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  • Greenwood Gaming Breaks Its Losing Streak

    GREENWOOD GAMING BREAKS ITS LOSING STREAK

    Philly.com
    Nov 19 2014

    Harold Brubaker, Inquirer Staff Writer

    Last updated: Wednesday, November 19, 2014, 1:08 AM Posted: Tuesday,
    November 18, 2014, 8:00 PM

    Greenwood Gaming & Entertainment Inc., which already owns Parx
    Casino in Bensalem, was the big winner Tuesday when the Pennsylvania
    Gaming Control Board chose Live! Hotel & Casino, planned for South
    Philadelphia, for the city's second casino license.

    Not only does the selection of Live! give Greenwood the chance to
    protect its majority slice of the $1.14 billion gambling market in
    the immediate Philadelphia region, it also ends a losing streak.

    Greenwood, which fought fiercely against the board's approval of a
    license for Ira Lubert at the former Valley Forge Convention Center,
    lost competitions for casino licenses in Maryland and Massachusetts
    in the last year.

    In Massachusetts, in particular, the company thought it had a great
    chance because it had a local partner, but the license went to Penn
    National Gaming Inc. Cordish, its partner in Philadelphia, was another
    competitor in New England.

    Greenwood's roots in the Philadelphia area go back to the late 1980s.

    That's when chairman Robert W. Green, a native of the United Kingdom,
    formed the firm to buy Philadelphia Park racetrack - now home to Parx
    as well - from penny-stock swindler Robert E. Brennan's International
    Thoroughbred Breeders Inc. for $67 million.

    The purchase was a bet that lawmakers would eventually turn to the
    legalization of slot machines at racetracks for tax revenue. That
    finally happened in 2004, with much support from Green.

    Green's primary financial backer is Watche "Bob" Manoukian, an Armenian
    born in Lebanon who now calls London home. He made his fortune in
    the 1980s and 1990s as an agent for the royal family of Brunei,
    the small but oil-rich nation in Southeast Asia.

    Manoukian owns 85.84 percent of Parx, and is restricted to owning no
    more than 33.3 percent of a second casino in Pennsylvania. To stay
    within those limits, Manoukian will own just 28.33 percent of Live!

    outright while another entity, set up for the benefit of certain
    Manoukian family members, will own 17 percent.

    Other Greenwood-related investors, including Green, own 4.67 percent,
    for a total of 50 percent on the Greenwood side.

    Cordish Cos., a family-owned business in Baltimore, owns the other
    50 percent, with most of it split between the three sons of chief
    executive David S. Cordish. The company's top casino executive,
    Joseph Weinberg, owns 5 percent.

    In 1910, Cordish's grandfather founded the company, which now
    has operations in private equity, real estate development, and
    entertainment management. Local projects include Xfinity Live!

    Philadelphia, next to Citizens Bank Park, and the Walk in Atlantic
    City.

    Live! in Philadelphia will be the sixth casino Cordish has developed.

    The company owns Live! Maryland, south of Baltimore. That is the
    highest-grossing casino in the mid-Atlantic region, with $552 million
    in gambling revenue this year through October.

    http://www.philly.com/philly/business/20141119_Greenwood_Gaming_breaks_its_losing_streak .html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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