Nevada casinos undone by baccarat and the absence of Mayweather, Pacquiaos

Nevada casinos undone by baccarat and the absence of Mayweather, Pacquiao

 Nevada casinos undone by baccarat and the absence of Mayweather, PacquiaoNevada casino revenue took a tumble in May thanks to a double-digit drop on the Las Vegas Strip.

Figures released Thursday by the Nevada Gaming Control Board show statewide gaming revenue of $958m in May, down 4.53% from the same month last year, although up dramatically from the $876m Nevada casinos earned in April 2016.

Revenue on the Strip was down 11.7% to $531m, driven in part by a poor comparison with last May, which featured the long-awaited Mayweather-Pacquiao boxing match and the inaugural Rock In Rio festival. Other factors included baccarat revenue, which tumbled 18.6% to $89m.

The lack of a marquee boxing event was enough to halt the winning streak at Nevada sportsbooks, which reported revenue of $5.9m, a whopping 70% year-on-year decline thanks to a woeful 1.9% hold.

Despite the lack of major boxing wagers, overall betting handle was down only $3.3m from last year to $312.5m as baseball handle rose more than one-quarter and basketball wagers were up nearly 15%.

Basketball wagering revenue was the month’s lone bright spot, rising 69% to $4.7m. Baseball was down 73% to $2.9m, ‘other’ sports were down 92% to $660k and parlay cards dropped 71% to a mere $63k, while slowpoke football bettors finally got around to cashing in nearly $2.4m worth of winning tickets. The state’s race books were down 12.3% to $5.2m.

Statewide slots revenue was in positive territory, rising 4.7% to $630m, but the table game numbers were almost uniformly negative. Blackjack revenue fell 12.4% to $107.4m, while craps was off 28% to $31.5m and roulette dipped 14.7% to $28.2m.

The rest of the table game tallies shook out as follows: pai gow poker ($7.9m, -11.3%), mini-baccarat ($7.6m, -23%), let it ride ($2.9m, -12.7%), keno ($2m, -13.6%) while poker was off 13.9% to $8.9m. The lone positives were ‘other games and tables,’ which rose 3.7% to $16.6m and bingo, which improved 17.5% to $1.8m.