“Reducing the debt load will ease a great deal of pressure, making it easier for the property to invest in facilities and promotions that will draw customers,” he said. That encouraged David Schwartz, a gambling expert at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. WHYY thanks our sponsors - become a WHYY sponsor Of the $70 million Luxor pumped into the property earlier this year, $50 million went to pay down debt, leaving it with a greatly improved balance sheet, Matejevich told The Associated Press. It is being transferred from the late Bruce Deifik, the Colorado developer who died in a car crash last month, to hedge fund Luxor Capital, who had agreed to take over and invest $70 million into the property as Deifik ran out of money to operate it. The property, which opened in 2012 as Revel and closed two years later, is in the process of changing hands yet again.
The Ocean Casino Resort, which until a few weeks ago was known as the Ocean Resort Casino, has greatly reduced its debt and will return to profitability in May, according to Eric Matejevich, the interim CEO managing the oceanfront property while an ownership transfer takes place. A perennially challenged Atlantic City casino will finally turn a profit this month and chart the way forward under the ownership of a New York hedge fund.