Wynn Implicated as Wynn West Planned

The Wall Street Journal last week published an explosive story alleging that Steve Wynn (above) has assaulted dozens of women during his years as head of Wynn Resorts and before that Mirage Resorts. Wynn denied the allegations, but it took the wind out of his fourth-quarter conference call where he highlighted a profit of $492 million, offered more details of his Las Vegas project, Paradise Park, and announced the development of Wynn West, on the former Alon site across the Strip from Wynn Las Vegas and Encore.

Wynn Implicated as Wynn West Planned

Steve Wynn was the target of an explosive article published last week in the Wall Street Journal that alleged a pattern of sexual abuse of women during his time leading Wynn Resorts and Mirage Resorts. The WSJ charged that “dozens” of women recounted encounters with Wynn where he made unwanted sexual advances.

In the article a manicurist charged that Wynn forced her to have sex with him in his office in 2005, and later received a $7.5 million settlement.

Wynn responded in statement, saying, “The idea that I ever assaulted any woman is preposterous.”

“We find ourselves in a world where people can make allegations, regardless of the truth, and a person is left with the choice of weathering insulting publicity or engaging in multi-year lawsuits. It is deplorable for anyone to find themselves in this situation.”

Wynn blamed his ex-wife for the allegations.

“The instigation of these accusations is the continued work of my ex-wife Elaine Wynn, with whom I am involved in a terrible and nasty lawsuit in which she is seeking a revised divorce settlement.”

Elaine Wynn has declined to comment.

Despite his denials, Wynn later resigned as finance chairman for the Republican National Committee, a decision supported by his friend, President Donald Trump. Wynn was enormously successful in that position, raising millions of dollars for the party.

“Effective today I am resigning as finance chairman of the RNC,” Wynn said in the statement. “The unbelievable success we have achieved must continue. The work we are doing to make America a better place is too important to be impaired by this distraction. I thank the president for the opportunity to serve and wish him continued success.”

Wynn said he remained focused on the company, its employees and its shareholders.

One group demanded his resignation from both Wynn Resorts and the RNC.

“Steve Wynn needs to go,” said Nita Chaudhary, co-founder of UltraViolet, a women’s advocacy organization. “He is a predator of the worst kind who used his position of power to sexually coerce his female employees. It is sadly no surprise that he keeps company with people like Donald Trump—a man who follows the same playbook of sexual abuse.

“The board of Wynn Resorts must prove that it stands against sexual assault and with survivors, and take immediate action to remove Steve Wynn from the company.”

The hand-picked board of Wynn Resorts isn’t likely to accede to these demands, however, it has set up a special committee to investigate the charges. The committee will be led by Patricia Mulroy, a former member of the Nevada Gaming Commission, and the only female member of the Wynn board.

Several gaming regulatory bodies, including Nevada’s Gaming Control Board and the Massachusetts Gaming Commission, have said they are “aware” of the charges and are reviewing them. Wynn must still be licensed in Massachusetts before his Wynn Boston Harbor in Everett debuts in 2019.

The WSJ article and its reaction distracted from stellar fourth-quarter results and expansion plans for Wynn Resorts, outlined just days before publication.

Wynn Resorts says it plans to fast-track construction of a new hotel on the 38 acres the company acquired in December across Las Vegas Boulevard from its Wynn Las Vegas and Encore resorts.

Plans call for a 2,000-3,000-room property on the land, once the location of the New Frontier and more recently the site of James Packer’s abortive Alon megaresort.

Wynn West, as it’s called, will connect to the Beach Club outside Encore and Wynn Las Vegas via an “air conditioned umbilical hallway” that will run over the Strip, Steve Wynn told analysts participating in the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call. He said the necessary infrastructure outside the Beach Club is already in place because he knew he would eventually buy the Alon site.

“What we are going to do across the street is going to go rather quickly because I have been giving it thought for a long time,” he explained. “I don’t think the design and development period is going to be very long,” he added, saying he expects to complete Wynn West, together with the much-anticipated Paradise Park, “in three years or so”.

The announcement, Wynn’s first regarding the purchase, came as a surprise to Wall Street, which had expected the company to sit on the parcel until it deemed market conditions to be ideal.

But then, to hear Wynn tell it, they already are.

“Do you believe that Las Vegas will for the next decade or two continue to be a major destination city in the United States of America and the world?” he asked. “If you believe that, then you can be fearless about accommodating these people at the best level and giving the highest level of value. Anyone that doesn’t understand that is missing the boat.”

As for Paradise Park―which includes a 1,500-room hotel located between the existing Wynn and Encore towers together with convention and meetings space and a 1,600-foot lagoon surrounded by a pedestrian promenade and a white sand beach―construction is well under way.

“I am going to get those damn buildings up as fast as I can because I want to capture more of the absolutely inevitable visitor and tourist traffic that Las Vegas will experience in the next 15 to 20 years,” Wynn said.

With the completion of Paradise Park and Wynn West, the company will have 8,000 of Southern Nevada’s 160,000 hotel rooms, surrounded by 6 million square feet of meeting space and capable ultimately of commanding rates of $400 to $500 a night.

Wynn said he hoped to have renderings for all his Las Vegas projects in the next four to five months.

The quarter was a strong one for Wynn, largely on a continuing resurgence in the Macau market, where the company derives more than 60 percent of its total revenues.

Eighteen months since its debut on Cotai, Wynn Palace is now generating about $4 million of operating revenue a day, the company reported, and Wynn said he expects it will “blow past” an earlier forecast of $630 million in EBITDA.

In response, the company plans to expand the resort and work has already started on its design, Wynn said.

“The Macau market is still only touching a tiny percentage of the potential market that is there,’’ he said on the call. “Do not bet against Macau. You will be losing your money.”

Investment bank Morgan Stanley largely concurs in a new report forecasting the Chinese casino enclave to nearly double in size over the next five years to US$60 billion in gaming revenue as visitation from mainland China grows at a double-digit clip over the same period, boosted by rising incomes, the completion of key infrastructure projects, and the opening of new resorts and attractions.

“All these things are looking very nice for us,’’ Wynn said.

The company beat analysts’ estimates with net income of $491.7 million, or $4.77 a share, on revenue of $1.69 billion in the quarter, compared with earnings of $113.8 million, $1.12 a share, on revenue of $1.3 billion for the same period a year earlier. The company also reported a 50-cent-per-share dividend.

The increase was largely due to an estimated $340 million windfall as a result of the Trump-GOP tax overhaul, and Wynn duly lavished praise on the administration of his one-time casino rival and the Republican-controlled Congress.

“With the Trump administration, with the Republicans in Congress, we are seeing this fabulous renaissance,” he said. “Any attempt to vilify or criticize this tax bill is a fruitless and pointless experience. The impact of that tax bill is a tsunami of business activity and growth in America.”

Wynn also said he would share the largesse with employees by raising wages or giving bonuses. He did not go into details.

But the catalyst for the improved results in the fourth quarter was the Macau performance.

Feeling buoyant about the results, Wynn says he is planning to expand his $4.2 billion Wynn Palace, which opened in August 2016, on 11 acres in Macau.

“The depth and the foundational strength of that market is real,” Wynn said. “We’ve been encouraged by the government in conversations with them to file our plans for Phase II, which we’re working on now.” He was alluding to Wynn’s gaming concession, which expires in 2020 and is subject to renewal by the Macau government.

“We enjoy a good deal of confidence and we have been given reason to have confidence that our businesses will continue after the initial concession expiration date,” he said. “That confidence is based upon the kinds of conversations we have with the government.”

JPMorgan raised Wynn Macau’s earnings estimate by 7 percent for 2018 to, analyst DS Kim said in a note cited by the Macau Daily Times.

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