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Strip
Club Depression
by
Doug French
by Doug French
Strip clubs
are the ultimate boom time creation. After all, the business model
rests on masses of men overpaying for cocktails while overpaying
lithesome young women to bump and grind on their laps all
of this after paying an exorbitant charge just to enter the building.
Prior to the
great boom of the past decade the jiggle business was localized.
Politically unpopular, zoning for such establishments is confined
to industrial areas, tucked away from mom and the kids. Financing
to build such businesses was hard to come by as many bank boards
frowned upon the morals of the operation, turning a blind eye to
the abundant cash flows. Publically traded strip club operators
were unheard of.
Of course given
their unpopularity with local do-gooders, entrepreneurs who are
able to open an adult business become ongoing targets for extortion
by local politicians. Since the government tightly controls how
many can open and the rules when they do, adult business owners
are often forced to bribe city officials first to gain approvals
to open their businesses, and then to remain open.
Such was the
case in one of the most fertile fields for the stripping business,
Las Vegas. As home equity rich Americans were flooding Sin City
after the shock of 9/11 wore off and Federal Reserve liquidity was
making testosterone-filled young men feel like the good times would
never end and money was for wasting, strip club owner Mike Galardi
operated a small hole-in-the-wall money machine called Cheetahs.
But with the town booming, he wanted to expand his feline-themed
empire. But he wasn’t the only one. Everyone wanted to build a big
club in Las Vegas. Convention traffic was soaring, gaming win was
growing by leaps and bounds and more casino properties were planned
for the Strip. Las Vegas was just getting started and the big-box
strip club race was on. The 70,000 square foot Sapphire Gentlemen’s
Club was underway right behind Circus Circus, as was the large,
ornate Treasures located across I-15 from Palace Station. So many
others were trying to open clubs that a moratorium was placed on
new applications.
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With approvals
for his 25,000 square foot Jaguars club hard to obtain, Galardi
made a few hundred thousand dollars in gifts and cash payments to
county commissioners to get Jaguars started and keep county inspectors
off his back. Ultimately three Clark County commissioners, as well
as Galardi, would go to prison in a political corruption case known
as G-Sting.
Of course Galardi
was only doing what he had to do. In his book, The
Ethics of Liberty, Murray Rothbard explained that there
"is nothing illegitimate about the briber, but there is much that
is illegitimate about the bribee, the taker of the bribe. Legally,
there should be a property right to pay a bribe, but not to take
one."
Former Galardi
employee and friend Rich Buonantony told the San Diego Union-Tribune
newspaper. "[Galardi] was giving hundreds of thousands of dollars,
and do you think it was easy to remember giving five grand here
and 10 grand there? It was nothing for him to give money. People
looked at Mike Galardi like he was an ATM machine." Those "people"
Bounantony referred to were politicians.
But now that
the boom has turned bust, business has flattened for strip clubs.
The 25,000 square foot club that forever changed the lives of Galardi
and three commissioners is now owned by the publically traded Rick’s
Cabaret International Inc. Eric Langan, the man who took over Rick’s
in 1998, ramped up the company’s growth in 2005 and now it owns
19 clubs around the country. Quite a story for a guy who sold his
baseball card collection to finance his first club, "I just
jumped in," says Langan. "With cold beer and some naked
girls, it’s pretty easy to make money."
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With that initial
$24,000 investment, Langan’s first club measured 1,600 square feet.
Now, as he told BBook.com, some of his clubs have dressing room
areas measuring more than three times that space. Back in 1999 Rick’s
was trading for less than a buck a share on NASDAQ but by December
of 2007, with his shares trading for $27 more than the price
of a lap dance – Langan’s goal became to own 50 clubs in three to
five years. He bought a 47,000 square foot club in Miami for $25
million, a 25,000 square foot Dallas club for $9.5 million and he
paid $18.7 million for the former Jaguars in Las Vegas. Rick’s balance
sheet is now showing the strain. At September 30, 2006, liabilities
totaled less than $17 million. Now with business sagging along with
the asset values of the clubs, the company’s debts have soared to
almost $72 million.
And the company
has encountered expenses that Langan likely didn’t include in his
pro forma when analyzing his company’s Las Vegas purchase. Cab drivers
in Sin City have always collected bounties for delivering passengers
to various businesses – especially strip clubs. But the price has
soared in recent months as business has soured.
When a lot
of loose cash is floating around, lawyers start taking interest.
Attorney Al Marquis has filed a lawsuit to stop cabbies from being
paid for delivering customers, thinking that it’s bad for Vegas.
"The problem with paying for the delivery of customers is that
it’s been escalating in recent years. It has begun to substantially
alter the conduct of lots of different parties from hosts and doormen
at casinos; to individual cab and limo drivers; to tourists getting
diverted over their objection."
To regain market
share Rick’s Las Vegas hiked cabbie payouts to $100 per head which
led to an increase in monthly sales to $1.9 million in April, according
to the Wall Street Journal. However, $1 million of that went
to cabbies and the club lost money for the month. "You gotta
remember, in our industry it’s all about the girls. So he who has
the girls has the customers, and he who has the customers has the
girls," Lagan philosophized during a recent investor conference
call. "So it’s really a chicken and egg and which came first.
The trick is keeping the girls and the customers on a platform….
The guys will always go where the girls are."
What Lagan
didn’t say is that the girls are important because they pay to work.
So, beyond the drinks and the cover charges and in some cases expensive
meals, strip club cash flow depends first and foremost on entertainers
paying to entertain. Back in the Las Vegas boom days it was $50
per shift (depending upon the time of day) and $75 or $100 during
convention weeks. On top of that, dancers are expected to tip the
disc jockeys, floormen and house mothers.
But the current
bust means too many dances are chasing too few laps in too much
square footage. "For an industry often thought to be recession
proof," the WSJ’s Kris Hudson writes, "the transition
has been sobering." Rick’s stock is trading below $7 and publiclytraded
rival VCG Holding Corp. is trading at $2.40, a decline of 83% from
its peak. And investors are not the only ones getting hammered by
the softness in the bump and grind industry. The entertainers themselves
are shaking their moneymakers for much less these days. Buffy, who
plies her trade at Rick’s in Las Vegas told the WSJ that she is
making only a quarter of what she did during the boom. However,
that beats the mortgage business for Sara, who gave up making loans
in the bay area, for stimulating conventioneers in her g-string
at the Sapphire Gentlemen’s Club. Reportedly, "a laid-off paralegal,
a laid-off fashion designer, a Bank of America banker, a former
paralegal and two Los Angles real estate agents" have changed
careers despite the lower returns to be had working in 8-inch heels.
However, anyone who has spent time in strip clubs will tell you
that obtaining reliable personal information from entertainers is
problematic.
The
overexpansion of the strip club business is yet another malinvestment
created by the Federal Reserve’s monetary creation. As F.A. Hayek
has explained, profits made through stock market or real estate
appreciation in terms of money, "which do not correspond to
any proportional increase of capital beyond the amount which is
required to reproduce the equivalent of current income, are not
income, and their use for consumption purposes must lead to a destruction
of capital."
The wealth
that strip club patrons and strip club moguls thought they had to
throw around was but an illusion and the reality is sobering for
the entertainers, cabbies, politicians and others that have been
riding the strip club boom.
June
15, 2009
Doug
French [send him mail]
is president of the Ludwig von Mises
Institute and associate editor for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He is the author of Early
Speculative Bubbles & Increases in the Money Supply.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies. See his tribute to
Murray Rothbard.

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