BEHIND VEGAS‘S
BAT BET.
Republication
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We believe that most of the Emigrant
Greeks of USA or all Greeks and the
Emigrant brothers wish us or have go
Las Vegas for interruptions because
this Las Vegas they are perhaps the
better part for Tourism or would
wish they play been famous Casino of
this city. However we located the
below article of TIME that has big
interest and we thought you him to
Study as he is written.

Behind Vegas's Bad Bet
By
Deirdre Van Dyk
Monday, Dec. 29, 2008

What happened to recession-proof
Vegas? The short answer is that the
city placed most of its bets on the
tourism industry. For a long time it
paid off, but, says Keith
Schwer,
director of the Center for Business
and Economic Research at the
University of Nevada at Las Vegas,
"if you ride a fast horse, you have
the likelihood of greater
volatility."
That volatility was all positive and
profitable as Las Vegas morphed from
a place where people went just to
gamble and get a lap dance to a
destination where middle Americans
wanted to vacation. It became so
mainstream
that even the Southern Baptists had
a convention in the city. "Visitors
were coming to hotels at rates of
90% — a signal to expand,"
Schwer
explains. "And interest rates
dropped, so there was readily
available cash to do just that." Jan
Freitag,
a hotel analyst at Smith Travel
Research, agrees: "There was the
sense that if you build it, they
will come — that there was this
pent-up demand."
The city attracted convention
business: 6 million attendees
brought in $8 billion of business
last year.
No
other city could compete with the
entertainment, parties and number of
hotel rooms. "If you
put three to a room," says
Schwer
to illustrate the capacity Vegas
has, "you could put the whole
population of Wyoming in Vegas and
still be able to feed, clothe and
give them extra towels." (See
10 things to do in Las Vegas.)
Over the past four years, Nevada was
growing jobs at two to six times the
national rate. In the past decade,
the state's population increased
50%, with new residents attracted by
steady employment, no personal
income tax and housing that seemed
to grow ever more valuable (home
prices increased 135% between 2000
and 2006, according to Standard &
Poor's). "We thought we had
decoupled from the national
economy," says
Schwer. Unlike the rest of
country, Nevada hadn't had a
downturn since the 1980s.
But Las Vegas, in doubling down on
the travel sector, had not
diversified its economy. As the
visitor rate dropped 10% in October,
average daily room rates fell 14%
and gaming revenue dove 26%. The
hotel-casino downturn sent ripples
across the city that turned into a
tsunami. "In our union halls, 30% of
members were what we call
travelers," says Steve Holloway of
the Las Vegas chapter of the
Associated General Contractors of
America. "They came here for the
work, and now they're going home."
The construction industry alone
employs 10% of Las Vegas's
population.
Sales and gaming taxes fill up about
two-thirds of the state's coffers.
In the past few years, tax revenues
for Nevada had been gaining at a
double-digit rate. Now they are
forecast to shrink 9% in 2009. The
state is probably going to have to
cut in places like education and
social services — and get creative
with some new taxes on business.
Even the Chamber of Commerce,
usually an ardent opponent of
business taxes, has discussed
raising taxes for the first time.
But Freitag,
despite
Steve
Wynn's recent
announcement that he will lower room
rates, thinks the picture may not be
all gloomy. "If you look at the
hotel occupancy rate of 83.5%, well,
people in other cities would be
ecstatic," says
Freitag. "But it's just in
Las Vegas, the benchmark is 90%."
And while there are reports of some
struggling hotels offering free
rooms to visitors who gamble as
little as $100 at the tables, Scott
D. Berman of PricewaterhouseCoopers
says the better properties are doing
relatively well, at least on
weekends. "It's a segmented market,"
says Berman. "What's happening in
one casino isn't happening next
door."
Philip Shalala, head of marketing at
the Hard Rock Hotel Las Vegas, says
his hotel is having its best
December yet — up 6%, year over
year. Some of that may be due to
creative marketing: the hotel had a
holiday party for the city, offering
two hours of free wine and beer. "It
keeps up the energy of the place,"
says Shalala, "and it's good for
employee morale." People who came in
for drinks stayed to eat and gamble;
that night the hotel beat its
forecast take by 10%.
But the customer who once spent
$10,000 to $15,000 on the tables is
now spending maybe $5,000. And other
customers are shopping around. "They
know they can get a deal," Shalala
says. "They used to call up, asking
for a table at a club, not caring
what it cost. These days they're
saying, 'Well, I can get a table at
another hotel for $1,000.'" Though
Shalala hasn't dropped rates
drastically to attract customers, he
does throw in extras like free
concert tickets, promotional chips
to spend in the casinos or discounts
at the retail shops.
America's fantasyland probably won't
come back fully until the rest of
the country recovers. Indeed, the
economic hard times have only proved
that the town's famous slogan —
"What happens in Vegas stays in
Vegas" — needs some tweaking. Now,
it appears, what happens in America
doesn't stay out of Vegas for very
long.
http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1868933,00.html?xid=feed-yahoo-full-nation-related
See
pictures of the recession of 1958.
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TIME's
Wall Street covers.