Quantcast
Home manage Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

Breaking News


MGM Mirage in discussions to secure additional financing for CityCenter

MGM Mirage (MGM) and Deutsche Bank are in discussions that could give the casino company additional financing it needs to complete its CityCenter project in exchange for operating or taking ownership of the troubled Cosmopolitan project, sources said.

Both parties declined to comment Monday, but several sources confirmed the talks have been under way.


Most Popular Stories
  • Three suspects arrested in shooting death of police officer
  • Three suspects arrested in shooting death of police officer
  • Station Casinos posts $455 million third-quarter loss
  • Two of three suspects in slaying of officer could face death penalty
  • Man sentenced to 15 years for federal tax crimes
  • Las Vegas police shoot at man fleeing after traffic stop
  • Las Vegas police shoot at man fleeing after traffic stop
  • Corrections officer dies in collision on U.S. 95
  • Escalator accident at Caesars Palace still under investigation
  • Las Vegas man denied pardon in killing of abusive father
  • Man pleads guilty in death of girlfriend's child
  • Visitors authority urges officials to call off mock nuclear blast




  • One source said Friday that the two parties were still far apart on an agreement.

    MGM Mirage is trying to secure the remaining financing for its $9.1 billion CityCenter project, which is a 50-50 joint venture with Dubai World.

    MGM Mirage, the managing partner in the project, has been paying its share of the project with company cash flow.

    The mammoth 76-acre project on the Strip is scheduled to open in October.

    Deutsche Bank, which acquired the Cosmopolitan for $1 billion at a foreclosure sale in August, has been in discussions with companies to operate the $3.9 billion project, which is scheduled to open the second quarter of 2010.

    According to sources who talked with the Review-Journal, Deutsche Bank would provide MGM Mirage with up to $700 million to complete the CityCenter project. In turn, MGM Mirage would either operate the Cosmopolitan, which sits on 8.5 acres bordering CityCenter, or the gaming company would take over the project in exchange for giving Deutsche Bank an equity stake in CityCenter.

    Independent debt analysis firm CreditSights wrote Feb. 4 that MGM Mirage needs another $1 billion to finish CityCenter.

    Brian Gordon, a principal in the local economic research firm Applied Analysis, said businesses and banks are having to become more creative in finding financing to keep their businesses running.

    "Does it make sense? Certainly it could," Gordon said of the reported discussions. "I don't think you could rule it out as a possibility. Liquidity is certainly an issue in today's environment. If MGM Mirage is able to access funding through Deutsche Bank while assisting Deutsche Bank with a potential problem they have, it could be a win-win."

    MGM Mirage has been struggling to complete financing for the massive Strip project as local visitation and gaming revenue numbers have tumbled.

    Beyond CityCenter financing, MGM Mirage has $1.3 billion in debt maturing this fall, and another $1.1 billion matures in 2010.

    The company had $13.3 billion in debt in the third quarter ended Sept. 30, filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission show.

    Various credit rating services, including Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's, have downgraded MGM Mirage's credit rating to "highly speculative" within the past month on fears the gaming giant will breach loan covenants in the next 12 months should visitor numbers and gaming revenues not recover.

    Dennis Farrell Jr., a bond analyst with Wachovia Capital Markets, said the opening of CityCenter will cannibalize cash flow from MGM Mirage's 10 casinos on the Strip. Additionally, the opening of Fontainebleau and the Hard Rock Hotel expansion later this year could drag much-needed customers away.

    "Same-store (cash flow) results will be challenged on the Las Vegas Strip for the next two years, in our view," Farrell wrote Friday in a note to investors.

    MGM Mirage locally owns MGM Grand, Mandalay Bay, the Luxor, Excalibur, New York-New York, Monte Carlo, Bellagio, The Mirage, Circus Circus and Treasure Island.

    The company has an agreement with former New Frontier owner Phil Ruffin to sell Treasure Island for $770 million, which will be used to pay down debt.

    Rumors have swirled that the company has fielded serious offers for other properties including The Mirage and Bellagio, but no deals have been struck.

    CityCenter partner Dubai World spent $6 billion to acquire 9.4 percent of MGM Mirage's shares and a 50 percent stake in CityCenter.

    The Persian Gulf state, however, has seen its credit rating fall after being hit hard by the global financial meltdown.

    The United Arab Emirates, which includes Dubai as one of its seven members, pledged $10 billion over the weekend in an effort to help the financially struggling state.

    Moody's said in October that Dubai might have to refinance $15 billion this year in maturing debt.

    Farrell said it is unlikely that MGM Mirage majority shareholder Kirk Kerkorian or Dubai World will be making any more equity investments into the CityCenter project.

    Kerkorian's investment firm Tracinda Corp., on Friday pledged the remainder of the 53 percent stock holding in MGM Mirage as collateral against the firm's $600 million credit facility. A default on the credit facility could transfer Kerkorian's shares to loan holder Bank of America Securities.

    MGM Mirage has seen its stock decline from a high of $100.50 per share on Oct. 10, 2007, to close Monday at $4.27 per share on the New York Stock Exchange.

    Deutsche Bank, which hired New York-based Related Cos. to finish the Cosmopolitan, needs to obtain a gaming license or find an operator to run the Cosmopolitan if it wants to continue owning the project.

    An investigation for a new licensee can take a year to 18 months for gaming regulators to complete.

    Dennis Neilander, chairman of the state Gaming Control Board, said Deutsche Bank has not filed an application for a gaming license, nor have any other parties connected to the Cosmopolitan.

    "My understanding is Deutsche has been shopping for an operator that would seek licensure and lease the gaming operation from them," Neilander said.

     

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

    Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

    Leave Your Comment 7 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

    mike wrote on February 24, 2009 03:54 PM: Things are worse than it seems. The VP sales at VDARA has confirmed that there is no bank in the country that is willing to provide financing for the units that have already been sold. They are now hoping that they can strong arm investors into paying cash for the units. The way I see it most investors would rather walk away from their hefty deposits than throwe more good money after bad. I would love to see what happens to their share price and credit rating when they are unable to close on any of the pre-sales.


    A Dollar For 75 Cents wrote on February 24, 2009 12:14 AM: Since MGM agreed to sell T.I. for $750 million I have been telling everyone I know to be worried about MGM's short term and possibly long term health. Phil Ruffin got $1.25 billion for an anitquated casino that got knocked down and turned around and purchased a renovated casino for $750 million. It should have cost Ruffin at least $1 billion. But MGM was so desperate for cash to keep plowing forward on CityCenter that they took the deal. I have no inside information, but I have heard that it costs anywhere from $2 - $3 million dollars a day for the construction on CityCenter. Dubai World is having their own implosion in their backyard and I can see the Mirage and/or Bellagio as being the next pieces auctioned off for 75 cents instead of a Dollar. The comments made about CityCenter being empty after it opens are valid too. If you bought in during the boom, how upside down are you right now? And if you have lots of cash to burn, you're going to have MGM over a barrel getting a deal on the new pricing for commercial or residential space at CityCenter. I commend MGM for moving forward and wanting to finish, but the short term prospects are very scary and you wonder if the decisions they make now will have long term ramifications for the company in the future and for Las Vegas as well. If MGM and Harrah's (Coke & Pepsi of Vegas) were to fall, would it be a good thing if the casinos were all independently owned? We shall see...


    real deal wrote on February 23, 2009 08:33 PM: Arnould,, its not 9.1 billion any more its 11.3 billion. You have to add the Phantom equity mgm was using on anticiapted closings in the condos to reduce the total amount of cost. This will reach oover 12 billion easily. Please verify the numbers and let us know. City Center can never turn a profit they have to BK it just like the M will, stations and Harrahs and LVS and maybe Boyd..... WYNN wins


    laguna wrote on February 23, 2009 08:05 PM: The poor negative commenting dolts on this forum remind me of our 'crisis,crisis,crisis' talking rookie President. When one have never accomplished anything worthwhile, thats how one thinks.


    HousingDoom wrote on February 23, 2009 05:50 PM: Can you hear the sounds of the crickets echoing thru the corridors and walkways of this joint????


    City Cemetery wrote on February 23, 2009 05:07 PM: Who is going to go to the City Cemetery? I would not buy into that morgue of a property.


    Dave wrote on February 23, 2009 03:41 PM: MGM Mirage, the managing partner in the project, has been paying for its contributions out of company cash flow.

    Translation...employees have been paying contributions out of their paychecks.