RubinBrown Gaming Stats 2018

TRIBAL GAMING PORTLAND REGION †

$8.0B $8.5B $7.5B

140 OPS 150 OPS 130 OPS

$7.0B

120 OPS

$6.5B

110 OPS

$5.0B $5.5B $6.0B

90 OPS 100 OPS

NO. CASINO OPERATIONS

80 OPS

$4.5B

70 OPS

53

52

$4.0B

60 OPS

51

51

50

49

49

49

47

46

GAMING REVENUES

$3.5B

50 OPS 40 OPS 30 OPS 20 OPS 10 OPS

$3.0B $2.5B

$2.0B

$1.5B

$1.0B

0 OPS

$2.26B

$2.38B

$2.52B

$2.66B

$2.76B

$2.87B

$2.90B

$2.93B

$3.02B

$3.18B

FY 2007

FY 2008

FY 2009

FY 2010

FY 2011

FY 2012

FY 2013

FY 2014

FY 2015

FY 2016

DATA FROM NIGC’S ANNUAL STATISTICAL RELEASE FOR TRIBAL FISCAL YEARS ENDING IN 2016.

10.2% TRIBAL GAMING REVENUES

GAMING REV $8.38

GAMING REVENUE $3.18B

THREE-YEAR COMPOUND ANNUAL GROWTH RATE 3.1% FIVE-YEAR COMPOUND ANNUAL GROWTH RATE 2.8%

$59.95M AVERAGE REVENUE PER CASINO

53

CASINO OPERATIONS

5.1%

4.3% OF ALL 2016 GAMING REVENUES

The Portland region is one of two regions that has seen year-over-year growth every year since 2007. In 2016, the trend continued with the region generating revenue growth of 5.1%, the largest growth rate since 2009 (6.1%). Overall, the Portland region represents 10.2% of tribal gaming revenues. Since 2008, the region has seen the number of gaming operations increase by seven casinos and revenue increase by $913.4 million or 40.3%. • The Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians are leading an effort to open the state’s first intertribal gaming facility in Salem, Oregon. The project would include a 140,000 square-foot entertainment, gaming and hotel facility, with 2,000 gaming devices and 45 tables games. The Siletz hope that the project will be complete by 2021. However, the project must be approved by Oregon Governor Kate Brown and the other eight federally recognized tribes in Oregon. If approved, the project will include an “unprecedented revenue sharing agreement” whereby initial estimates indicate that participating tribes will split 50% of the net entertainment venue revenues. • Oregon tribal casinos may benefit from the state legislature’s efforts to shut down poker rooms. In 2017, the state legislature was looking to pass HB 2190, which would limit the operation of “social” poker games to charitable, fraternal or religious organizations. HB 2190 cleared the Oregon House of Representatives with a vote of 39- 16, but has sat idle in a Senate committee since July 2017. If the legislation is picked up in the 2018 session, there are 19 poker rooms in the Portland, Oregon area that could be impacted. The closure of the poker rooms would be a win for Oregon’s tribal casinos, which have been facing increased competition from state-backed gaming through Oregon’s Lottery and the expansion of limited stakes gaming.

18

RUBINBROWN GAMING STATS 2018

† see statistical note on page 25

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