It passed New Jersey and is second to Nevada in revenue

Pennsylvania now second US biggest gambling market

2012-04-11
Reading time 1:49 min
(US).- Pennsylvania's eleven casinos pulled in more than us$ 233.1 million in gross slot machine revenue last month, setting an all-time monthly high since the state's first casino opened in November 2006 and showing further evidence of its growing gambling market.

The slots totals recently released include revenue from two test nights and one day of operations at the state's 11th casino, Valley Forge Casino Resort, which opened on Saturday. Overall, the figures broke the previous monthly record of us$ 218.3 million set in July, and they represent an 8.5 percent increase over March 2011.

"Virtually every jurisdiction in the country would kill for that kind of growth, especially in a sluggish economy," said Joe Weinert, senior vice president of Spectrum Gaming Group, a New Jersey casino consulting firm, who called the state the "envy of the casino industry."

When slots and table game revenues are combined, Pennsylvania has surpassed New Jersey and grown into the second-largest casino market in the country behind Nevada, Weinert said. The two traded places in July, Weinert said, and, by January, Pennsylvania had grown into a us$ 3.66 billion market, compared to a us$ 3.3 billion market for New Jersey.

Richard McGarvey, a spokesman for the board said the figures simply show that the state's market is continuing to grow, with each casino showing growth over the year before. "It still shows that the Pennsylvania market is still expanding," McGarvey said. "It just shows that the casinos are still drawing more patrons in."

The numbers also show evidence of the increasing competition. Harrah's Chester Casino and Racetrack, which is just outside Philadelphia, was up less than a percent over the year before, as it faces competition from Sugarhouse Casino in Philadelphia, Parx Casino in Bensalem, casinos in neighboring states and now the new casino in Valley Forge.

Valley Forge, a smaller "resort" casino expected to attract a more high-end clientele, brought in more than us$ 500,000 in the three days recorded. Sugarhouse posted a 25 percent increase over last March, while Parx saw an 8.7 percent spike.

In July 2004, the state Legislature approved legislation legalizing up to 14 slot-machine casinos in Pennsylvania. The state's first casino, Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs in Wilkes-Barre, opened for business two years later. The state taxes casino revenue and uses it to support the state budget, public schools, civic development projects, volunteer firefighting squads, local governments and the horse racing industry.

The law also calls for a second casino in Philadelphia, but that remains in limbo. A resort outside Pittsburgh was awarded the second "resort" license, but that decision is being challenged in the state Supreme Court. The final license is tied to a yet-to-be built racetrack.

Leave your comment
Subscribe to our newsletter
Enter your email to receive the latest news
By entering your email address, you agree to Yogonet's Terms of use and Privacy Policies. You understand Yogonet may use your address to send updates and marketing emails. Use the Unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.
Unsubscribe
EVENTS CALENDAR