Yesterday’s Chapter 11 proposal by Station Casinos was paradoxically both inevitable and premature. From the day Station drew on its revolving line of credit to fund operational expenses, the handwriting was on the wall. However, Station chose to precipitate a crisis by opting not to make an interest payment … even with $350 million in the bank.

Already one is hearing grumbles that Station ownership is trying to bust the balls of its bondholders, who balked at the last refinancing plan, to put it kindly. In return for an accelerated redemption date, senior debtors are being asked to take 50 cents on the dollar (mostly in the form of more paper), while junior debtors will have to settle for 10 cents on the buck — a considerable premium to the current value, one must in fairness note. Or they could call Station’s bluff and send the whole kit ‘n kaboodle into bankruptcy court.
The Fertitta clan, Colony Capital (co-owners of Station) and the secured lenders have all signed off on this … of course. They’re the ones with the least to lose, should it go through. Colony and the Fertittae are sweetening their previous offer with a promised $244 million cash infusion. It would be cricket if Frank III and Lorenzo Fertitta ponied up $60 million — if said contribution is proportional to ownership stake — considering that they’ve taken considerably more than that out of the company in recent years. Together with their sister and brother-in-law, the boys toted home nearly $495 million from the buyout alone.
What’s not on the table are asset sales, even though Station has more undeveloped real estate in the Vegas Valley — plus the Reno area — than you can shake a stickman at. (Not to mention that expansion is currently pointless in a market that has lost its elasticity for the time being and is, in fact, constricting). Evidently call-center employees and 401(k) contributions are expendable but pipe dreams like Viva are sacrosanct.

Investment service Moody’s estimates that as many as 17 casino companies are at risk of default right now. (Scary!) Should Harrah’s Entertainment fall, the enormity of ensuing “SPLASH!” will drown out the Station fiasco — but it shouldn’t. In effect, if not in intention, private equity buyouts of casino companies have become a sham whereby management gets its company back for pennies while leaving bondholders holding the bag, too. That’s disgraceful.
Speaking of Moody’s, the Las Vegas Review Journal‘s “Inside Business” blog has an amusing Wall Street-into-English translation of a Moody’s investor note on Landry’s (owner of the Golden Nuggets) that’s a dense thicket of cover-your-ass verbiage. I was going to say Moody’s “waffled all over the place,” but I don’t care to insult waffles.
As for Landry’s CEO Tilman Fertitta, he has more reason than most to delve into today’s coverage of the calamity at Station. After all, the Fertitta brothers helped Tim Poster and Tom Breitling “play” him during his bid for the Nuggets. So, no love lost there. In fact, I’m sure that Tilman is sitting down for an extra-large schadenfreude supper tonight.
