70°F
weather icon Clear
Filters Reset
21 - 30 of about 51 Results
Content Type
Categories
Tags
Year
Month
older archives
Gaming leaders to display products at G2E next week in Las Vegas

There’s no such thing as a sure bet in the gaming industry but two manufacturers exhibiting at this year’s Global Gaming Expo believe they have the closest thing to it.

Al Faccinto, early executive of Caesar’s Palace, dies

Albert “Moky” Faccinto Sr., an early executive of Caesar’s Palace who helped to open the hotel and casino, died Sept. 17 at the age of 91.

Caesars’ bankruptcy brawl with creditors may be over soon

Caesars Entertainment Corp. is the closest it’s been to ending two years of rancorous court battles with bondholders over who should pay to fix the casino giant’s insolvent operating unit, which can’t afford to pay almost $20 billion in debt.

Campaign pushing to expand gambling in New Jersey suspended

A footwear magnate and a racetrack operator who want to build two new casinos worth billions of dollars in the northern part of the state have concluded that voters will reject the plan in a November referendum, and they’re ending their expensive lobbying push for it.

Gaming regulators OK plans for Red Rock Resorts, Boyd Gaming

Representatives of two locals casino companies are counting on new opportunities now that the Nevada Gaming Commission has unanimously approved licenses to Red Rock Resorts for the Palms and to Boyd Gaming for the Aliante Hotel.

Caesars offers another $1.6B to creditors of bankrupt unit

CHICAGO — Caesars Entertainment Corp. said on Wednesday it proposed along with its private equity backers a settlement offer with an added $1.6 billion for creditors of its casino operating unit, raising hopes of an end to the subsidiary’s costly bankruptcy.

Atlantic City casino gets named Ten; 2017 opening planned

In terms of success, Atlantic City’s former Revel casino was a zero. If it had a number, it was a negative: It went bankrupt twice and then shut down in 2014. But new owner Glenn Straub hopes to swing the pendulum all the way in the other direction by renaming the casino resort Ten

IGT officials say Maryland lottery inflated $262 million contract

Maryland lottery officials inflated a $262 million, eight-year information technology contract for monitoring wagers to include kinds of internet gambling that aren’t allowed under state law, according to one of the losing bidders.

Entity betting off to slow start with Nevada sports books

A new concept that allows businesses to place wagers on behalf of passive investors is failing to gain much traction with Nevada’s sports books.