The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION
New Jersey's newest casino, Revel, to file for bankruptcy in March to eliminate $1B in debt
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. - Revel, the casino many people had hoped would turn around Atlantic City's sagging fortunes, said Tuesday that it will file for bankruptcy protection in March, less than a year after opening.
The voluntary, pre-packaged bankruptcy envisioned for late March will wipe away about two-thirds of its $1.5 billion in debt by converting more than $1 billion of it into equity for lenders.
Kevin DeSanctis, Revel's CEO, said the restructuring will give the casino resort more flexibility to operate.
Existing management will remain in place, no layoffs are planned, and employees and vendors will be paid as usual, the company said. The restructuring should be completed by early summer, it added.
The $2.4 billion casino never caught on as much as it had expected to, and it remained mired toward the bottom of Atlantic City's 12 casinos in terms of casino revenue. Revel had to line up two rounds of additional financing since August to keep operating.
In January, it posted its second-worst month, winning less than $8 million from gamblers. During the second and third quarters of last year, it reported gross operating losses of $35 million and $37 million.
Revel officials have been reviewing their options in recent months as the Atlantic City market continued to decline and its own revenues remained stuck in neutral. DeSanctis said the company and its lenders decided that a prepackaged bankruptcy would be the best way to improve its balance sheet by eliminating substantial debt and increasing the changes for growth.
It is the latest in a series of recent bankruptcies involving Atlantic City casinos. Trump Entertainment Resorts emerged in 2010 from the third bankruptcy that it or its corporate predecessors had filed, and the Tropicana Casino and Resort was sold that same year out of bankruptcy court to billionaire Carl Icahn.
Revel opened in April as a potential game-changer, the first new casino built in Atlantic City since the Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa opened in 2003.
Revel was designed as a destination resort, an ambitious, risky project in a declining market. It saw itself not as a casino resort but as a resort that happened to have a casino. But the distinction seemed to have been lost on many customers, who found its restaurants and hotel rooms pricey.
The project ran out of money during the recession and had to stop construction halfway through. Morgan Stanley pulled out, taking a $1.2 billion loss on the project. It only got completed with the help of state tax incentives that were approved in February 2011.
It is the only casino in Atlantic City to fully embrace the ocean, with floor-to-ceiling views of the coast that are considered a no-no in other gambling halls, where the prevailing thought is to keep gamblers focused on gambling. It eschewed bus tours and, for the most part, day-tripping gamblers, focusing much more intently on customers it could woo for two- and three-night stays, as well as business meeting and convention bookings.
Revel has more than 2,000 slot machines, nearly 100 table games, electronic tables and a poker room.
It booked some of the biggest names in show business, starting with a four-night run of Beyonce concerts in May for its grand opening weekend. It also booked Aerosmith, Kanye West and The Eagles. But even those top-name acts didn't generate enough gambling revenue to pull the casino out of a hole.
___
Wayne Parry can be reached at http://twitter.com/WayneParryAC
More Business
- Back to Top
- Return to Business
More Business
(1 of 10 articles for today)
Mackinac Island developers, preservationists in conflict over proposed waterfront hotels
1:31 PM 0Poll
Most Popular Business
- Ex-'Pegger seeks to grow local businesses
- Mounties say crooks passing fake polymer bank notes in British Columbia
- Bridging the gap
- Buyer beware in online auto sales: experts
- Bangladesh High Court bars garment factory owner from leaving country
- The ready-made solution evolution
- Gen X, young boomers up against retirement wall
- Weekend of spending expected
- Toronto, Wall Street surge higher amid positive U.S. data, consumer sentiment
- Bernanke says computer revolution likely to provide various future gains to economic growth
- Transcona transformation
- Mounties say crooks passing fake polymer bank notes in British Columbia
- Holiday pump jump debated
- Driving downtown development
- Winnipeg's got the REIT stuff
- McDonald's adding 3 new Quarter Pounders as it phases out third-pound Angus burgers
- Flight attendants union calls $50 million Air Canada cuts premature
- 3 Ford owners sue in federal court, saying EcoBoost engine is defective
- Emergency manager reveals Detroit is nearly broke; city may have no choice except bankruptcy
- CEO, execs terminated at TCIG
- Target opens its first Manitoba stores Tuesday
- New structure to be king of downtown?
- Transcona transformation
- Target opens Manitoba stores
- Mounties say crooks passing fake polymer bank notes in British Columbia
- Raising the rent is a good sign
- City to get a touch of glass
- Canad Inns property has personal meaning for owner
- Holiday pump jump debated
- Border-fee idea doesn't fly
- Bridging the gap
- Viterra plans $20 million capacity upgrade at four Saskatchewan grain terminals
- Ex-'Pegger seeks to grow local businesses
- Rent to own
- Late deal in workplace sex-harassment case
- A fix for hockey sticks
- Condos made from shipping containers pass hurdle at city hall
- Monsanto wins Supreme Court fight over its genetically engineered soybeans
- Idaho spud giant bets on biotech potatoes 12 years after similar Monsanto push failed
- Transcona transformation
- Transcona transformation
- Winnipeg's got the REIT stuff
- CEO, execs terminated at TCIG
- Diversification spurs Exchange Income's growth
- Driving downtown development
- Late deal in workplace sex-harassment case
- There are lots of I's in 'team'
- Bridging the gap
- Ex-'Pegger seeks to grow local businesses
- Viterra plans $20 million capacity upgrade at four Saskatchewan grain terminals
- Transcona transformation
- New structure to be king of downtown?
- CEO, execs terminated at TCIG
- Target opens its first Manitoba stores Tuesday
- Canad Inns property has personal meaning for owner
- MacDon on the block?
- Winnipeg's got the REIT stuff
- Older and jobless? Resource on hand
- Winnipeg Boeing plant set to expand
- Local boy leads Great-West
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.