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Station Casinos' board rejects Boyd's $950 million offer

Station Casinos' board of directors on Tuesday officially rejected Boyd Gaming Corp.'s (BYD) unsolicited $950 million offer for a majority of Station's assets.

It is "in the best interest of the company and its stakeholders to proceed with the company's restructuring plan," Station said in a letter sent to its main rival in the locals gaming industry.


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  • Rob Stillwell, Boyd's vice president of corporate communications, said the company will respond to Station's rejection letter today.

    However, he said Tuesday afternoon that "we remain interested in acquiring some or all of the assets of Station Casinos."

    Bill Lerner, a gaming analyst with Deutsche Bank, said Station's rejection of the buyout offer makes sense.

    "The reasoning on why they rejected this current offer makes sense to me," Lerner said. "They feel there is notable risk that the deal might not close, and if that happens, they've disrupted the prepackaged proposal, and that changes everything."

    On Feb. 2, Station announced a proposed "prepackaged" bankruptcy plan that would give bondholders who hold $2.3 billion of Station's debt between 10 cents and 50 cents on the dollar in new notes and cash.

    Under Station's plan, the company would enter into a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy and the gaming company's owners — the Fertitta family and real estate investment firm Colony Capital — would put $244 million in cash into the company.

    An earlier debt exchange was rejected by bondholders in November. That proposal did not include any kind of cash infusion by the company's owners.

    Station's rejection came on the same day that the company announced it had reached agreements with most of its debt holders to extend a deadline to vote on the company's bankruptcy proposal.

    The agreements "will provide the company with additional time to continue discussions regarding terms of its plan of reorganization," Station Casinos said in a statement.

    The agreement gives Station and its debt holders until April 10 to vote on the proposed debt swap and restructuring.

    The agreement was signed hours prior to Monday's midnight deadline for the bondholders to vote on the restructuring plan.

    Mike Sullivan, a finance professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said Boyd Gaming's offer made Station's deal less attractive for bondholders.

    "Station is asking bondholders for another month to figure things out," Sullivan said. "I suspect (Station Casinos) will sweeten the pot a little bit, if they can."

    Lerner suggested that Station might have rejected the buyout offer because it could be "hypersensitive" to sharing company finances and other confidential information with its biggest competitor in today's ecnonomic environment.

    Boyd Gaming, however, could come back with another offer that addresses some of Station's concerns, Lerner said.

    He said Station's board will judge any offers based on what's best for the company, not what's best for the Fertitta family, which founded the company in 1976 and owns 25 percent of the company but controls three of the board's five seats,

    The letter to Boyd Gaming, signed by Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Frank Fertitta III, states Station will not take "any steps towards pursuing, a sale of all or any portion of the company's assets."

    Station Casinos owns 13 casino properties — including Red Rock Resort, Sunset Station, Palace Station and Boulder Station — in Clark County.

    The company is also partner in five 50-50 joint ventures with Greenspun Corp., including Green Valley Ranch and the newly opened Aliante Station in North Las Vegas.

    Boyd offered to buy Santa Fe Station, Texas Station, the 94-acre Wild Wild West site on Tropicana Avenue west of Interstate 15, two Fiesta properties, the Greenspun joint ventures and several nonhotel casinos.

    The deal would leave Station Casinos with four hotel-casinos carrying $2.5 billion of debt.

    Station Casinos cited the "highly conditional nature" of Boyd Gaming's offer, as well as the risks "in sharing sensitive and confidential information with a significant competitor" and potential harm to "stakeholders" as reasons for rejecting the offer.

    "The board also considered the potential harm that would result to the company's stakeholders if such a proposal was delayed or could not be completed," the letter read.

    The letter, addressed to Boyd Gaming Executive Chairman Bill Boyd and CEO and President Keith Smith, expressed concern about "Boyd's potential inability to perform due to its own financial position."

    Boyd Gaming closed trading Tuesday at $3.69 on the New York Stock Exchange, down 9 cents, or 2.38 percent. Shares of Boyd were trading at $26.25 a year ago before falling to $2.81 during last November's stock market crash.

    Boyd Gaming posted a net loss of $223 million last year, driven by 12.1 percent decrease in revenues to $1.8 billion from $2 billion in 2007.

    Boyd Gaming currently has a $2.6 billion debt load, $2.1 billion of which doesn't mature until 2012.

    Boyd Gaming operates nine casinos in Las Vegas and Henderson including Sam's Town on Boulder Highway, the Suncoast in Summerlin and The Orleans on Tropicana Avenue.

    The company also owns six properties in Louisiana, Mississippi, Illinois and Indiana, and has a 50 percent stake in the Borgata in Atlantic City.

    The terms of Station's new forebearance agreement, which expires April 15, reveal the company skipped its third debt payment in a month.

    The agreement, however, prevents bondholders from declaring default on the missed payments — a $24 million debt payment due March 1 with a 30-day grace period to March 31, along with $14.6 million and $15.5 million payments skipped in February — prior to April 15 when the forbearance agreement expires.

     

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

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    David wrote on March 10, 2009 10:00 AM: Bad move stations-look for the hostile takeover over the entire thing now-Boyd hates the Fertitas and now they will go for the jugular-let the blood bath begin!

    Boyd ain't the only ones who hate the Fertittas. Most would approve of Boyds hostile takeover of Stations. Arrogance and greed are dead in this economy and the Fertittas are poster childs of both


    Report abuse

    da truth wrote on March 03, 2009 08:02 PM: "we remain interested in acquiring some or all of the assets of Station Casinos."

    Key word-"ALL"

    Bad move stations-look for the hostile takeover over the entire thing now-Boyd hates the Fertitas and now they will go for the jugular-let the blood bath begin!


    Report abuse

    Free Nevada wrote on March 03, 2009 07:25 PM: Ken, not exactly like GM as the locals casinos/establishment has hopes the whole 'flushy thingy' will get fixed and they can finally refill the bowl with some fresh water, I mean tourists, I mean home owners (same thing). The ones who are trapped the valley now are beginning to get a bit ripe!

    /ducks


    Report abuse

    Fair and Balanced Fred wrote on March 03, 2009 07:22 PM: Lighten the Station's load. Get rid of political liability, Station Casino's Chief of Security, former Sheriff Bill "Bring It On" Young.

    Let's face it: "Bring It On Bill" Young is dead wood requiring immediate and consummate lopping and delivery to the wood chipper. Yesterday was the best time to do so. Today is the second best time.

    "Bring It On's" juice is dead. Just wait until Mazzeo's lawyer makes a fool of him on the stand (actually just exposing him for what he is at core, [as well as superficially], with the emphasis on superficial).

    I CAN'T WAIT to see bill on the stand! We'll be videotaping, editing, and posting on YouTube!

    "Bring It On" Bill Young is a disgrace to our community and should do Southern Nevada a favor by retiring to Baker or Barstow (if they will actually have and can stomach "Bring It On" Bill Young, our former Sheriff and new Chief of Security for bankrupt Stations).


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    casinocon wrote on March 03, 2009 05:59 PM: Stations MUST LIQUIDATE!!! Bondholders should demand it. The Fertittas are arrogant, stupid s.o.b.s! Granted, the Boyd offer was too low a price for so many casinos, but Stations MUST sell off assets. They can not have their cake and eat it too. Every operator with any liquidity should flood Stations mailbox with offers. Michael Gaughan are you listening? The Palace Station could be upgraded to a decent property, not the hell hole it is now. The Fertittas never had the class to upgrade their first property. The location is good, the sports book is huge, someone needs to buy the dump for around 200 million and sink another 100 million into it.


    Report abuse

    pacman720 wrote on March 03, 2009 03:26 PM: what it really says is...we need more time to try and scr*w the bondholders..if that doesnt work we'll get back to you


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    2pac wrote on March 03, 2009 03:24 PM: Boyd would have ran those nice Casinos into the ground anyway. Look at Sam's Town.


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    Mrstacy wrote on March 03, 2009 03:14 PM: The board will be out of a job if they approve the buyout. A conflict of interest that affects how they vote.

    Perhaps they think they can get more now that the word is out that an offer has been made.


    Report abuse

    pacman720 wrote on March 03, 2009 02:54 PM: If you read between the lines ..it really says...Thanks but no thanks...we're gonna need some more time to screw the bondholders...if that doesnt work out then we can talk.


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    Ken wrote on March 03, 2009 02:40 PM: Stations is buying time and much like GM, has no idea how it is going to get itself out of this hole. Expect more of a stink to be raised and pressure to mount on Stations the next time they miss a payment or fail to report. When that happens and Boyd drops their offer by about $50M, we may have a deal.


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