THIS IS AN ARCHIVE OF LAKE TAHOE NEWS, WHICH WAS OPERATIONAL FROM 2009-2018. IT IS FREELY AVAILABLE FOR RESEARCH. THE WEBSITE IS NO LONGER UPDATED WITH NEW ARTICLES.

As debt mounts, Caesars in talks with lenders


image_pdfimage_print

By Kimberly Pierceall, AP

Caesars Entertainment said Friday it is prepared to start formal discussions with some of its bank lenders as it works to reduce its debt and stave off what some see as near certain bankruptcy.

In a filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission, the casino company announced that it has reached out to some of its creditors — namely bank lenders — to find ways to ease pressure on its $24.2 billion debt.

Caesars is the parent company of Harrah’s Lake Tahoe and Harveys in Stateline.

That came a day after the company promised its creditors who are first in line a claim on cash held by its debt-strapped subsidiary Caesars Entertainment Operating Co. in case it defaulted. It’s been in formal talks with that group of creditors, too, for about a month.

In recent years the company has spun off multiple divisions in an attempt to shape up its finances, including Caesars Entertainment Resort Properties and Caesars Growth Properties, dividing its casinos, properties and businesses among the subsidiaries. The operating company has the largest debt load.

Earlier this year, the company sold the Claridge hotel tower of its Bally’s Atlantic City property and sold the Atlantic City Country Club to a private buyer. It also closed the Harrah’s Tunica casino in Mississippi in June and shut down the Showboat Atlantic City casino in September.

For financial analysts watching the debt-heavy operations division that includes Caesars Palace on the Las Vegas Strip, the company’s trademarks and two of its remaining Atlantic City properties as well as other regional casinos, it’s not a matter of if but when the casino company will file for bankruptcy.

Caesars spokesman Gary Thompson said he couldn’t comment, citing the company’s SEC-mandated quiet period before its third quarter financial results are released Nov. 10. But CEO Gary Loveman has told the Las Vegas Review Journal before that the company has no plans for bankruptcy.

Analysts said Caesars’ actions could be an attempt to reorganize its financials outside of a federal courtroom or, if that doesn’t work, get priority creditors on its side before it inevitably files for bankruptcy.

Alex Bumazhny, a financial analyst with Fitch Ratings, said it’s going to be difficult for the company to reorganize its finances out of court or arrange a pre-packaged bankruptcy wrapped in a bow that it can take to a judge.

The tricky part, Bumazhny said, is the creditors who are second-in-line.

He said the company owes more than the company is worth to those who are first-in-line to be paid back. That leaves little for those second in line.

Those in the latter position have declared Caesars already in default of its agreements. The company dismissed the contentions in recent securities filings.

“It’s just hard to see everybody agreeing to a deal without a pretty long bankruptcy proceeding,” Bumazhny said.

Chris Snow with CreditSights pointed to $230 million in interest owed to some of the second-in-line holders of debt in December. He said if Caesars doesn’t want to pay up, it likely behooves the company to get the priority creditors on its side now rather than later while it still has attractive cash on hand.

Both analysts said it would be difficult to handicap when the company might file bankruptcy, but Bumazhny said it could be within the year. Snow said it could be imminent or into the middle of next year after the company passes the threshold of time for some transactions that the court would otherwise be able to look back on during its bankruptcy consideration.

The company has 52 casinos in the United States and abroad with most bearing the Caesars, Harrah’s and Horseshoe brand. About 68,000 people worked for the company at the end of 2013.

image_pdfimage_print

About author

This article was written by admin

Comments

Comments (5)
  1. Slapshot says - Posted: October 19, 2014

    I would expect Harvey’s to be sold.

  2. Parker says - Posted: October 19, 2014

    Worth noting that they didn’t shift either Harrah’s or Harveys to their newly created Caesars Growth Partners entity. An entity set up to protect some of Caesars’ assets when the bankruptcy comes.

    We’ll see if the bankruptcy courts let them get away with that shell game? But again of note, they’re not even trying to protect their Tahoe casinos.

  3. Steven says - Posted: October 19, 2014

    Why protect the Tahoe casinos ? They are now constant losers and a drain on the overall company.

  4. BitterClinger says - Posted: October 19, 2014

    This is the outcome of placing a professor of academia in charge of an organization. No offense to Gary Loveman, but he is hardly suited to run a business organization.

    If this sounds familiar, take one look at the White House – our long national nightmare is a direct result of the imbecile occupying 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. He too is one of the smartest guys in the room according to academic circles.

  5. reloman says - Posted: October 19, 2014

    the drain on the company was the overleveraged buyout used to bring the company private, they overpaid esp when the economy took a drop and at that time indian casinos were coming out of the woodwork, they should have tried to go to Macao like other companies did