Columnist
Jeff Simpson: 2006 Can Only Get Better for Las
Vegas Gaming
I expect major Las Vegas business
- especially big casino industry news -- to
be the norm again in 2006, with some of the
most significant events taking place during
the first part of the year.
My
predictions appear to have been written with
the aid of rose-tinted lenses, but they come
with a caveat echoing what Steve Wynn, Terry
Lanni and other top Las Vegas executives have
told me in recent months: A significant terrorist
attack -- elsewhere or especially here -- could
derail the gravy train Las Vegas has been riding
in recent years.
I'm
no psychic and am certainly not predicting any
catastrophic events.
One
of the biggest -- and first -- major gaming
stories of the year should be Bill Boyd's announcement
of his company's plans to redevelop its prized
63-acre Stardust property on the north Strip.
Boyd
Gaming Corp. executives have been tight-lipped
about what they'll do the property, but I expect
them to announce plans to create a project similar
to MGM Mirage's Project CityCenter. Boyd told
me a few months ago that he intends to build
a property that will appeal to the high-end
customers who are generating record numbers
at hotels like Bellagio, Wynn Las Vegas and
the Venetian.
And
Boyd's proven its ability to do just that in
Atlantic City. The Borgata, co-owned with MGM
Mirage and operated by Boyd, has been an incredible
success story and demonstrates Boyd's ability
to compete in the rarified air of the top-end
megaresorts.
With
a chunk of land as valuable as the Stardust
site, expect Boyd to build and operate its own
signature megaresort -- the "Boyd"
perhaps? -- and to partner with a number of
boutique hoteliers and retailers to create a
multibillion-dollar project that will continue
the amazing transformation of the northern end
of the Strip. With the large number of Strip-side
condominium projects already on the drawing
board, I'd be surprised if Boyd plans much of
a condominium component to the project, if any.
I
don't expect Boyd to close the hotel and implode
the Stardust's main tower until 2007.
The
World Market Center's impact on Las Vegas has
yet to be fully appreciated. I think that the
twice-a-year expos will demonstrate the dramatic
contribution the wholesale furniture shows will
have on the Las Vegas Valley. The market opened
to furniture-industry acclaim last year, and
I expect this year's events to cement the reputation
of Las Vegas as an ideal spot for permanent
international and national sales operations.
Station
Casinos plans to open Red Rock Resort in the
first part of the year, and I expect the property
to be a rousing success. With its clean look
and stellar location in the valley's most succulent
sweet spot, Red Rock should immediately supplant
Green Valley Ranch as the valley's most luxurious
locals casino.
Wynn
Resorts opens its second branded Wynn hotel
in Macau in September, and I expect the billion-dollar
resort to immediately become the most successful
American-owned casino in the Chinese enclave.
Not only will Wynn Macau's business dwarf that
done by Sheldon Adelson's functional Sands casino
in Macau (what Wynn called "Sheldon's box
of baccarat") but it will also generate
considerable business for Wynn Las Vegas.
One
of the side effects of Wynn's competition for
the biggest bettors with Strip titan MGM Mirage
has been an evolving cooperative relationship
with national casino goliath Harrah's Entertainment.
Harrah's has only one super-premium property
in Las Vegas, Caesars Palace, and Wynn has only
his one property until his planned Encore resort
opens next to Wynn Las Vegas in 2008. Both companies
see MGM Mirage as their chief competitor and
see the partnership as a logical tactic. The
two companies have already cooperated on boxing
match promotions, but I expect to see much more
cooperation between Harrah's and Wynn, probably
including a joint-venture deal to develop a
multi-casino project on Macau's Cotai Strip.
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