Take that, Boyd Gaming, ya varmints!
To paraphrase vile Remington Products CEO Victor Kiam (1926-2001), the Fertitta Brothers liked Station Casinos so much they stole the company. Not only did three Fertitta siblings and an in-law cash out during the LBO to the tune of $495 million, they’ve been able to blow off literally billions of debt, gotten some of their scorched creditors to pony up even more cash, repurchased a gaggle of Station assets at a bargain price and continue to lead gullible Colony Capital CEO Tom Barrack around by the nose (assuming they can pry him away from the collected works of Stephenie Meyer).
Today’s Fertitta victory in bankruptcy court was a predestined conclusion, not least because Station had Judge Gregg Zive eating out of the palm of its hand from the start. Once Boyd Gaming was out of the running, that left a half-dozen rival bidders, all of whom reportedly wanted to cherry-pick from the 11 casinos, tribal management contracts and sundry real estate that were on the auction block. Considering that no “trophy assets” were up for grabs, one can’t blame the Unsuccessful Six for not wanting the dog’s breakfast that remained, mostly little grind joints.
It’s still conceivable that Penn National Gaming might relieve Station and its unhappy Greenspun partners of Green Valley Ranch and Aliante Station, but even that’s a long shot and Penn is a hard-to-please buyer. No, it looks like Station insiders — having played the system like a Stradivarius — are sitting pretty for the foreseeable future. As for the protestations by new principal owner Deutsche Bank that Station and sock-puppet bidder Fertitta Gaming were discrete entities, today’s disclosure that Marc Falcone is CFO of both speaks for itself.
The question has been raised whether the Fertittas planned it this way. Nonsense. That would require a degree of clairvoyance which is belied by their series of lead-with-your-chin business decisions (including sinking $662 million into small, remote Aliante Station). It may have occurred to somebody during the LBO that, should the economy go south, Station could shuck some debt here, write off some acquisitions there and take the Chapter 11 escape hatch. However, this is a company that tends to believe its own publicity, so what’s likeliest is that — once they landed in hot financial water — the Fertittas were canny enough to craft an exit strategy that left them with all the goodies, an escape plan so brilliant that creditors and rivals were forever at least one stumbling step behind.
The bad guys won. Time to turn the page and move on.

“The bad guys won”, with the help of an ‘activist judge’.
At long last this debacle is over. Between 1994 (when Boulder Station opened) and up through the opening of Red Rock Resort (in 2006) Station Casinos had one hell of a run and made millions and millions of dollars in profit. During these boom years Station Casinos opened many local casinos and bought out a lot of the competition in the locals market. Then the wheels came off the “gravy” train, the economy fell apart and bankruptcy came calling.
I can’t believe they pulled it off. If it didn’t sicken me so, I’d almost have to give them credit. This whole mess should be a case study in every business school in the land.
Bob B –
“This whole mess should be a case study in every business school in the land.”
I hope you meant that it should be taught in “Business Ethics 101”, and not as a “how-to” lesson, right?
Pretty disgusting, but then again, we have seen it before. Trump 101. Do not bash the Fertittas, its the law. They played and won! I wish Boyd had, but then again, they appear to be over it and looking at other interesting assets.
Well, it’s over for now, but I don’t think this is “the rest of the story’. The Fertittas’ mismanagement drove the company(s) into bankruptcy, and they might do it again – and the next judge might not be so sympathetic.
Business Ethics, that’s a good one. Do they still offer Business Ethics anywhere?