Drama in the News

Sphere Entertainment shares soared 11% Monday following the successful opening weekend of the company’s new Las Vegas venue.

The entertainment and media company, a pet project of New York Knicks owner James Dolan, paired its venue opening with a performance from rock band U2 on both Saturday and Sunday night. The Sphere plans to host live concerts and sporting events.

Fans took to social media to share their excitement at the performances, which appeared to have a big turnout.

Sphere calls itself a “next-generation entertainment medium” that aims to bring a fresh take to live entertainment, fit with a futuristic dome-shaped arena and wall-to-wall video screens. The Las Vegas venue is the company’s first opening.

The company has also announced plans to build another Sphere in London, pending approvals.

The company’s market cap sits at about $1.4 billion.

VICI Properties Willing to Consider More Las Vegas Strip Acquisitions


VICI Properties (NYSE: VICI) is already the largest landlord on the Las Vegas Strip, owning the real estate of some of the most prestigious casinos in the world. That doesn’t mean it won’t consider adding to that already expansive portfolio.

Caesars Palace Las Vegas, seen above. Owner VICI Properties is willing to add to its Las Vegas portfolio. (Image:(Image: CNN)

Following a spate of dealmaking over the past several years, the New York-based real estate investment trust (REIT) owns nearly 50 gaming properties across the US and Canada. VICI’s 2022 purchase of rival MGM Growth Properties (MGP), coupled with the acquisition of the Venetian, Palazzo, and what was then called Sands Convention Center, significantly expanded the REIT’s Las Vegas Strip footprint.

Today, VICI owns the property assets of 10 Strip venues operated by four tenants — Apollo Global Management, Caesars Entertainment, Hard Rock International, and MGM Resorts International. Even with that, the real estate firm is open to adding to its Sin City roster.

If the right properties came available with the right operators, at the right prices, we’d of course be interested,” said VICI CEO Ed Pitoniak in an interview with Eli Segall of the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Including the 10 Strip properties, VICI owns the real estate of 13 Nevada casino hotels, with one in Laughlin and two in Lake Tahoe.

VICI In Strong Position

In recent months, there’s been increasing concern that commercial real estate could be “the next shoe to drop” in the global financial system. That’s because of significant amounts of unoccupied offices in major cities in the US.

That problem is amplified by the shift to work-from-home caused by the coronavirus pandemic and rampant crime in office-dense cities such as Chicago, New York, and San Francisco. VICI and other casino landlords don’t face those conundrums. The gaming industry is thriving, Las Vegas visitation trends are robust, and there are no signs of material weakness among VICI tenants that would endanger rent payments.

Currently, the Strip accounts for 47% of VICI’s lease exposure, with regional and Canadian casinos representing the remainder.

“And as an experiential ecosystem. Las Vegas just gets richer, if not every day, every year. So our belief in the long-term health of not only the Las Vegas Strip but, frankly, the whole Las Vegas basin is really, really strong,” Pitoniak told the Review-Journal.

As for the idea that VICI could add to its Strip portfolio, the REIT has the right of first refusal agreements on several of Caesars’ Strip venues. But that operator isn’t likely to be a seller this year. It is widely believed that a Strip property will come to market in 2023, but it’s unclear which one it will be.

The company has not commented on the matter. Still, it’s possible Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust (BREIT) could raise capital by paring its Las Vegas real estate portfolio, which includes Aria, Bellagio, and Vdarra — all operated by VICI tenant MGM.

VICI Interested in Other Parts of Las Vegas

It’s not just the Strip that VICI has eyes for in Las Vegas. Pitoniak told the Review-Journal the REIT would consider opportunities to add downtown and Las Vegas locals properties to its portfolio.

The downtown comments aren’t surprising, as VICI expressed as much as last year. The issue is what comes up for sale there and in the locals’ segment.

Boyd Gaming is the biggest operator in downtown Las Vegas. That operator and Red Rock Resorts have a near duopoly among locals casinos across the valley, and neither have a history of actively engaging in sale-leaseback deals. For its part, when Red Rock sells land or old casinos, it’s almost always to a buyer outside of the gaming industry.

VICI Properties Has Eyes Open For More Las Vegas Buys
Las Vegas’ Top Landlord Looks at Spas, Water Parks for Future Growth
VICI Properties open to adding to Las Vegas roster on and off the Strip.
Original link
Fort Worth’s Canyon Ranch resorts plot ambitious growth plan with Caesars Palace owner
Canyon Ranch - the luxury resort brand backed by Fort Worth's Crescent Real Estate - is partnering with Caesars Palace operator VICI Properties on a major...
Original link
VICI Properties: Why Bet In Vegas When You Can Own VICI (NYSE:VICI)
VICI Properties has achieved impressive growth through its focus on well-positioned assets and strategic acquisitions. Read why VICI stock is a Buy.
Original link
Casino landlord’s revenue jumps more than $1B after big Las Vegas buyouts
Vici Properties, the biggest property owner on the Strip, generated $2.6 billion of revenue last year, up 72 percent from 2021.
Original link
Is This $2 Billion Orb the Future of Live Music?
Designers say the high-tech Sphere in Las Vegas will redefine the concert-going experience. Others say it’s an expensive boondoggle
Original link
Live Entertainment - business conventions and sports betting
Casino landlord’s revenue jumps more than $1B after big Las Vegas buyouts

Casino landlord Vici Properties pulled in more than $1 billion of added revenue last year, after it loaded up on megaresorts along Las Vegas Boulevard.

New York-based Vici, the biggest property owner on the Strip, said this week it generated $2.6 billion of revenue last year, up 72.3 percent from roughly $1.5 billion in 2021.

But its expenses also shot higher, and overall profits didn’t climb nearly as fast as its revenue. Vici said it booked almost $1.14 billion in net income last year, up 11 percent from $1.02 billion in 2021.

A Caesars Entertainment spinoff, Vici was launched in 2017 but now has a real estate portfolio that spans many of Las Vegas’ biggest casino-resorts, including Caesars Palace, The Venetian, The Mirage, Mandalay Bay and MGM Grand.

These and other properties in its portfolio are leased to operators that pay rent to Vici.

All told, Vici owns tens of thousands of hotel rooms in Las Vegas, with around 660 acres along the Strip, and has said it generates some 45 percent of its total revenue here.

‘A city like no other’

John Payne, Vici’s president and chief operating officer, said in a call with analysts Friday that the Las Vegas market overall is “producing record results.”

He cited “robust” leisure business, the return of meetings and conventions, and high visitor levels.

More than 38.8 million people visited Las Vegas last year, up 20.5 percent from 2021, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.

Overall, the Strip generated almost $8.3 billion in gambling revenue in 2022, up 17.1 percent from the year before, the tourism agency reported.

“In essence, we believe consumers did not find a replacement for the experience offered by the Las Vegas market, nor do we believe they ever will,” Payne said Friday.

Later in the call, he noted that Las Vegas is set to host a Formula One race later this year and the Super Bowl in early 2024, both of which are expected to draw enormous volumes of visitors and generate windfalls of spending.

“It’s a city like no other,” Payne said. “We talk internally, is there a city performing better than Las Vegas in the world? And we’re not sure we can find one.”

Big buyouts

Vici, whose holdings on the Strip consisted of Caesars Palace and Harrah’s by the end of 2017, vastly expanded its portfolio in America’s casino capital with a pair of high-priced acquisitions that closed last year.

In one deal, it acquired The Venetian, Palazzo and former Sands Expo and Convention Center from casino operator Las Vegas Sands Corp. Vici bought the real estate for $4 billion as part of a $6.25 billion buyout with investment giant Apollo Global Management.

Vici also acquired MGM Resorts International’s real estate spinoff in a $17.2 billion deal, giving Vici ownership of several MGM-operated properties along the Strip, including Park MGM, Luxor and Excalibur.

Two recent deals further cemented Vici’s hold on the Strip. It took full ownership of MGM Grand and Mandalay Bay last month, acquiring financial giant Blackstone’s stake in the properties for almost $1.3 billion in cash and the assumption of nearly $1.5 billion in debt.

Vici also announced in December it was providing up to $350 million — part of a $2.2 billion construction loan from multiple lenders — to the developers of Fontainebleau Las Vegas on the north Strip.

Los Angeles goes inside Sphere as Madison Square Garden Entertainment executives debut the proprietary Sphere Immersive Sound. Designed and customized by Sphere Studios in partnership with Berlin-based 3D audio technology creator Holoplot, the audio capabilities promise to reengineer the future of concerts and residencies from top artists.
https://lamag.com/entertainment/las-vegas-sphere-experience-sound