Approvals lift to a dozen the number of state’s licenses

Three more casino operators get online poker licenses in Nevada

2012-10-22
Reading time 1:52 min
(US).- Three companies were granted interactive gaming licenses by the Nevada Gaming Commission and Control Board to compete in Nevada’s developing intrastate market. They are online subsidiaries of Boyd Gaming, for Station Casinos and the founding Fertitta family’s Ultimate Poker brand, and for the Golden Nugget with casinos in Las Vegas and Laughlin.

Commissioners licensed Boyd Gaming, the Golden Nugget ownership and Fertitta Interactive - which includes the owners of Station Casinos and operators of Ultimate Fighting Championship - to launch online poker websites as soon as the technology is approved. The website can only be accessed by persons age 21 and over playing on computers or mobile devices within Nevada's boundaries.

Boyd Gaming Executive VP Bob Boughner told gaming commissioners the company believes online poker in Nevada will be a us$ 180 million a year business and would damage the state's live poker business. "The total revenues in the state from poker will be twice what they are today with online poker," Boughner said.

The company has an agreement with bwin.party to operate online poker and the website can't be launched until the European partner is licensed, which may not happen until early 2013. Meanwhile, Fertitta Interactive is hoping to launch its for-pay Ultimate Gaming brand as soon as its technology, which the company owns through its purchase last year of Cyber Arts Licensing, is approved.

Ultimate Gaming Chairman Tom Breitling told commissioners the company's partnership with UFC and Station Casinos creates a large pool of online poker players. "Ultimate Gaming is ideally positioned to rapidly capture a significant following," Breitling said.

The commission had few questions for Golden Nugget representatives. "You benefit by being the third one we've seen today," said commission Chairman Pete Bernhard. The downtown casino has a partnership agreement with Bally Technologies, with the slot machine manufacturer operating the website and the Golden Nugget providing the branding. "We're set up to participate in the revenues when there is revenues to participate in," said attorney Kate C. Lowenhar-Fisher of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, who was representing the Golden Nugget.

Meanwhile, the commission approved the takeover of the LVH Las Vegas by Navegante Gaming at the end of the month. The LVH, formerly the Las Vegas Hilton is expected to be sold at foreclosure to its lenders.

Navegante, which is controlled by longtime gaming executive Larry Woolf, would take over operations of both the casino and the 3,000-room hotel on November 1 if the foreclosure sale is completed.

Goldman Sachs Mortgage would own 70 percent of the LVH and Gramercy Capital would own the other 30 percent.

Woolf told the commission the hotel's more than 2,200 employees would be retained and he expects to hire additional sales and marketing professionals to beef up the property's room occupancy.

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