Horseshoe Baltimore Continues Woeful Run, Casino Win Tumbles Nearly 29 Percent
Posted on: February 5, 2021, 11:45h.
Last updated on: July 19, 2021, 02:32h.
It’s a new year, but the same old problems persist for the Horseshoe Baltimore casino. the property reported a gross gaming revenue (GGR) decline of 28.7 percent in January.
Owned and operated by Caesars Entertainment, Horseshoe Baltimore’s casino win totaled $13.75 million, a decrease of more than $5.5 million compared with January 2020.
The casino has been limited to operating at 25 percent of its fire code capacity since November. The city order remains in place.
Statewide GGR last month totaled $128.7 million. That represents a decrease of 11.5 percent from January 2020, when the state’s six casino floors kept $145.4 million of gamblers’ money.
Horseshoe High Hopes, Hurdles
Caesars’ casino in Maryland has been struggling for years. It was envisioned as an entertainment destination that would benefit from its proximity to Camden Yards and M&T Bank Stadium, respectively the homes of the MLB Baltimore Orioles and NFL Baltimore Ravens. But the short walk from the sports venues along Russell Street remains uninviting.
CBAC Gaming, LLC, the entity that was formed by Caesars to build the casino in 2013, invested $442 million to construct the property.
The company has spent many millions more buying distressed warehouses and buildings along Russell Street in hopes of working with other local businesses to bring new life to the area. Horseshoe also spent $15 million to build an outdoor gaming terrace where gamblers can smoke and play.
Despite its efforts, CBAC Gaming continues to be a struggle. Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the company’s debt to Caa2 last March, a classification “judged to be of poor standing and are subject to very high credit risk.”
Caesars is the majority stakeholder in CBAC Gaming. The entity’s original investors also included what’s now known as Jack Entertainment, a gaming and hospitality firm privately held by Rocket Mortgage billionaire Dan Gilbert.
COVID-19 Hurting Casino Numbers
Horseshoe Baltimore certainly wasn’t alone in enduring a rough month to kick off 2021.
MGM National Harbor, the top GGR earner in Maryland, saw its casino win drop 13.7 percent to $50.5 million. Live! Casino & Hotel reported a loss of 7.7 percent, GGR at the Anne Arundel casino totaling $47.7 million.
Two of the state’s three smaller resort-style casinos fared better. Ocean Downs Casino saw a revenue increase of nearly six percent to $5.6 million. Hollywood Casino in Perryville won more than $6.8 million — an 11.8 percent gain.
Rocky Gap, the third resort-style property, experienced a decline of five percent. The casino’s win there totaled $4.2 million.
One bit of good news for Maryland’s gaming industry is that sports betting is soon on the way. Voters approved of the gambling expansion during the November election through a ballot referendum.
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Last Comments ( 4 )
Place sucks - they even let self-excluded gamblers in. They care about the almighty dollar dollar bill.
I had blackjack dealers make errors 3 times in favor of the house in one day. I never received an apology from anybody even after I complained. I think their employees are generally not happy and the casino does not provide a fun atmosphere - more of a money making environment. They will have to work on corporate and local culture to become a place of entertainment from which visitors will leave happy, even if they lose money as will happen most of the time.
When they first opened they appeared to set the slot machines extremely tight. On top of that, the managers there are extremely rude. In my opinion, this is a large reason why they don't get return customers.
The horseshoe table games are ran horribly. The way they run them, makes out of town gamblers stay out of town. They need to redo how they run the tables games there. Plus the atmosphere isn't a safe-like atmosphere.