Respectable visitation, gaming and airport numbers, a bold prediction by MGM CEO Bill Hornbuckle and the return of CES spotlight the good news that Las Vegas is back.
Business Columns
Las Vegas developer Brett Torino is acquiring 2 acres in CityCenter after building Harmon Corner across the street.
When the city of Chicago unveiled its request for proposals for a casino-resort, it said the winning bidder would also get to install slot machines at O’Hare and Midway.
The north Strip megaresort will feature 3,500 rooms, more than 40 food and beverage spots, 250,000 square feet of meeting space, and 117,000 square feet of casino space.
After the pandemic turned Las Vegas Boulevard into a ghost town for a while, the fallout from the outbreak has, for the most part, not been kind to the roadway’s real estate market.
The failure of Kentucky Derby track operator Churchill Downs to sign an agreement with a licensed disseminator could prevent race wagering in Nevada.
Executives of the Southern Nevada’s publicly traded gaming and tourism companies would just as soon forget about their fourth-quarter earnings reports.
Four companies, including two from Las Vegas, participated in the city’s “request for information.” Does that mean they’ll apply to build in the Windy City?
A UNLV expert wants to see gambling companies that partner with universities step up their education efforts involving problem gambling.
Blackstone Group, a large firm with heavy investments on Las Vegas Boulevard, is looking to snap up the Australian casino operator Crown Resorts.
With Circa opening in October, Virgin Hotels Las Vegas debuting Thursday and Resorts World Las Vegas on deck for the summer, the city is in the midst of a new wave.
The SLS Las Vegas opened with much fanfare in 2014 but quickly spiraled downward. Now, a few miles away, Las Vegas’ newest renovated resort figures it’s starting out on stronger footing.
Apollo Global Management is making a multibillion-dollar wager on America’s casino capital and hoping it’s rolling the dice on the way out of a national crisis, not on the way in.
It seemed 2020 was going to be a transformative year for Southern Nevada. Then, the pandemic hit. But there’s much to look forward to in the months ahead.
The concept of skill-based games in casinos may be a part of Nevada’s future. But it will be without Blaine Graboyes, former CEO of GameCo LLC, who was denied a license.
