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Harrah's gets preliminary approval to acquire Planet Hollywood

Nevada's top gaming regulator Wednesday called Harrah's Entertainment's pending acquisition of Planet Hollywood Resort "beneficial for the state" because it will keep another hotel property from having to possibly file for bankruptcy.

"The existing Planet Hollywood was headed for some type of restructuring, perhaps a bankruptcy," Gaming Control Board Chairman Dennis Neilander said. "We have some 40 properties that are in our bankruptcy group right now. This will offer a smooth transition for employees that are there and operating the business."


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Neilander's comments came just before the three-member board in Carson City gave preliminary approval to the deal that will give Harrah's Entertainment its ninth Strip hotel-casino.

Harrah's paid $70 million to acquire $306 million of Planet Hollywood Resort's debt at a discount between September and December. Harrah's is exchanging the debt with the company's current owners for 100 percent ownership of the property.

Harrah's will provide an additional $30 million for working capital once the deal closes. An approximately $554 million mortgage loan will remain leveraged against Planet Hollywood Resort after the deal is completed.

The transfer of gaming operations is scheduled for noon Feb. 19, pending approval of the deal by the state Gaming Commission on Feb. 18, Harrah's Western Division President Tom Jenkin told regulators.

The property's staff of approximately 2,300 will be reduced by less than 5 percent by eliminating duplications in a few management positions and areas such as call centers, accounting and revenue management, Harrah's Regional President Marilyn Winn told the regulators.

The Planet Hollywood employees will become Harrah's employees and will be eligible to join the gaming company's 401(k) retirement program, she said. Employees will keep their current health plans.

Winn's management team, which also oversees Bally's and Paris Las Vegas, took over the 2,496-room hotel and food and beverage operations on Jan. 16. Harrah's plans to spend $8 million integrating the company's information technology systems, including Harrah's Total Rewards customer rewards system.

Jenkin told regulators that the addition of Planet Hollywood to the company's customer database will reap benefits beyond just the company.

"When we have new offerings put into the mix, we generate business not only for Harrah's Entertainment but the city of Las Vegas and the state of Nevada," Jenkin said.

Harrah's Chief Financial Officer Jonathan Halkyard told regulators that the gaming company became interested in Planet Hollywood last summer after learning the resort was in danger of defaulting on its loan payments.

"We began to (buy the debt) because we felt Planet Hollywood would be a very complementary addition to our portfolio in Las Vegas," Halkyard said.

The 35-acre property borders Harrah's Paris Las Vegas and Bally's properties. The acquisition will give Harrah's control of all 126 acres on the Strip between Flamingo Road and Harmon Avenue.

The company also owns Caesars Palace, Flamingo, Harrah's Las Vegas, Imperial Palace, Bill's and the Rio.

The licensing agreement also allows Harrah's to brand other casinos with the Planet Hollywood name internationally.

Jenkin said the property's proximity to CityCenter should benefit Planet Hollywood.

A pedestrian bridge over Las Vegas Boulevard connecting the retail center Crystals to the sidewalk in front of Planet Hollywood could be extended to draw people directly into the resort, Jenkin said.

"We think there is a very good opportunity there to capture pedestrian traffic," he said.

Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893.

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ezr2c wrote on February 09, 2010 12:56 AM: It gets worse. What happens if they all fail at once?Aren't all of these hotel/casino's union? This would devastate Nevada's families.I am beginning to see a pattern here.These people are union busters.


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Casino casualties wrote on February 04, 2010 02:52 PM: " Harrah’s seeking $740 million from credit line

By Steve Green (contact)

Friday, Feb. 13, 2009 | 5:13 p.m.

Harrah’s, hit hard like the rest of the gaming industry by the recession, last fall reported having about $24.1 billion in debt — a figure that ballooned in last year’s deal that took the company private. The current amount of debt has not been disclosed. The debt level changed after an exchange offer involving about $2.1 billion in notes late last year."

And less then a year later they're purchasing another casino. Why don't reporters report inside info anymore, versus PC garbage. Find out what the eff is going on!


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vegaslee wrote on February 04, 2010 09:30 AM: Better 115 out of work then 2300.

I don't see anyone else lining up to pay millions to save the place.


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Wayne.Kaser wrote on February 04, 2010 08:29 AM: Nice to gaming approve this and another 115 people will be out of work here in Las Vegas. And oh goodee, PH employees can join harrah's 401K plan which by the way Harrah's does not match anything the employee puts towards retirement. Sounds like a win-win for PH employees.


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outsider wrote on February 04, 2010 07:14 AM: Will Harrahs be contaminating guests at PH they way they did at their other Casinos?

Will Harrahs be shipping in ASBESTOS?

GOOGLE: Harrahs asbestos lawsuit

Look at the bright side, if their is a fire, Harrahs guests won't burn all the way through.


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BILL MIRON wrote on February 04, 2010 06:50 AM: IF THIS DEAL GOES THRO.....PLANET HOLLYWOOD WILL BE ANOTHER HARRAH'S NON PAYOUT CASINO TO NOT VISIT AND DEFINITELY NOT PLAY IN.....WHAT A POOR SITUATION NOW IN VEGAS HARRAH'S TALKED ABOUT BANKRUPCY LAST YEAR AND THIS YEAR THEY ARE BUYING PLANET HOLLYWOOD....NO WONDER THE USA HAS MONEY PROBLEMS...WILL CONTINUE TO STAY AWAY FROM THE MAIN PORTION OF THE STRIP AT LEAST TO GAMBLE....


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To PH Employees wrote on February 03, 2010 08:49 PM: I warned you PH employees that things will get miserable over there.

I cannot wait until I see the first posts that verify that fact.

Harrah's is not only the worst thing for PH but they are the worst thing for Nevada.

Someday the Nevada Gaming "Control" will understand that. Of course, by that time it will be too late.


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Spelling Flamer wrote on February 03, 2010 08:36 PM: Wow, only five hundred paragraphs in this article. Did any of you have English class when you went to journalism school?

Sheesh. It reads like my five year olds nursery school book.


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Don wrote on February 03, 2010 03:30 PM: Can anyone spell MONOPOLY ? Surely not the Nevada Gaming Control Board! Pretty soon Las Vegas will be named Las Harrah's, and oh geez thanks for adding to the unemployment rate !


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eric wrote on February 03, 2010 02:19 PM: So sad. We used to stay here everytime we came to Vegas (about 6 times a year). Guess we'll start looking for another hotel but since we're running out of options maybe we'll find some place else to vacation. The call center was the best of any hotel. So sorry for those people.


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