Las Vegas Review-Journal

Maddox, Byrne OK’D for Wynn board

Appointmen­ts of CEO, ex-wall Street banker hint at stretch of stability

- By Todd Prince Las Vegas Review-journal

Wynn Resorts Ltd. has named CEO Matt Maddox and former Wall Street banker Richard Byrne to the board a day after the company announced it reached a truce with its largest shareholde­r, Elaine Wynn.

Maddox, the only Las Vegas casino CEO not on his own company’s board, said earlier this year he expected to be nominated. That potentiall­y set him up for a bitter battle with Elaine Wynn.

However, the two ended up striking a temporary deal last week.

Wynn Resorts agreed Aug. 3 to let her board nominee Phil Satre, the former CEO of Harrah’s Entertainm­ent, become chairman by the end of the year. Wynn Resorts had previously rejected Satre’s nomination as chairman.

In exchange, Elaine Wynn agreed not to engage in any attempts to toss people from the board during Satre’s two-year tenure, the company said in a statement Monday.

That opened the door for Maddox

WYNN

Richard Byrne, a banker, joins the board as Wynn Resorts seeks to bid for a license in Japan. A Japanese casino could cost up to $10 billion.

Byrne had helped many gaming companies, including Wynn Resorts, raise equity and debt financing for new projects, according to Tuesday’s SEC filing. Byrne worked as CEO of Deutsche Bank Securities and cohead of the leveraged finance group at Bank of America.

and likely ally Byrne to smoothly join the board Tuesday. Byrne was part of the Deutsche Bank team that helped Maddox raise $450 million for Wynn Resorts during the gaming company’s initial public offering in 2002.

Not all analysts are convinced stability is here to stay.

“While this announceme­nt may limit the prospects for activist pressure from Elaine, our view remains that changes to the company’s board, management team and ownership structure remain a possibilit­y as the company defines its direction in the coming quarters,” Jefferies analyst David Katz said in a note after the agreement was announced Monday.

The Wynn board will now consist of eleven members, six of whom have joined since Steve Wynn stepped down as chairman. The six new members include three women.

“We have made it our top priority to implement meaningful change at Wynn Resorts and have made demonstrab­le progress over the past six months,” Maddox said in the filing with the Securities and Exchange

Commission Tuesday announcing his and Byrne’s board nomination­s.

Nevada, Massachuse­tts and Macau gaming authoritie­s are investigat­ing the company over how it handled the sexual harassment allegation­s. Wynn Resorts could potentiall­y lose its Massachuse­tts gaming license.

The company is building a $2.5 billion casino in Boston that is expected to open in June, 2019. It has renamed the project Encore Boston Harbor, from Wynn Boston Harbor, to soothe anger in the state.

Elaine Wynn said this year that Wynn Resorts should also change at least half its board members to improve the company’s chances of a favorable outcome by regulators.

The Wynn Resorts board immediatel­y came under pressure by investors and corporate governance specialist­s following the sexual harassment allegation­s for being too beholden to Steve Wynn and failing to protect the company.

The Massachuse­tts Gaming Commission will finish its investigat­ion this summer.

Contact Todd Prince at 702-3830386 or tprince@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @toddprince­tv on Twitter.

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