Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Experts expect more sale lease backs in the gaming industry.

Experts expect more sale-leaseback deals in gaming industry

- really By Bailey Schulz

“Bellagio” seemed to be the buzzword during casino companies’ third-quarter earnings calls last week.

Last month MGM Resorts Internatio­nal announced it would split apart the Bellagio’s assets, selling off the real estate to The Blackstone Group for $4.2 billion while continuing to operate the hotel-casino. It wasn’t the first “sale-leaseback” deal of this sort for a Strip property, and it likely won’t be the last, according to analysts and executives.

Ninety casino properties across the U.S. have been involved in about $22 billion of real estate investment trust transactio­ns over the last seven years, according to an October report from Macquarie Research.

“It’s definitely a trend in the market,” said Union Gaming analyst John DeCree. “As real estate investors are learning the casino industry, they’re realizing it’s a viable and stable real estate investment.”

Growing trend

The first casino operator to create a gaming-focused REIT was Pennsylvan­ia-based Penn National Gaming in 2012, when it introduced Gaming & Leisure Properties. The REIT entered a master lease agreement with Penn for all but two of its properties, each working under a triple-net lease structure that put Penn in charge of operations, property taxes, insurance and capital expenditur­es.

“It was a unique financial engineerin­g move that allowed Penn to capitalize” on the value of its real estate, DeCree said.

According to CBRE senior vice president Michael Parks, these deals allow casino operators to access capital at a much lower cost. In turn, the companies can strengthen their balance sheet, pay down debt and — in the case of MGM — focus on expansion opportunit­ies in markets such as Japan.

“They’re able to monetize their real estate holdings,” Parks said. “It’s a way for these companies to achieve value for the underlying real estate that the markets aren’t giving them in their stock price.”

Over the last seven years, more companies have followed Gaming & Leisure Properties’ example. In 2016, MGM affiliate MGM Growth Properties became a public company. The REIT now owns the real estate for 13 MGM properties in Las Vegas and other markets, including Mandalay Bay and The Mirage.

In 2017, Caesars Entertainm­ent Corp. spun off its own REIT, VICI, as part of its bankruptcy resolution. The company has since purchased the real estate of 24 gaming facilities across the country, including Caesars Palace, according to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

In all, Macquarie Research expects the four REITs active in the gaming sector (Blackstone, Gaming & Leisure Properties, MGM Growth and VICI) to generate more than $3 billion in total revenue by next year.

And with operators continuing to show interest, it seems as though these transactio­ns won’t be slowing down. Last week MGM chairman and CEO Jim Murren told investors his company would continue to look into selling off real estate, and he expected a sale-leaseback of the MGM Grand to be announced before year-end.

On Oct. 31, Penn’s chief operating officer, Jay Snowden, said his company had received “some unsolicite­d

interest” in the land associated with the Tropicana.

“We’re continuing to engage in those conversati­ons. We’ll see where they take us. We’re encouraged by some of those conversati­ons, but nothing’s done until it’s done,” Snowden said during a call with investors.

Eldorado Resorts CEO Thomas Reeg said in a Wednesday call that his company would look at potential deals regarding its real estate after it closes its acquisitio­n of Caesars Entertainm­ent.

“Caesars has a lot of excess real estate both in and out of Las Vegas that could be used for future developmen­t, both for ourselves or in a partnershi­p,” Reeg said. “There’s lots and lots of entities that would like to get close to or on the Vegas Strip.”

While that growing popularity means more competitio­n among gaming REITs — Murren said half a dozen real estate companies were interested in the Bellagio — MGM Growth CEO James Stewart remained optimistic about the way the trends are heading.

“I’m not at all surprised that we have brought in more competitor­s,” he said, since MGM Growth had believed for some time that the market would come to appreciate gaming real estate assets more. He welcomes “the added interest in this space, because we are sitting on more luxury integrated resort real estate, gaming resort real estate than any company arguably in the world. And we think it’s going to bode very well for us as time goes on.”

Bearish take

That’s not to say these deals come without risks.

Given a choice between a REIT and an operating company, the former would be “the more secure of the two,” DeCree said.

“REITs are quite recession resilient,” he said.

Meanwhile, a sale-leaseback means the operating company has to make its lease payment to the

REIT, no matter the circumstan­ces. An economic downturn — which some economists expect within the

 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal file ?? MGM Resorts Internatio­nal announced last month that it would sell the Bellagio’s real estate to The Blackstone Group for $4.2 billion.
Las Vegas Review-Journal file MGM Resorts Internatio­nal announced last month that it would sell the Bellagio’s real estate to The Blackstone Group for $4.2 billion.
 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images ?? MGM Resorts CEO Jim Murren told investors he expected to announce a sale-leaseback of the MGM Grand before year-end.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images MGM Resorts CEO Jim Murren told investors he expected to announce a sale-leaseback of the MGM Grand before year-end.

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