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INSIDE GAMING: Pinnacle, Penn say there's no attraction

A gaming analyst believes it makes sense for financially flush Penn National Gaming to acquire rival regional casino operator Pinnacle Entertainment, a company in transition and being run by members of its board of directors following its chief executive's resignation a month ago.

One problem: Penn and Pinnacle officials shot down the idea.


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"We're focused on moving the company forward," Pinnacle interim Chairman Richard Goeglein said. "We are not interested in merging, selling or doing anything of that nature."

Penn National Chairman Peter Carlino said in an interview last month with the Review-Journal he had zero interest in buying Pinnacle. At the time, Penn was making a lowball bid to acquire the bankrupt Fontainebleau, an offer that corporate raider Carl Icahn has since topped.

Last week, Union Gaming Group principal Bill Lerner, in a research note to the firm's clients, suggested that it made tactical sense for Penn National to acquire Pinnacle to gain control of strategic assets in Indiana, Louisiana, Missouri and a casino site in Atlantic City.

Lerner made a case for Penn spending $15 a share for Pinnacle, a 42 percent premium over the company's current stock price.

"There are a handful of strategically sensible reasons to justify an acquisition of Pinnacle by Penn in our view, while a deal would be relevant to properties representing roughly 60 percent of Penn's cash flow," Lerner said.

Penn National has a balance sheet with about $1.6 billion in liquidity, which the company wants to use to buy a Strip casino. Acquiring Pinnacle doesn't seem to mesh with the corporate focus.

A source said Penn executives believe Texas will eventually legalize casinos, removing an important customer base for Pinnacle's flagship casino in Lake Charles, La., about four hours east of Houston.

Goeglein, a veteran gaming executive who joined Pinnacle's board in 2003, said the company has a bright future, especially in Louisiana.

Pinnacle is moving ahead with a second casino in Lake Charles and a project in Baton Rouge. A second company casino in St. Louis will open next spring.

The board's primary attention is on finding a replacement for Dan Lee, who resigned Nov. 7. Goeglein said there is a rich applicant pool, including people familiar with the business model.

Former Hilton Gaming President and board member John Giovenco is interim CEO and is not interested in assuming the role permanently.

"Our senior management team is still in place, and they have worked together for several years," Goeglein said. "It's business as usual, and we're moving forward.

Howard Stutz's Inside Gaming column appears Sundays. E-mail him at hstutz@reviewjournal.com or call 702-477-3871. He blogs at lvrj.com/blogs/stutz.

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Michael Prokop wrote on December 09, 2009 07:37 AM: Don't be so sure about Texas getting gambling. Their best chance was after Hurricane Ike (tax revenue could quicken the revival of battered Galveston), but talks about gambling barely surfaced. If Texas gets gambling, it will be many many years off. And Lake Charles is 2-2.5 hours from Houston (not the 4 hours stated inaccurately in the article).


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American Gaming Guru wrote on December 07, 2009 08:45 AM: Bill Lerner makes a good point. Going after PNK might be a better play for the company rather than dealing with the FB in Vegas.


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Free Nevada wrote on December 06, 2009 09:49 PM: It is natural for the troubled casino operators to seek M&A/consolidation, but Nevada can't allow existing operators to merge --only buyouts by external parties not already involved/infected.

These are not normal times. Things are going to get worse, much worse, in the long term revenue forecast and the last thing that Nevada should do is put more of its eggs in any one basket.