| TIME TO WAKE UP THIS THREAD! Here is the article from Street Com's Herb Greenberg 16 Sept 1998;
 
 Herb on TheStreet: Will WMS Get a
 Monopoly on the Slot Machine
 Business?By Herb Greenberg
 Senior Columnist
 9/16/98 8:41 AM ET
 In the business of building slot machines, WMS Industries
 (WMS:NYSE) has been the losing bet against International
 Game Technology (IGT:NYSE) and Anchor Gaming
 (SLOT:Nasdaq).
 When its Midway Games (MWY:NYSE)
 home-video-game unit was spun off earlier this year, most
 investors opted for the spinoff rather than the so-called stub
 known as WMS, which also makes video lottery games
 and pinball machines. Midway had several hot games,
 including Mortal Kombat. WMS, on the other hand, had
 little visibility-especially in the potentially superhot casino
 segment, where it had lost a crucial patent lawsuit brought
 by IGT. As recently as two months ago its stock was
 trading at 4.
 But while Wall Street wasn't watching, WMS used the
 downtime to retool itself and design around the patents.
 Judging by its stock, which closed yesterday at 6 15/16, it
 appears to be beating the odds. Several WMS slots
 introduced this year have been hits. But none has generated
 the buzz like WMS' new Monopoly game. Introduced just
 six weeks ago, this "game within a game" has won rave
 reviews. And based on early results, it may be the hottest
 new slot since the joint introduction by IGT and Anchor
 several years ago of Wheel of Fortune.
 
 Bear Stearns analyst Jason Ader, who has no relationship with
 WMS and isn't currently recommending its stock, interviewed
 officials from 26 of the country's top casinos for a report
 scheduled for release in conjunction with next week's World
 Gaming Congress & Expo in Las Vegas. "Everyone's talking
 about Monopoly," he says. He adds that so far, some casinos
 expect Monopoly to do better than Wheel of Fortune and
 several other recent winners. The various versions of the
 Monopoly game works like any other slot that dispenses coins,
 with one exception: After a number of plays the machine also
 incorporates features, as a bonus, from the familiar Monopoly
 board game. Like Wheel of Fortune did for IGT and Anchor,
 however, the real attraction of Monopoly is that it has the power
 to create an annuity of sorts for WMS. Rather than selling the
 slots outright, at a price of around $6,500 apiece, the company
 shares in the game's profits by receiving roughly 20% of the
 take. The average slot grosses around $100 per day. It's hard to
 say how Monopoly will eventually do. There are currently only
 12 machines in four casinos. But early results lead David Ehlers,
 chairman of Las Vegas Investment Advisors, to suggest that
 Monopoly may do on average as much as $450 per day. That
 would translate into $32,850 per year, or earnings per share of
 42 cents per 1,000 machines. (This year WMS is expected to
 earn 5 cents per share.) As a benchmark, consider that currently
 there are roughly 6,000 Wheel of Fortunes installed. Even with a
 portion of that, "It doesn't require an accountant, or an
 investment analyst, to figure out that Monopoly may impact
 WMS substantially," says Ehlers, who is just as likely to be short
 gaming stocks. WMS is currently his favorite stock to own. The
 gaming industry in general has been in the investment swamp
 lately, due in large part to overcapacity in Las Vegas. But that
 overcapacity should actually work in favor of WMS because
 casinos will need to make sure they have a mix of the best
 games. Ehlers doesn't expect earnings from Monopoly to really
 start to kick in until the post-Christmas quarter. The obvious
 question, however, is whether a game that gets off to such a fast
 start can fizzle. The obvious answer: absolutely. "If customers
 lose a lot of money on it you're going to die," says WMS Chief
 Operating Officer Kevin Verner. To avoid such a fate, he says
 Monopoly has high "hit frequencies" and frequent bonuses.
 Ehlers, meanwhile, says his staff's own daily checks at the same
 casinos at the same time every day show no letup in demand for
 Monopoly. He says he checked his old notes and "there's every
 bit as much enthusiasm" for Monopoly as there was for Wheel
 of Fortune. "All machines are a gamble," says Ehlers of Las
 Vegas Investment Advisors. "The ones that do the best are
 those that can entertain you while you're losing money. And if
 they can make you laugh, well, WMS is the first that has done
 that." If Ehlers is right, WMS will be laughing all the way to the
 bank. "
 
 Now my Marth
 
 $450.00 times 365 days per year= $164,250.00 per
 machine/year
 
 $164,250.00 times 6000 machines = $ 985,500,000.00 gross
 
 $985,500,00.00 times 20 percent = $197,000,000.00 gross
 profit
 per year to WMS! Take a ride on the Reading children! Pass
 GO and collect 200 dollars! Get out of jail free!
 
 Call your friends and neighbors and tell them to jump on this one!
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