Las Vegas Review-Journal

Gaming win up, visitation flat

Slots statewide, Strip baccarat boost May results; EDC helps tourism

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

State gaming win returned to its billion-dollar ways in May, posting a monthly total of $1.04 billion, a 5.3 percent increase over last year, state officials reported Friday.

It was the fourth time in five months that winnings at the state’s 434 licensed locations topped the billion-dollar mark.

It also was the best performanc­e for the beginning of a calendar year since 2008. Win fell below $1 billion in April.

Slot-machine win statewide and Strip baccarat play boosted May’s results, according to Michael Lawton, senior research analyst for the administra­tion division of the Control Board.

“The driver for this month was strong Strip baccarat win, which was up $21.4 million due to improved hold,” Lawton said. “Statewide slot win was up a solid 3.6 percent or $23 million due to continued increases in volume, up 2.5 percent. In fact, the state has recorded 15 consecutiv­e months of increases to slot volume.”

Casino sports betting win

GAMING It was the

also was up significan­tly, by $17.5 million or 590.5 percent. That was a result of the state’s sports books recording their largest loss in state history for basketball, $4.4 million, in May 2017.

Joseph Greff, a gaming industry analyst for New York-based J.P. Morgan, also noted that the growth was impressive because the May calendars of 2017 and 2018 were similar with eight weekend days. He expects numbers to be elevated in June with 10 weekend days in June compared with nine in June 2017.

Clark County was responsibl­e for 86.6 percent of the state’s monthly win total with $904.6 million. County win hadn’t hit the $900 million mark since January 2017 and prior to that, December 2013.

County win was up substantia­lly thanks to the $581.5 million total from the Strip, up 6.3 percent from last year, more than offsetting a 3.5 percent decline to $53.3 million for downtown Las Vegas.

Of the 20 markets monitored by the Control Board, only two — downtown Las Vegas and the Boulder Strip — had year-over-year revenue declines in May.

The three-month gaming revenue trend for Clark County, generally a more accurate gauge of win activity because it eliminates volatile swings resulting from calendar comparison­s, shows the county’s 212 licensees’ win up 5.5 percent for March, April and May compared with those months in 2017.

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority also reported Friday that visitor volume was flat compared with a year ago, up 0.8 percent to 3.6 million.

The date shift of the Electric Daisy Carnival, from June in 2017 to Mayin2018,mayhavepre­venteda visitation decline for the month.

Convention attendance fell 5 percent for the month to 489,100, the lowest monthly convention attendance total of the year so far. LVCVA officials said the decline was the result of a mix of smaller convention­s and trade shows this year.

Citywide occupancy was up 0.3 percentage points to 89.4 percent for May. The average daily room rate also was up 7.4 percent to $133.75. The LVCVA’S calculatio­ns don’t include resort fees.

For the first five months of 2018, visitation is off slightly, down 0.8 percent to 17.5 million people. Convention attendance is down 4 percent to 3 million.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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