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The Newsroom - 2008 |
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March meekness: Gaming stocks sustain losses

Decreases for index's 10 companies tied to uncertainty, outside factors

April 01, 2008 - March was not a good month for the stock prices of
casino companies and slot machine makers.

All 10 of the gaming stocks charted by Las Vegas-based financial consultant
Applied Analysis suffered losses in their average daily prices when compared
with February. Seven of the 10 declines were double-digit drops.

And, said Applied Analysis principal Brian Gordon, April may not be much better.

"There is so much financial uncertainty in the markets and there are outside
factors impacting the gaming sector," Gordon said Monday. "The broader market is
down, there have been some questions about the viability of new projects and
investors are concerned about the depth of the market today."

Gordon said any quarterly earnings that are released in April covering the past
three months could affect the gaming sector. So far, only slot machine giant
International Game Technology has set a date, April 17, for its earnings. Also,
the release next week of February's monthly statewide gaming revenues also could
give the sector either a boost or bring prices down lower.

The national consumer confidence index reached a five-year low in March, which
has consumers questioning the overall health of the economy, their employment
outlook and the effects of rising costs for goods and services, including food
and gasoline, Gordon said. "It will be important to monitor the impacts of
consumer perceptions and their impact on leisure travel to Las Vegas."

The Applied Analysis Gaming Index, which takes into account more than 300 market
variables and economic indicators, fell 46.57 points to 511.89. In February, the
index recorded its first increase since October.

Boyd Gaming Corp. took the hardest hit in March, with the company's average
daily stock price falling more than 21 percent compared with February. The three
casino operators with a presence in Macau, MGM Mirage, Wynn Resorts Ltd. and Las
Vegas Sands Corp., had their average daily stock prices drop between 10 percent
and 12 percent.

Falling stock prices were one reason Susquehanna Financial Group gaming analyst
Robert LaFleur readjusted his earnings per-share estimates for Wynn Resorts, Las
Vegas Sands and Penn National Gaming, another casino operator charted by Applied
Analysis.

LaFleur told investors in a research note Monday the challenging Las Vegas
market may affect Wynn and Las Vegas Sands casinos.

"For Las Vegas Sands, we have revised our estimate to reflect a slower ramp-up
at the Palazzo, a soft near-term Las Vegas Strip outlook, and other adjustments
related to nonoperating items," LaFleur said. "The revisions in our Wynn
estimates are largely the result of operating performance at Wynn Las Vegas,
along with other nonoperating items in our model."
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