Las Vegas Review-Journal

Atlantic City casinos less profitable

Down 1.6% in 2023 despite online help

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY — Atlantic City’s casinos were less profitable in 2023 than they were a year earlier, even with help from the state’s booming online gambling market.

Figures released Monday by the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcemen­t show the nine casinos collective­ly reported a gross operating profit of $744.7 million in 2023, a decline of 1.6 percent from 2022. When two internet-only entities affiliated with several of the casinos are included, the decline in profitabil­ity was 4.1 percent on earnings of $780 million.

All nine casinos were profitable in 2023, but only three saw an increase in profitabil­ity.

Gross operating profit represents earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on, and other expenses, and is a widely-accepted measure of profitabil­ity in the Atlantic City casino industry.

The figures “suggest it is getting more expensive for New Jersey’s casinos to operate, and patron spending may not be keeping pace,” said Jane Bokunewicz, director of the Lloyd Levenson Institute at Stockton University, which studies the Atlantic City gambling market.

“The same forces that might be tightening visitors’ purse strings — inflation, increased consumer prices — are also forcing operators to dig deeper into their pockets,” she said.

Bokunewicz said higher operationa­l costs including increased wages and more costly goods, combined with increased spending on customer acquisitio­n and retention including and free play, rooms, meals and drinks for customers have not been offset by as significan­t an increase in consumer spending as the industry hoped for.

The statistics are certain to be used in the ongoing battle over whether smoking should continue to be allowed in Atlantic City’s casinos. A group of casino workers that has been pushing state lawmakers for over three years to pass a law eliminatin­g a provision in New Jersey’s indoor smoking law that exempts casinos recently tried a new tactic.

Last week the employees and the United Auto Workers Union, which represents workers at three casinos, filed a lawsuit to overturn the law.

The casinos say that ending smoking will place them at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge to casinos in neighborin­g states, costing revenue and jobs.

But workers cite a study on the experience of casinos in several states that ban smoking and are outperform­ing competitor­s that allow it.

The Borgata had the largest operating profit at $226.1 million, up 1.3 percent, followed by Hard Rock ($125.5 million, down 2 percent); Ocean ($117.2 million, up nearly 22 percent); Tropicana ($93 million, down 15.1 percent); Harrah’s ($80 million, down 9.7 percent); Caesars ($51.7 million, down

14.4 percent); Bally’s ($11.1 million, compared to a loss of $1.8 million a year earlier), and Resorts ($9.5 million, down 54.8 percent).

Among internet-only entities, Caesars Interactiv­e Entertainm­ent NJ earned $23.6 million, down nearly 28 percent, and Resorts Digital earned $12.2 million, down 20.5 percent.

And only four of the nine casinos — Borgata, Hard Rock, Ocean and Tropicana, had higher profits in

2023 than they did in 2019, before the COVID19 pandemic broke out.

The casinos are also operating under a contract reached in 2022 that gave workers substantia­l pay raises.

The nine casino hotels had an occupancy rate of 73 percent in 2023, down 0.4 percent from a year earlier.

 ?? Wayne Parry The Associated Press ?? The exterior of the Hard Rock casino in Atlantic City. Figures released by New Jersey gambling regulators Monday show Atlantic City’s nine casinos collective­ly reported a gross operating profit of $744.7 million in 2023, a 1.6 percent decline from 2022.
Wayne Parry The Associated Press The exterior of the Hard Rock casino in Atlantic City. Figures released by New Jersey gambling regulators Monday show Atlantic City’s nine casinos collective­ly reported a gross operating profit of $744.7 million in 2023, a 1.6 percent decline from 2022.

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