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Harrah's buying Planet Hollywood debt

Harrah’s Entertainment is buying up the Planet Hollywood Resort’s debt in what an analyst said could be a bid to take over the financially troubled Strip property.

Sources confirmed this weekend that Harrah’s has purchased a portion of the $860 million debt load that is leveraged against the property.


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  • Officials from Harrah’s and Planet Hollywood Resort declined to comment Monday.

    Brian Gordon, a principal at Applied Analysis, however, suggested Harrah’s could be following the recent trend of acquiring casino properties through debt purchases rather than through an outright buyout.

    “With covenant and debt defaults looming around for some of these properties, it’s a potential way to gain eventual ownership of a property,” Gordon said.

    The practice has been used successfully in the past locally, most recently when the Tropicana on the Strip was acquired in bankruptcy court.

    In that case, the property’s new owners bought nearly $440 million in debt at a steep discount.

    At the same time, billionaire Carl Ichan led a group of investors who used a similar strategy to acquire controlling interest in Tropicana Entertainment, which owns gaming companies in Atlantic City, Laughlin, Lake Tahoe and in the Midwest.

    Mike Sullivan, a finance professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said debt acquisitions usually happen when industries — such as the automobile industry or the airline industry — become distressed.

    He said the troubled gaming industry, which has seen its visitor numbers and revenue dollars drop because of the recession, is perfect for this type of back-door takeovers because casinos are still cash machines if their debts can be erased, Sullivan said.

    “(Harrah’s) is buying a position on the cheap right now but with long-term ideas,” Sullivan said. “They’ve got their foot in the door right now. ... They are picking up a position of influence so they must be interested in acquiring assets.”

    Sullivan, however, called Harrah’s purchases of Planet Hollywood’s debt interesting, considering the gaming giant appears to be heavily leveraged itself.

    Harrah’s, which was taken private by private equity firms Apollo Management and TPG Capital before the economy collapsed, reported a $19.3 billion debt load for the second quarter ended June 30.

    The sources did not know if money being used for the purchases is coming from Harrah’s or from one of the private equity funds.

    The debt purchases appear tied to Planet Hollywood’s defaulting on its debt, though.

    Planet Hollywood officials on Friday received a letter from their lenders saying the company was in default because of “(Planet Hollywood’s) failure to pay certain amounts of the debt that were due Sept. 9.”

    The Strip property, on the northeast corner of Las Vegas Boulevard and Harmon Avenue, warned in filings in August that it could default on the debt because of the current economic environment.

    “Absent a capital contribution” from the property’s owners or “an equity investment by third parties or a restructuring” of the debt, the owners “do not believe that cash generated from operations, cash held in reserve by the lenders under the loan agreement ... will be adequate to meet the anticipated working capital and debt service obligations” of Planet Hollywood Resort, the Aug. 14 Securities and Exchange Commission filing said.

    Planet Hollywood Resort is owned by a partnership between restaurateur Robert Earl and private equity firm Bay Harbour Management. Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide holds a minority share in the property and manages the hotel’s and food and beverage operations.

    Earl and Bay Harbour acquired the old Aladdin out of bankruptcy from Aladdin Gaming on Sept. 1, 2004, for $510 million. The property’s long-term debt load, however, swelled to $820 million in 2006 when the partnership borrowed money to remodel the property.

    If Harrah’s acquires the property, it would give the gaming giant 10 casino properties on and near the Strip and all 126 acres on the east side of the Strip between Flamingo Road and Harmon.

     

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

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    Report abuse

    crazyaces wrote on September 17, 2009 06:38 PM: Great idea Paula. Would be awesome to put even more people out of work in Las Vegas. Why didn't anyone else think of that?


    Report abuse

    paula wrote on September 16, 2009 07:04 AM: let it go under--just like the rest of them


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    Free Nevada of Cronyism wrote on September 14, 2009 08:14 PM: Harrah's is more of a supermarket type deal --you can't buy class and they don't have enough to operate a place like Planet Hollywood --it will wind up going like Ceasars and that's bad for Las Vegas.

    $20B in debt, they have a finished tower on their back lot with room for the combined population of all the towns between Vegas and Reno and they pull this...

    Don't look to the gaming authority to do much about it. That inept group can, at best, throw million dollar fines around which the casinos can easily recoup later during negotiations over expansion plans.


    Report abuse

    jeff wrote on September 14, 2009 06:29 PM: LOL, Harrahs has asked employees to take pay cuts and then they go and do this???? Why don't they use their money to pay off their own debts or take care of their employees? There is already too much consolidation in Las Vegas, this is a disaster for the city and the Gaming Commission should put a stop to it.


    Report abuse

    Ken wrote on September 14, 2009 04:13 PM: Great, now Holly Madison will be replaced by a puppet.


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    the man wrote on September 14, 2009 03:39 PM: One bankrupt company (Planet Hollywood with 2 BK's) bought Aladdin out of BK.

    Now another BK company (Harrah's) is buying the other BK company debt.

    So bad debt is allowed to buy another bad debt in order to keep in debt...

    Shows you what donating to the Obama cause lets you get away with...


    Report abuse

    Harry wrote on September 14, 2009 01:47 PM: How can they do this when THEY are loosing money themselves and owe as much to people that THEY haven't even paid on? I guess when tyou are that big, you can do that - me on the other hand have $80k in debt that I would LOVE for the bank to sell to someone else, so I can walk away...


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    kenodave wrote on September 14, 2009 01:44 PM: It just gives locals another reason NOT to visit the Strip. You've seen one Harrahs property, you have seen them all.


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    Shelley wrote on September 14, 2009 01:35 PM: Wow, I can't fathom this! You need to read Howard Stutz's 'Inside Gaming' column in Sundays RJ, with all of these new rooms coming online soon, and the drastically reducted (down 18% in 2 years)airline seats arriving everyday, it's a physical impossibility to fill these rooms. The airlines will not increase flights anytime soon. The drive in crowd from SoCal is our ONLY hope. And even this is a gamble with oil prices so unstable! All it takes is $3.00 a gallon or higher prices (when it starts to affect household budgets) (which it currently is) to shut down that I-15 corridor. This boomtown will REMAIN BUST for years to come. This is NOT the time to be working in the tourism industry in this town. Look for continued HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT AND REDUCED EMPLOYMENT!! This goldmine of a town, where cocktail servers and valet attendants could make 100k a year is OVER!! It'll be at least 5 years maybe 10 before things even get back to where they were, let alone better than what they were. Get ready for a long, hard, bitter ride friends. For you optimists out there, yeah, it'll get better here one day, but are you prepared to wait it out for several years? If you work in construction and still live here, why? If you're considering moving here: DON'T! The grass may seem like it's greener here, but be prepared for this ONCE boomtown to take YEARS TO RECOVER!! The worst case scenario has come to fruition and hopefully the greedy casion owners learn from this! God help us if this country has another al quaida hit!


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    Russ Cunningham wrote on September 14, 2009 01:27 PM: Oh goodie. Harrahs can ruin another property.


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