the rug before remembering what he has meant to the company over the years. Kerkorian isn’t as well known as Steve Wynn of Wynn Resorts, or Sheldon Adelson of Las Vegas Sands, but he has played a similar visionary roll in MGM‘s history.

Kerkorian began his dealings in Las Vegas in 1962 when he bought the land that Caesars Entertainment’s flagship casino Caesars Palace sits on. When he sold the land to the company, he ended up building MGM Grand, and naming it after the MGM movie studio, which he also owned. Decades later, Kerkorian was behind the merger of MGM and Mirage, which was the company Steve Wynn built, bringing the Mirage, Bellagio, and Treasure Island into MGM.  

If Kerkorian wants to increase his 18.6% stake in the company, he must be bullish on both Las Vegas and the economy as a whole.

Bullish on economy
Kerkorian last tried to up his stake in MGM in 2006 when the economy and markets were going bonkers. After the financial collapse, he backed off MGM, but now that he’s on board, I think it’s a strong sign that one of Las Vegas‘ biggest investors is bullish on the economy as a whole and, therefore, Las Vegas.

Kerkorian also has seats on the board, meaning he has insider access to MGM‘s financials. Insider buying is often a very bullish sign for a stock, because insiders know things about a company’s operation that goes beyond what outside investors can know.

What this means for gaming stocks
Before you go out and buy a basket of gaming stocks, it’s important to understand the difference between MGM and other companies. Wynn and Las Vegas Sands are Asian-centric so, if Kerkorian is bullish on MGM, it doesn’t really mean anything for them. Caesars is in a similar position to MGM with high exposure to Las Vegas, but instead of having exposure to Macau, like MGM does, it has exposure to regional gaming in the U.S. If you’re bullish on Las Vegas, MGM is the way to go, not Caesars.

A deep dive into MGM Resorts

When MGM Resorts began constructing the CityCenter in Las Vegas, it was an audacious plan that seemed like a sure bet with its prime location in the center of The Strip. But Las Vegas hit a rough patch during the Great Recession and has yet to fully recover, so MGM has since turned its attention to a new market in Macau. This Chinese gaming enclave now holds the key to the company’s future, and a new resort on Cotai may relieve the company from crushing debt. For expert analysis on whether this former high-flying stock can regain its form on the back of a growing presence in Asia, you’re invited to check out The Motley …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

New Neighbor Not a Welcome Sight for MGM and Caesars

By Travis Hoium, The Motley Fool

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The latest development in Las Vegas will bring excitement to the city and a new neighbor to Las Vegas Sands and Wynn Resorts on the north side of The Strip. But it also comes at a time when casinos are just starting to return to reasonable returns and, with growth in the single digits, the city doesn’t need the new capacity. 

Alison Southwick sat down with analyst Travis Hoium to see who Genting Group‘s new resort will affect most. 

Is MGM finished?

When MGM Resorts began constructing the CityCenter in Las Vegas, it was an audacious plan that seemed like a sure bet with its prime location in the center of The Strip. But Las Vegas hit a rough patch during the Great Recession and has yet to fully recover, so MGM has since turned its attention to a new market in Macau. This Chinese gaming enclave now holds the key to the company’s future, and a new resort on Cotai may relieve the company from crushing debt. For expert analysis on whether this former high-flying stock can regain its form on the back of a growing presence in Asia, you’re invited to check out The Motley Fool’s new premium report on MGM Resorts. Simply click here now to claim your copy today.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The Las Vegas Strip May Have a New Resident

By Travis Hoium, The Motley Fool

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The north end of the Las Vegas Strip may be getting a new resident long before anyone expected. Boyd Gaming has sold its Echelon project to Genting Group, a Malaysian company with a web of gaming, hospitality, and real estate holdings worldwide. The company paid $350 million for the 87-acre site, the former home of the Stardust hotel.  

This ends Boyd’s attempt to make a splash in Las Vegas, down the street from Wynn Resorts and Las Vegas Sands , the two resorts that brought the north end of The Strip to a new level. Boyd had planned a $4.8 billion resort with 5,000 rooms, a 140,000-square-foot casino, and another 300,000 square feet of shopping. But now Genting will take its shot in Las Vegas.

What the new neighbor will look like
Genting’s resort will be branded similarly to Resorts World Sentosa, one of just two casino resorts in Singapore along with Las Vegas Sands‘ Marina Bay Sands. The company says the resort will be called Resorts World Las Vegas, and phase 1 will include 3,500 rooms, 210,000 square feet of dining, and a 175,000-square-foot casino among the 8 million square feet. The cost will be a minimum of $2 billion but could be $7 billion by the time the entire project is complete.

This is the most ambitious project in Las Vegas since MGM Resorts built CityCenter at the bottom of the financial crisis. CityCenter and Cosmopolitan have been financial disasters, and Genting is taking a big risk in the new resort. The good news is, it’s getting a great deal on the property.

A steal for Genting
Genting already opened a casino in New York in 2011 and has been trying to get into the U.S. gaming market in Miami as well. But Las Vegas is still the country’s largest gaming market, and for just over $4 million an acre the company is getting a steep discount to Strip sales before the financial crisis. El-Ad Properties bought the New Frontier and the 34.5 acres it sat on for $1.2 billion in 2007, a whopping $33 million per acre. It even appears as if the company will use the abandoned construction Boyd left behind in its new resort, saving even more money.

What it means for Las Vegas
The good news for other casino operators is that Las Vegas will have a new resort sometime around 2016. This will revitalize interest in the city and bring more foot traffic to the north end of The Strip.

The bad news is that it will add more hotel rooms, gaming, and slot capacity to an area that could only fill 84% of rooms last year and already has enough gambling areas.

This also adds more rooms to the upper end of the market, pressuring prices there, and making the lower end look even less attractive. For MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment , which together own most of …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

MGM Resorts Needs to Catch a Break

By Travis Hoium, The Motley Fool

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MGM Resorts can’t seem to catch a break. Macau is growing, but MGM‘s resort is on the wrong side of town. New Jersey is going to allow online gaming, which will be great for operators there, but MGM was kicked out of New Jersey because of its ties to Pansy Ho in Macau. Finally, just as Las Vegas starts to slowly return to revenue and profit growth, Genting Group decides to build another massive resort and suck the air out of MGM‘s sails.

Las Vegas isn’t what it used to be
In 2007, Las Vegas Strip gaming revenue peaked at $6.83 billion and MGM looked like one of the big winners in the industry. Last year, the region gained 2.3% from a year before to reach $6.21 billion in gaming revenue, still well below the peak. The problem is exacerbated by the fact that CityCenter opened in 2009 and The Cosmopolitan opened in 2010, spreading both gaming and room revenue among even wider supply. The competition has shown on the income statement as recently as the last quarter.

Fourth-quarter revenue fell $2.3 million to $2.3 billion, and wholly owned domestic resorts saw a $10.0 million drop in revenue. The only good news is that the company was able to squeeze an extra $15.2 million in EBITDA from wholly owned domestic resorts during the year.

Las Vegas isn’t growing quickly, and MGM and Caesars Entertainment are struggling under heavy debt loads built during the financial crisis. They would be seeing a light at the end of the tunnel because of increased traffic and gaming if it weren’t for the recently announced sale of an 87-acre strip of land to Genting Group by Boyd Gaming . Genting is planning to build a $2 billion-plus resort on the north side of The Strip, with another 5,000 rooms and 140,000 more square feet of gaming. This will grab a lot of the upside in Las Vegas from MGM and Caesars, just as they’re starting to get back on their feet.

Lagging behind in Macau
MGM is definitely happy about its investment in Macau, but the Macau Peninsula isn’t growing as quickly as its neighbors to the south on Cotai. MGM‘s Macau revenue grew just 2% to $731 million from a year ago, which actually outperformed Wynn Resorts , its Macau Peninsula neighbor. Operating income was up 8% to $83 million in the quarter.

The big prize for MGM is its Cotai property, which will hopefully open in the middle of 2016. The company recently broke ground on the resort with 1,600 hotel rooms, 2,500 slot machines, and 500 table games next to Melco Crown‘s City of Dreams and Las Vegas Sands‘ Sands Cotai Central. Both companies have been big winners in Macau recently as Cotai has grown and mass-market play has trended toward Cotai, so the resort should be a big hit for MGM. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Can Melco Crown Continue to Shine?

By Travis Hoium, The Motley Fool

MPEL Total Return Price Chart

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Melco Crown has been one of the best performing stocks on the market over the past three years, easily surpassing rivals on a total return basis. Even Las Vegas Sands and Wynn Resorts , who generate most of their revenue in Asia, haven’t kept up with Melco’s pace.

MPEL Total Return Price data by YCharts.

How does this much smaller rival continue to beat out competitors with much greater resources?

Growth that just won’t stop
The first reason Melco Crown‘s stock continues to outperform is the company’s improving finances. Fourth-quarter revenue grew 9% to $1.1 billion, EBITDA was up 7% to $247.5 million, and net income was $108 million, or $0.20 per share.

But the key for Melco is why revenue and profits continue to grow. For that, we need to look at the company’s improving competitive position.

Location, location, location
The single biggest reason Melco Crown has been able to outperform rivals is the central location of its largest casino. City of Dreams sits in the middle of Cotai and it has been able to leverage three resorts from Las Vegas Sands and one by Galaxy to draw more revenue there.

Look at the image above and then compare revenue, EBITDA, and mass-market growth over the past year on the Macau Peninsula versus Cotai. You can draw a quick conclusion that gaming is trending toward Cotai, particularly in the mass market.

 

Q4 Revenue Growth Y/Y

Q4 EBITDA Growth Y/Y

Mass-Market Table Drop Growth Y/Y

City of Dreams 

11%

17.6%

24.5%

The Venetian 

10.3%

17.6%

10.5%

Wynn Macau 

-9.7%

-9.5%

-1%

Sands Macau

-2%

4.2%

3.1%

Source: Company earnings reports.

Just the location of Melco’s Cotai resort has been a huge advantage for the company and is a main driver of its stock performance. And it doesn’t look like the draw of Cotai will stop any time soon. Las Vegas Sands is working on another resort, Wynn is as well, and MGM Resorts will soon join the fray with a resort next to City of Dreams. If the mass-market continues to grow like it has recently then Melco Crown should see improving results.

Low expectations
To outperform on the stock market you have to do well financially but it doesn’t hurt if the market sets low expectations to begin with. Two and a half years ago, I lamented that Melco Crown was the worst performing gaming company in Macau by reporting mid-teen EBITDA margin when rivals exceeded a 30% margin.

During the second quarter of 2010, City of Dreams reported a 13.9% EBITDA margin. Today, that margin is up to 28.4%, more than doubling over that time. Even if revenue didn’t more than double, EBITDA would have doubled over that time. With growing revenue and expanding margins Melco Crown was able to rapidly grow …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The 25 Highest-Yielding Dividend Stocks in March

By Dan Dzombak, The Motley Fool

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Dividend investing is popular again. Investors have taken to heart Jeremy Siegel’s studies, which show that higher-yielding stocks tend to offer greater returns over time than low- or no-yield stocks.

The highest dividend yields can be very tantalizing. As long as a stock yielding 15% doesn’t lose value, you’ll make 15% in one year! In more cases than not, however, an astronomical yield is a bad sign for a stock. Since dividend yields and stock prices move in opposite directions, a high yield usually means that investors have begun to worry about the business and driven down its stock price.

However, certain types of companies such as REITs have to pay out most of their income as dividends, so their yields will be higher than “normal.” Dividends are not guaranteed; you need to make sure that a business is generating enough cash to pay its dividend, or your investment could be disastrous.

I ran a screen for the highest-yielding stocks, the only limitation I’ve set this time is that the dividend stocks must have a market cap greater than $500 million and must be a corporation, so no REITs or MLPs.

Here are the top 25 highest-yielding stocks the screen produced:

 

Company Name

Market Cap (millions)

Dividend Yield

1

Boise

$860.3

13.80%

2

SeaDrill

$17,629.6

12.00%

3

Windstream

$5,125.4

11.50%

4

Pitney Bowes

$2,750.4

11.10%

5

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock

$580.3

10.40%

6

R.R. Donnelley & Sons

$1,900.8

10.10%

7

Vector Group

$1,442.9

10.10%

8

Wynn Resorts

$11,700.5

9.87%

9

Ship Finance International

$1,410.9

9.53%

10

Frontier Communications

$4,092.9

9.52%

11

Consolidated Communications

$664.2

9.39%

12

National Presto Industries

$521.8

8.65%

13

PDL BioPharma

$977.1

8.60%

14

SouFun Holdings

$1,992.7

8.51%

15

First Financial Bancorp

$896.4

7.90%

16

New York Community Bancorp

$5,909.6

7.41%

17

Werner Enterprises

$1,704.1

7.40%

18

Linn

$1,349.4

7.37%

19

Costamare

$1,214.0

7.05%

20

Capitol Federal Financial

$1,813.3

6.89%

21

HCA

$16,386.9

6.82%

22

VimpelCom

$19,611.6

6.77%

23

United Online

$549.6

6.77%

24

Exelon

$26,881.8

6.70%

25

Giant Interactive

$1,550.4

6.69%

Source: S&P Capital IQ.

These stocks are a good place to start your research, but they’re not formal recommendations.

Let’s take a look at the top 3:

Boise is first with a trailing yield of 13.8%. Boise does not pay a regular dividend; 2012 was the third year in a …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Is Las Vegas Sands Future Hitched To Macau?

By Trefis Team, Contributor

  Las Vegas Sands reported its Q4 2012 results last week and Macau once again was a big driver to growth. Unlike its competitors, Las Vegas Sands hasn’t experienced slower growth in Macau in spite of a slowdown in the Chinese economy. We believe the company has established a critical mass in the market with its properties and resorts and that has helped it take market share away from its competitors such as Wynn Resorts. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest