Economy

SGR) latest reprieve make it the ‘Lazarus’ casino?

Going, going … revived! Star Entertainment has survived a near-death experience and left a trail of disappointed corporate vultures who were lining up to pick up the spoils from administrators.

It may be too soon to brand Star as the “Lazarus” of the casino industry, after its 11th hour stay of execution on Friday. But what Star chief executive Steve McCann has conjured so far might yet elevate him to the status of corporate magician, even if the company’s long-term future remains unclear.

Bally’s Corporation has 19 casinos across the United States and has set its sights on Australia’s Star.Credit: Bloomberg

Star still cannot sign off on its accounts, so we are not talking about a rosy or even a risk-free future, and there is now a new twist in the tale that could forge an altogether new chapter in the saga of keeping the company afloat.

But Star’s reprieve on Friday, as it announced an agreement to sell its stake in Brisbane’s Queens Wharf property for $53 million, would be music to the ears of finance regulator AUSTRAC, which is in the throes of reaching a legal settlement that would leave the casino group to pay it about $300 million in penalties. Also overjoyed would be the NSW and Queensland state governments, who are staring down the prospect of losing the gravy train of taxes and securing the future of the 9000 or so staff that work at Star’s properties.

The rescue, announced on Friday, comprises a number of elements but only one of them (the Queens Wharf deal) appears to be legally set in stone. The first is a $250 million bridging loan from King Street Capital that looks to be well advanced and if agreed on will attract a hefty 15 per cent interest rate.

A larger, longer-term loan facility ($750 million to $940 million) is only a proposal at this stage, but a detailed one with drafts of a commitment letter, fee letter and term sheet. Star is yet to disclose the name of the lender.

While optimists would say Star now has a pathway to profitability, realists would argue its descent into extinction has not been completely averted.

This limbo would be of great frustration to asset vultures that had been waiting in the wings to pick at Star’s carcass. And on Monday, one of them finally showed its hand.

US-based casino operator Bally’s – run by New York hedge fund Standard General – came out of hiding to present a new rescue proposal – an alternative to the one that landed on Friday. It is a fair bet that Bally’s will now need to offer something far more generous than what it would have offered had it been negotiating with Star’s administrator.

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  • Source of information and images “brisbanetimes”

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