Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Eldorado Resorts wraps up $17.3 billion buyout of Caesars

- By Ken Ritter

The $17.3

LAS VEGAS — A Nevada company that started in 1973 with a single hotelcasin­o in Reno has completed a $17.3 billion buyout of Caesars Entertainm­ent Corp. and will take the iconic company’s name going forward as the largest casino owner in the world.

Eldorado Resorts Inc. said the combined company will now own and operate more than 55 casino properties in 16 states, including eight resorts on the Las Vegas Strip.

“We are pleased to have completed this transforma­tive merger,” Tom Reeg, former CEO of Eldorado Resorts and now CEO of Caesars Entertainm­ent Inc. said in a statement Monday announcing the deal.

Reeg promised to welcome the combined company’s tens of thousands of employees and to create value for stakeholde­rs using “strategic initiative­s that will position the company for continued growth.”

The buyout also affects Caesars properties in the United Kingdom, Egypt, Canada, Dubai and a golf course in the Chinese gambling enclave of Macau. largest casino firm was approved this week.

The company vaulted over MGM Resorts Internatio­nal as the world’s largest casino operation.

The company plans to shed several properties to satisfy antitrust concerns raised before approvals were granted by the Federal Trade Commission and regulators in Indiana and New Jersey. In Nevada, executives have said they may sell at least one Las Vegas Strip property.

Anthony Carano, company president and chief operating officer, acknowledg­ed the combined company now carries $13 billion in debt and has billions in additional obligation­s to VICI Properties and another real estate investment trust, Gaming and Leisure Properties Inc.

He said that the company was “in a great financial position as Caesars going forward from here” and will reduce debt. Properties outside the U.S. will likely be sold, he said.

The New Jersey Casino Control Commission approved the deal last week, after the combined company announced plans to sell Bally’s Atlantic City. That will leave Caesars Entertainm­ent with three of nine casinos in Atlantic

City: Caesars, Harrah’s and the Tropicana.

Executives promised federal regulators the company will sell sites in Kansas City, Missouri; South Lake Tahoe, California; and Shreveport, Louisiana. Reeg told Indiana regulators that casinos in Evansville and Elizabeth would likely be sold, with a sale of a casino in Hammond possible.

In Las Vegas, the combined company now owns Caesars Palace, Paris Las Vegas, Planet Hollywood, Harrah’s Las Vegas, the Flamingo, Linq Hotel, Cromwell, Bally’s, and the Rio off the Strip. It will be one of the largest employers in Nevada.

Billionair­e investor Carl Icahn will be the largest single shareholde­r, with more than 10% of the combined company and three members on the new company board, Carano said. Icahn acquired a large block of Caesars shares after that company emerged from bankruptcy protection in late 2017.

The merger also involves properties in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Mississipp­i, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and Maryland.

 ?? L.E. BASKOW/AP 2019 ??
L.E. BASKOW/AP 2019

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