Buying Wynn could be Genting jackpot opportunity Gadfly


SYDNEY: Genting Bhd.

SYDNEY: Genting Bhd chairman Tan Sri Lim Kok Thay has never quite gotten over losing out on a Macau casino licence.

The Malaysian gambling and resorts group failed to win a permit when the territory opened its casino market in 2002, and an attempt to set up a venture with gaming mogul Stanley Ho went
nowhere. 

The company would love to operate in Macau "but the door's closed," Lim told Bloomberg News in a 2013 interview.

"When it next opens, we would be the first one knocking on that door and try our luck."

For the first time in years, the door is open a crack.

After stepping down from the company he founded following allegations of sexual harassment, Las Vegas tycoon Steve Wynn is selling some or all of his 12 percent stake in Wynn Resorts Ltd., which has its hands on one of Macau's six casino licenses via its Hong Kong-listed unit. 

As Gadfly's Tara Lachapelle argued Wednesday, that move -- and Wynn Resorts' current valuation discount -- ought to put the company in play as a takeover target.

There's a dearth of plausible buyers. The rise of Macau has been so dramatic that all casino companies of comparable size already have a license, and local authorities are likely to frown on a merger between two existing holders.

Genting -- and particularly its Genting Singapore Plc, which operates that city's Resorts World Sentosa casino -- is an exception. 

While Genting Singapore's market cap of S$13.4 billion ($10.2 billion) falls well short of Wynn's $18 billion, it has S$2.6 billion in net cash and racked up free cash flows of S$1.15 billion during 2017 -- a figure exceeded only by Wynn Resorts itself and Sheldon Adelson's Las Vegas Sands Corp. and Sands China Ltd.

What would such a deal look like? If Genting Singapore were to offer Wynn Resorts a 20 percent premium to its closing price Tuesday, paid for one-third with cash and two-thirds with its own stock, it would be giving target shareholders 8.5 percent more than the stock's highest price to date. 

If it could squeeze out just $110 million of annual synergies (equivalent to about 13 percent of last year's combined selling, general and administrative costs for the two companies) the deal would be
accretive in the first year, according to Bloomberg's merger calculator.

The enlarged company would have substantial advantages.

Wynn, which treated its founder's name and presence as a major asset until he became a liability, would gain the patronage of another global dealmaker with assets in the U.K. and New York
alongside its core businesses in Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines and planned expansions on the Las Vegas Strip, in Miami and Japan.

Genting would be able to add Wynn's high-end glitz and substantial cash flows to its own more mass-market charms in the competitive bidding for a Japanese integrated resort license, too. 

Having properties on multiple continents is important for casino companies, who like to be able to offer their most lucrative high-rollers new destinations. 

To be sure, the businesses remain quite different. Genting targets a family audience in contrast to the gilded crowd favored by Wynn. Even in Singapore, where it takes as much of half its winnings from the same mostly Chinese, high-rolling VIP gamblers who throng Macau, licensing rules mean the junket operators who financially underpin the business in both cities are different.

There are also structural issues. Singaporean shares aren't likely to be a particularly attractive acquisition currency for U.S. investors who'd end up with about two-fifths of the equity in the combined group. 

A dual listing might ease that concern, and the Singapore exchange (always keen to draw high-profile names) would probably bend over backwards to help.

The bigger issue relates to control. Lim has traditionally kept an iron grip on his empire by giving Genting Bhd. at least 50 percent of every listed unit, but he'd be left with as little as 20 percent of a combined Genting Singapore-Wynn Resorts.

Enlisting satrapies such as Genting Malaysia Bhd. might help, but would make a complex deal even more rickety.

Still, such a transformative undertaking might be worth the sweat and risk. Genting at present is a second-division player in the global casino industry, but a combined business could duke it out with MGM Resorts International and Las Vegas Sands at the top of the big league.

Relinquishing a little control might be a small price to pay. Gamblers who only bet when they have an unbeatable hand rarely end up taking the jackpot. - Bloomberg

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

 

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