Las Vegas Review-Journal

Visitation figures up; win drops

Airport passenger total on record pace

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Riding the busiest passenger month in history at Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport, Southern Nevada visitation rebounded in May from two straight lackluster months, the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority reported Thursday.

Mccarran reported 4.59 million passengers came through its gates for the month, a 5.3 percent increase over May 2018. The total shattered the record of 4.44 million set in October.

Big percentage increases by ultra-low-cost carriers Spirit, Frontier and Sun Country boosted passenger counts, which stand at 20.82 million for the first five months of the year, 3.1 percent ahead of last year’s record pace.

The LVCVA reported positive numbers in most visitation categories, including visitor volume (up 1.7 percent to 3.69 million), convention attendance (up 6.5 percent to 520,800) and citywide occupancy rate (up 1.4 points to 90.8 percent). Weekend occupancy hit 96.4 percent in May.

Occupancy rates remained high despite a 0.6 percent increase in room capacity, which at 148,909 was at the highest level of the year.

The average daily room rate hit $140.52, the second highest monthly rate in 2019.

Convention attendance was boosted by a shift in scheduling, with two trade shows — Arbonne Internatio­nal (25,000 attendees) and Waste Expo (14,000) — moving from April in 2018 to May this year.

While visitation was strong, gaming revenue didn’t reflect it.

The state gaming win had its steepest drop of 2019 in May, off 6 percent from May 2018, to $981.8 million, the state Gaming Control Board reported earlier Thursday. It was the fifth straight monthly decline to start the calendar year.

The Strip win was down 11.1 percent for the month. That decrease was the sixth straight for the Strip.

The three-month gaming win trend, generally a more telling gauge because it eliminates volatile swings resulting from calendar comparison­s, showed a 2.7 decline statewide for the

months of March, April and May. On the Strip, the three-month win trend was down 6.3 percent.

“It was a disappoint­ing month,” said Michael Lawton, senior research analyst for the Control Board. “Currently, the state is down 2.3 percent calendar year to date and the Strip is down

4.9 percent. The reason for the decrease was baccarat, which was down 54.8 percent or $66.2 million.”

Lawton said without the downturn in baccarat, the game of choice for most Asian high rollers, the win would be up 1.6 percent statewide and up 2.4 percent on the Strip.

“Unfortunat­ely, baccarat’s win percent was on 7.55 percent vs. a very robust 16.13 percent last year,” Lawton said. “The silver lining to this month’s results would be that statewide slot win and volume continued to display strong fundamenta­ls with a 1.5 percent increase in win on a 3.6 percent increase in volume. Statewide slot win has increased in eight of the last nine months and volumes have increased

in nine of the last 10 months.”

Gamblers played lucky at the baccarat tables in May.

Gaming industry analyst Joseph Greff of J.P. Morgan, in a note to investors, said the “paltry” casino win percentage on baccarat was low compared with historic averages of 13-14 percent. He also noted the month was doubly disappoint­ing because there were nine weekend days in May compared with eight in May 2018.

Sports wagering had a similar percentage downturn for the month, but the total amount wasn’t as dramatic because of low volume. The sports-betting win was down 45.1 percent, or $9.3 million, on volume that rose just 0.3 percent. But the hold was only 3.55 percent compared with 6.5 percent last year.

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

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