The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Twin River buying casinos in New Jersey, Nevada, Louisiana

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. » A casino company in the smallest state is pulling off one of the biggest deals of the year in the gambling industry, buying casinos in Atlantic City, New Jersey, Shreveport, Louisiana, and Lake Tahoe, Nevada.

And it could remove a major potential obstacle to the ongoing merger of Caesars Entertainm­ent and Eldorado Resorts, the granddaddy of all gambling deals.

Lincoln, Rhode Islandbase­d Twin River Worldwide Holdings announced Friday it is buying Bally’s Atlantic City Hotel & Casino from Caesars Entertainm­ent for $25 million. It also is buying Eldorado Shreveport Resort and Casino and the Mont Bleu Resort Casino & Spa in Lake Tahoe from Eldorado Resorts for a combined $155 million.

The move expands Twin River’s footprint into three additional states. The company currently owns and manages seven casinos: two in Rhode Island, one in Mississipp­i, one in Delaware, and three casinos and a horse racetrack in Colorado.

“This is a great deal for Twin River, and diversifie­s our business across eight states,” said Soo Kim, chairman of the company’s board of directors. “It reaffirms our commitment to employees, customers and the communitie­s in which we operate that Twin River will be stronger than ever.”

The Bally’s purchase should also remove a stumbling block to the $17.3 billion merger of Caesars Entertainm­ent and Eldorado, a transactio­n that still needs approval from regulators in multiple states.

New Jersey regulators were sure to take a hard look at whether a combined entity involving Caesars, which currently owns three of Atlantic City’s nine casinos, and Eldorado, which owns a fourth, would violate a prohibitio­n on any one company having an “undue economic concentrat­ion,” or owning too much of the market.

“It will significan­tly reduce the level of economic concentrat­ion and that will make it a lot easier for the (New Jersey) Casino Control Commission to approve it,” said Daniel Heneghan, a gambling analyst and former longtime spokesman for the commission. “The fact that it is being sold to a new player for the market here will help increase competitio­n. I’m sure the need to get New Jersey approval was a big factor in deciding to sell the property.”

In the Atlantic City deal, Caesars Entertainm­ent and VICI Properties are relinquish­ing Bally’s in an allcash deal. VICI will receive $19 million, while Caesars will get $6 million.

The deal is due to close in the fourth quarter of this year.

“We look forward to the reopening of Bally’s Atlantic City as soon as appropriat­e once the public health emergency related to COVID-19 has passed,” said Tony Rodio, Caesars’ CEO.

 ?? WAYNE PARRY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Caesars Entertainm­ent and VICI Properties announced, Friday they are selling Bally’s in Atlantic City to Rhode Island-based Twin River Worldwide Holdings for $25million.
WAYNE PARRY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Caesars Entertainm­ent and VICI Properties announced, Friday they are selling Bally’s in Atlantic City to Rhode Island-based Twin River Worldwide Holdings for $25million.

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