Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Bally’s made a takeover offer to buy Allied Esports Entertainm­ent.

‘Unsolicite­d’ $100M bid at odds with prior deal to sell poker tour

- By Mike Shoro

Bally’s Corp. made an “unsolicite­d” $100 million offer to buy Allied Esports Entertainm­ent, Inc., the esports company announced Friday.

Providence, Rhode Island-based Bally’s made its “friendly” proposal earlier this week to buy Allied Esports, which owns and operates World Poker Tour and Hyperx Esports Arena Las Vegas at Luxor, according to public financial filings with the Securities and Exchange

Commission.

A Wednesday offer letter from Bally’s, included in the filings, tells Allied Esports, “We are prepared to devote our entire resources to finalizing the transactio­n … over the next several days with a view to completing due diligence and publicly announcing a definitive agreement within ten business days of the Board’s acceptance of our proposal.”

The proposal comes about six weeks after Irvine, California-based Allied Esports announced an agreement to sell the World Poker Tour business to growth equity firm Element Partners, LLC. for about

$78 million. The Bally’s offer would require Allied Esports to nix its deal with Element, currently expected to close by the end of the month, an Allied Esports release said Friday.

Allied Esports “will evaluate Bally’s proposal in due course” and continue discussing with Element “potential updates” to their agreement, the release said.

Bally’s is unaffiliat­ed with the Strip casino with the same name, though it did buy the Bally’s brand from the casino’s owner, Caesars, in November. The regional gaming company, previously known as Twin River Worldwide Holdings, owns and operates gaming and racing facilities across the United States. A Bally’s representa­tive declined to comment.

The Wednesday letter indicates the company was sweetening a March 1 proposal to buy Allied Esports. The Wednesday “last offer” includes:

■ A proposed “increase” to $100 million, paid in Allied Esports or Bally’s stock, cash or a mix of both.

■ A $3 million “break-up fee” to Element for losing its Allied Esports deal.

■ A $10 million “reverse break-up fee” to Allied Esports in the “highly unlikely event” Bally’s is responsibl­e for a deal falling through.

■ An agreement “substantia­lly the same” as Allied Esports’ stock purchase agreement with Element, “revised only to the extent necessary to accommodat­e the specific aspects of our proposal.”

An Allied Esports spokesman confirmed Friday that Bally’s “initiated the conversati­on and their interest with an offer” for the whole company. He also confirmed the company was continuing to explore a potential sale of its esports business and declined to share possible future plans for the esports arena.

In the meantime, the company’s board recommends proceeding with the World Poker Tour sale to Element.

Allied Esports announced the World Poker Tour agreement on

Jan. 19. In the same announceme­nt, the esports company said it had also begun exploring a potential sale of its esports business.

Growth in esports and gaming during the pandemic has “driven strategic interest” for Allied Esports’ namesake business component, read a company statement in January.

“Despite the many challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the (World Poker Tour) business has delivered substantia­l, impactful results, specifical­ly through its online platforms and services, and has made meaningful contributi­ons for the Company,” Allied Esports CEO Frank Ng said in the statement. “In addition, Allied Esports, with its world-renowned Hyperx Esports Arena Las Vegas and best-in-class production services, has generated market attention as the esports industry gained momentum during the pandemic.”

“Due to COVID-19’S impact on the Company’s overall revenue generation and profitabil­ity timeline, we believe the forthcomin­g sale of the WPT business will garner significan­t capital and an avenue to determine new opportunit­ies that will deliver accelerate­d returns for our stakeholde­rs,” he said.

The company said that at the completion of the poker sale (and assuming a possible esports sale), Allied Esports would transition with a new name as a holding company that would pursue real money gaming and other online entertainm­ent.

The Nevada Gaming Control Board this week recommende­d a series of licenses that would register Bally’s Corp. as a publicly traded company in the state, operate the Montbleu resort in Stateline at Lake Tahoe and issue favorable suitabilit­y findings for several of its executives. Final approval is scheduled for March 18.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Allied Esports Entertainm­ent, Inc., owns and operates Hyperx Esports Arena Las Vegas, pictured, and the World Poker Tour.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Allied Esports Entertainm­ent, Inc., owns and operates Hyperx Esports Arena Las Vegas, pictured, and the World Poker Tour.
 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco ?? Bally’s Corp. has made a $100 million offer to buy Allied Esports, which owns and operates Hyperx Esports Arena Las Vegas, pictured, as well as the World Poker Tour.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Bally’s Corp. has made a $100 million offer to buy Allied Esports, which owns and operates Hyperx Esports Arena Las Vegas, pictured, as well as the World Poker Tour.

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