AC’s Revel Casino: The $300M pension gamble
| By Jean Mikle, Asbury Park Press, N.J. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
The state agency that oversees the multi-billion dollar employee pension funds voted late last year to invest
The investment deal is complex. Although the state plans to invest in
The 1,399-room Revel emerged from bankruptcy protection last year from nearly
The 47-story Revel, touted by Gov.
Touted as a job creator, Revel was expected to employ 5,500 people but now has about 2,800 on staff. Meanwhile, as
Board members
"Therefore no pension fund assets were expected to be invested in that enterprise," according to the minutes. But the minutes also note that
In a memorandum sent in November to council members, McDonough noted that
Hedge funds, like mutual funds, pool investors' money in an effort to make more money, but they are available only to so-called "accredited investors," typically wealthier individuals or institutions like pension funds or insurance companies.
Hedge funds often try to profit by engaging in riskier investment methods, that can pay off with big returns, but also can lose money.
Leaders of the city's largest casino workers' union, Local 54 of
"I can't think of anything that's come out of this project that's positive," he said. Local 54 protested the investment council's decision in a February letter sent to
Low interest rates over the past several years have led many public pension systems to invest more in so-called "alternative investments," like hedge funds. Such investments now make about 24 percent of pension fund investments nationwide, or about
The state's decision to invest pension money in a hedge fund that owns a casino led Assemblyman
"I don't think it's a wise investment to be investing our money in casinos," said Caputo. "It's not a very winning investment."
In
But the casino has never generated a profit, so the tax incentives were never paid, state officials have said.
Other Revel owners include hedge funds
McDevitt and other union officials fear that whoever buys Revel will shut it down to revamp it, throwing its employees out of work. They could then be re-hired for lower wages, or not brought back at all, McDevitt said.
"This project was also supposed to be about jobs," McDevitt said. "Revel was supposed to grow the market. Instead it cannibalized it."
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(c)2014 Asbury Park Press (Neptune, N.J.)
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Distributed by MCT Information Services
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