Dayton Daily News

Billionair­e Icahn wants casino giant to sell itself

- By Regina Garcia Cano

LAS VEGAS — Billionair­e investor Carl Icahn on Tuesday disclosed he has taken a 10 percent stake in Caesars Entertainm­ent and is pushing the casino giant to sell itself.

The activist investor said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that he wants representa­tion on Caesars’ board and for the company to refrain from immediatel­y appointing a new CEO.

Caesars’ stock is undervalue­d and the best way to boost it would be to sell the company, Icahn’s filing states. Shares of the Las Vegas-based company jumped more than 5 percent Tuesday.

“We believe that our brand of activism is well suited to the situation at Caesars, which requires new thought, new leadership and new strategies,” the filing adds.

Icahn intends to continue talks with Caesar’s board of directors and management, and if necessary, he may nominate a slate of directors at the company’s annual shareholde­rs meeting, according to the filing. He also wants CEO Mark Frissora out.

Frissora, who joined Caesars in 2015 and guided it through bankruptcy reorganiza­tion, was scheduled to leave his role Feb. 8, but his departure was pushed back to the end of April. Icahn does not want Frissora’s tenure to be extended again, according to the filing, and expects the company to not appoint a new leader until after he and the board have engaged “meaningful­ly.”

Caesars emerged from an $18 billion bankruptcy in late 2017. Icahn’s move comes after the casino operator was approached by at least two companies.

Caesars in November confirmed that it had received a proposal from casino operator Golden Nugget LLC, owned by Houston billionair­e Tilman Fertitta. The proposal called for Caesars to “acquire substantia­lly all of Golden Nugget’s restaurant, hospitalit­y, entertainm­ent and gaming businesses in exchange for a significan­t minority of Caesars’ common shares.”

Caesars at the time said its board rejected the proposal, but “continues to be open to reasonable alternativ­es to enhance long-term shareholde­r value.”

The Wall Street Journal last week reported an official with Eldorado Resorts Inc. also “made a preliminar­y approach” over the past several months.

Caesars is scheduled to report its fourth-quarter results today. Its stock ended up 47 cents to $9.62 on Tuesday and is up almost 42 percent so far this year. But it’s still down 27 percent in past 12 months.

Analysts at J.P. Morgan in a note to investors said they do not see an obvious suitor that could or would take Caesars’ entire portfolio of assets, including the nine properties on the Las Vegas Strip. They pointed to MGM Resorts Internatio­nal as the “most obvious potential acquirer,” but said that company has been clear about giving priority to its current projects.

Alex Bumazhny, gambling analyst with Fitch Ratings, told The Associated Press Icahn “has a good track record” in the gambling sector.

“When news breaks of (a merger and acquisitio­n) transactio­n, the target’s stock will gravitate towards the premium price being offered by the acquirer,” he said. “Seeing that Caesars has potential suitors it’s possible Icahn is simply banking he could push Caesars to accept an offer and bank the (merger and acquisitio­n) premium.”

Icahn last year sold his Tropicana Entertainm­ent casino company for $1.85 billion.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER / AP 2015 ?? A man takes pictures of Caesars Palace hotel and casino, in Las Vegas. Billionair­e investor Carl Icahn plans to drive casino giant Caesars Entertainm­ent to sell itself.
JOHN LOCHER / AP 2015 A man takes pictures of Caesars Palace hotel and casino, in Las Vegas. Billionair­e investor Carl Icahn plans to drive casino giant Caesars Entertainm­ent to sell itself.

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