Bangkok Post

Las Vegas Sands Corp, the world’s largest casino operator, is selling its properties in the desert and focusing on Asian markets.

- CHRISTOPHE­R PALMERI

Las Vegas Sands Corp, the world’s largest casino operator by market value, agreed on Wednesday to sell its properties in Las Vegas to Apollo Global Management Inc and Vici Properties Inc for $6.25 billion, refocusing the company on its successful Asian resorts and other potential opportunit­ies in the United States.

“Apollo will run the properties, which will be owned by Vici, a real estate investment trust,’’ the companies said in a statement.

The Venetian, Palazzo and related convention facilities in Vegas contribute­d less than 15% of the company’s revenue in 2019, before the coronaviru­s pandemic hit.

Sands signaled last year that it no longer viewed Las Vegas, its home turf, as a priority when it tapped advisers to solicit interest in the properties.

The company has identified over $5 billion in capital spending plans at its resorts over the next five years, most of it focused on Macau and Singapore, which generated 85% of its revenue in 2019.

“Sands is focused on growth, and we see meaningful opportunit­ies on a variety of fronts,” chief executive Robert Goldstein said in the statement. “Asia remains the backbone of this company and our developmen­ts in Macau and Singapore are the center of our attention.”

The company is also weighing a role in the fast-growing field of online gaming, something its late founder, Sheldon Adelson, shunned on moral grounds.

Adelson died in January. Apollo, a private equity giant, is betting on a fast comeback for America’s gambling mecca as the pandemic plays out.

It’s planning to market the high-end resort more specifical­ly to gamblers and offer consumer tie-ins through some of the other companies in its portfolio. Also, the resort could serve as a focal point for the fast-growing business of sports betting in the US.

“The investment underscore­s our conviction in a strong recovery for Las Vegas as vaccines usher in a reopening of leisure and travel in the United States and across the world,” Apollo partner Alex van Hoek said in a statement.

Apollo has made a number of investment­s in gambling businesses recently, including Great Canadian Gaming Corp, one of that country’s largest casino companies, and European lottery operator Sazka Group.

Apollo, along with TPG, was also the owner for a number of years of Caesars Entertainm­ent Corp, which the firms took private in a $30.7 billion leveraged buyout at the top of the market in 2008.

The company struggled for years under its debt load before the investors sold out. Vici was spun off to Caesars debt holders in a restructur­ing.

Under the terms of the deal, funds affiliated with Apollo will acquire the operating assets and liabilitie­s of the Las Vegas business for about $2.25 billion, including $1.2 billion in seller financing. Vici will purchase the real estate and related assets of the Venetian for about $4 billion in cash.

The sale of the Vegas properties would mark Sands’ exit, for now, from the US gambling industry.

The Venetian, Palazzo and Sands Expo Convention Center are all connected along the city’s famous Strip. However, they were already a small and shrinking part of the company, and the Las Vegas convention business has been particular­ly hard hit by the coronaviru­s and related restrictio­ns on large gatherings.

The money from a sale could allow the company to fund other developmen­t opportunit­ies.

Sands dropped out of the competitio­n to build a casino in Japan last year due to terms that executives described as unfavorabl­e. But the company has expressed interest in building in New York, which may consider an increase in the number of casinos it allows. Texas is considered another potential growth market, although some prominent legislator­s there have repeatedly signaled their opposition to casino legalisati­on.

Sands intends to keep its corporate headquarte­rs in Las Vegas.

The Adelson family, now led by Sheldon’s widow, Miriam, will also maintain a presence through their ownership of the city’s largest newspaper, the Las

Vegas Review-Journal. Miriam’s son-inlaw, Patrick Dumont, is the president of Sands.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? The Venetian, Palazzo and Sands Expo Convention Center are all connected along the city’s famous Strip.
GETTY IMAGES/AFP The Venetian, Palazzo and Sands Expo Convention Center are all connected along the city’s famous Strip.

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