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Mar 18, 2010
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INSIDE GAMING: Release of big news timed badly by Boyd

Give Boyd Gaming Corp. an A for effort but an F for timing.

The casino operator showed it was serious about acquiring Station Casinos. In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Wednesday, Boyd offered $2.45 billion in cash and assumed debt for its bankrupt rival's 18 casinos, land holdings and other assets


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  • The timing, however, was bungled.

    Boyd announced the offer on the same day MGM Mirage opened Aria, the centerpiece of its $8.5 billion CityCenter. The news stole some of the thunder from the hoopla surrounding the Strip's newest resort and MGM Mirage -- Boyd Gaming's 50-50 partner in the Borgata in Atlantic City.

    There is an unwritten rule within the gaming industry: Don't disrupt another casino operator's grand opening.

    With its $4.8 billion Echelon development shelved well into the next decade, Boyd doesn't need to worry about repercussions.

    More than 450 media credentials were issued for the Aria event; most of the national financial reporters who cover gaming got them. These reporters all but ignored the Boyd filing.

    Locally, the Boyd news pushed Aria off the front of media Web sites for a few hours until the casino opening retook center stage.

    It wouldn't have been surprising if Boyd's public relations staff had wandered over to the Aria event media center at Vdara to hand out copies of the 8K filing.

    Sources familiar with the bankruptcy proceedings said there was no pressing reason for Boyd Gaming to announce its intentions Wednesday. Station Casinos has until March to file a plan of reorganization with the court.

    Boyd had offered $950 million for a chunk of the company in February and was rejected. Boyd has been trying to insert itself in the bankruptcy proceedings by acquiring about $2 million of Station Casinos' debt.

    Insiders said Boyd wants to push the bankruptcy proceedings to a resolution quickly and the filing meant no disrespect to MGM Mirage executives.

    In fact, MGM Mirage Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jim Murren was so focused on Aria's grand opening events, he was unaware that Boyd Gaming had made another bid for Station Casinos.

    "Really?" Murren asked, when told of the move during Aria's VIP celebration.

    Murren didn't seem bothered.

    Talk continues to surface that MGM Mirage may want to vacate the New Jersey market because of gaming regulators concern surrounding Hong Kong businesswoman Pansy Ho, the company's Macau joint- venture partner.

    For Boyd to buy out MGM Mirage's share in Borgata, good relations between the companies must continue.

    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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    American Gaming Guru wrote on December 21, 2009 12:06 PM: It may have been bad timing, but it did little to steal from the CC thunder. I really hope BYD gets this deal done. It will be a home run for them!


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    Free Nevada wrote on December 20, 2009 03:46 PM: There was also big news over the past two days concerning Stanley Ho re-emerging in public for the first time after prolonged illness and in WSJ, Macau diversifying its economy away from gambling. That's got to be good for Wynn, Sands and MGM (not), but it pales in comparison to what Boyd faces with dozens of miles of once prosperous suburbs going through in just 2008-2013 what took thirty years to happen in Detroit, South Central, Oakland and even longer in the Rust Belt.

    From all this talk about Harrahs leveraging billions to buy PH debt and Boyd offering billions more for Stations, you would think they would have the wisdom to instead protect their current assets by building the 350mph Trans Rapid 09 mag-lev system out to Henderson, Boulder, Laughlin, Blythe, Indio, Temecula and finally the Irvine Spectrum. Bringing 45 minute walk-on/off access to their properties to 25 million people in Southern California is good, but pushing money around here in town is stupid.


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    gregorio wrote on December 20, 2009 06:47 AM: Boyd management is solid MGM and Station Casinos is weak.Short MGM stock and buy Boyd.If your A casino executive you should at least read the newspaper daily.