Gaming
Firm Seeks A Winning Hand From New Markets, Products
Investor's
Business Daily
August 3, 2005
BY MARILYN ALVA
Never
mind that parimutuel betting has become a much smaller
part of its overall business. In horse racing jargon,
Penn National Gaming seems to have won a trifecta.
Three
recent wins will almost certainly enrich its coffers
as a casino and horse racing company.
In
Pennsylvania, the state Supreme Court ruled in favor
of legalizing slot machines, setting the stage for
Penn to complete plans to build a new gaming facility
at Penn National Race Course near Harrisburg.
In
Illinois, the legislature agreed to roll back a previous
tax-rate hike on gaming facilities in the state. The
rollback will benefit Penn's (NasdaqNM:PENN - News)
operations in that state. Politicians there also agreed
to trim the admissions tax on gaming facilities from
$4 to $3, which should boost attendance.
And
in Maine, Penn recently completed its acquisition of
an off-track betting facility in Bangor, letting it
build the first gaming facility in the state.
There's
more to come. Penn's upcoming $2.2 billion purchase
of Argosy Gaming (NYSE:AGY - News) should double the
size of the company. The deal is expected to close
at the end of August.
" We
will be the third largest gaming company in terms of
revenue and (operating earnings)," said Kevin
DeSanctis, president and chief operating officer. With
about $2.4 billion in expected revenue, Penn would
trail only Harrah's Entertainment (NYSE:HET - News)
and MGM Mirage (NYSE:MGM - News).
" But
what might be more relevant is that we will probably
be the only regional gaming company of this size that
has no assets in Las Vegas and Atlantic City. We're
a pure-play regional gaming company," he said.
Not
counting Argosy, Penn operates 11 gaming and horse
racing facilities in nine jurisdictions.
Its largest operation, in Charleston, W.Va., accounted for nearly a third of
its $304.2 million in second-quarter revenue.
Besides
Illinois, Pennsylvania and Maine, Penn's other gaming
operations are in New Jersey, Louisiana, Mississippi,
Colorado and Ontario in Canada.
With
Argosy, Penn gains new casino operations in Indiana,
Missouri, Iowa and Illinois.
" Argosy
provides some very significant growth opportunities," said
analyst Ryan Worst of C.L. King & Associates. He
was referring particularly to the $250 million expansion
of Argosy's flagship Lawrenceburg, Ind., casino and
hotel property, which will up the slot count from 2,800
to 4,000; and a $75 million hotel that's already under
construction in Kansas City, Mo.
Based
on a string of past acquisitions completed by Penn,
analysts expect that Penn's integration of Argosy into
the fold will go smoothly.
" (Penn
executives) could bring a lot of upside to Argosy;
they could run it better," said Jefferies & Co.
analyst Larry Klatzkin.
Analysts
polled by First Call expect Penn's earnings to grow
41% this year to $1.49 and move up another 40% next
year.
About
five years ago, Penn's Chief Executive Peter Carlino
started steering the firm on an acquisition course
that would make it less dependent on horse racing,
an industry that had been declining for years.
The
spree of casino purchases began in 2000 with Casino
Magic Bay in St. Louis and Boomtown Biloxi in Mississippi,
followed by a few other small drive-to casinos in 2001
and 2002.
" Peter
likes to purchase properties as opposed to build properties," DeSanctis
said. "You know what you're buying, and it's a
much quicker process."
In
2003, Penn made a much bigger purchase when it paid
nearly $600 million for Hollywood Casinos, which includes
casinos in Aurora, Ill., and Tunica, Miss.
With
that buy, Penn transitioned from a race track company
to a gaming company.
" It's
hard for anybody to be a racetrack company now," he
said.
About
95% of Penn's operating earnings come from gaming,
says Bill Clifford, Penn's chief financial officer.
Analysts
don't expect Penn's run of gaming acquisitions to end
with Argosy, either. "They would love to look
at Atlantic City, but I don't think they need to," Klatzkin
said.
CEO
Carlino told analysts in a recent conference call that
its focus is on Argosy. When Alton, Ill.-based Argosy
is integrated, he expects Penn to "of course" look
elsewhere.
Meantime,
Penn's largest property -- Charles Town Races & Slots
-- continues to draw large crowds from the Washington,
D.C., and Baltimore metro areas. Slots are the main
draw.
A
new buffet should be completed this fall, expanding
the firm's food and beverage offerings there.
Penn's
new gaming operation at Penn National Race Course is
slated to open in late 2006 or early 2007, starting
with 2,000 slot machines. Penn could ultimately put
in up to 5,000 slots as business warrants.
" We're
projecting $160 million in revenue from the first full
year, with (operating earnings) of 25%," CFO Clifford
said. "Over time, we think the facility will mature
at roughly $300 million to $325 million, just from
the gaming side."
The race track takes in just $50 million in revenue now.
The
casino in Maine could ultimately accommodate up to
1,500 slot machines. Plans call for 475 slots to start.
GAMBLING
BEYOND NEVADA: A big deal with little fanfare;Penn National-Argosy
merger to create powerhouse
Las
Vegas Review-Journal
Apr. 03, 2005
By HOWARD STUTZ
The
multibillion dollar corporate buyouts that will reduce
Nevada's four gaming industry giants to two has sparked
a multitude of analysis from investment houses and
pages of copy from the financial media.
But
a third such merger, taking place far away from the
lights of the Strip featuring two companies most casual
investors would be hard-pressed to name, has also piqued
the interest of those who follow the gaming industry.
When
Penn National Gaming completes its $2.2 billion buyout
of rival Argosy Gaming sometime this summer, the combined
company will have estimated annual revenues of $2.18
billion and rank as gambling's third-largest casino
operator, trailing only the merged Harrah's Entertainment-Caesars
Enter-tainment and the combined MGM Mirage-Mandalay
Resort Group.
By
Las Vegas standards, Penn National, which has headquarters
about 60 miles northwest of Philadelphia in Wyomissing,
Pa., and began life as small racetrack operator in
1972, wouldn't seem to belong at the table with the
industry titans.
Once
combined with Illinois-based Argosy, Penn National
will control 20,831 slot machines and 2,477 hotel rooms
in nine states through 14 casinos, three racetracks
and seven off-track betting parlors. MGM Mirage, for
example, operates 16,200 slot machines in Nevada.
That
number doesn't include slot operations at the company's
casinos in Mississippi and Michigan and the nearly
equal number it will pick up once it completes its
$7.9 billion buyout of the Mandalay Resort Group.
Two
other like competitors, Boyd Gaming Corp., with 27,640
slot machines companywide, and Station Casinos, which
operates 18,524 slot machines in Nevada, may seem larger.
But the companies still trail Penn National's projected
revenues.
As
for lodging comparisons, the MGM Grand alone has more
than 5,000 rooms. Wynn Las Vegas will open this month
with more rooms, 2,714, than the combined Penn National
will have as a company.
Still,
gaming analysts are paying attention to Penn National
and believe the company is ready to step up with the
industry's most recognizable names.
" Penn
National maintains some of the most significant growth
opportunities of any company we follow," Merrill
Lynch gaming analyst David Anders said. "We continue
to believe Penn National represents one of the best
growth stories in our gaming universe."
Deutsche
Bank gaming analyst Marc Falcone believes the merger
with Argosy creates a powerful company in a regionalized
market, focusing on enhanced slot-machine offerings
and repeat customer visitation.
" Penn
National remains one of the most attractive stories
in gaming," Falcone said. "The pending Argosy
merger is an outstanding transaction for both companies.
We believe Penn will be able to extract a significant
amount of synergies and new growth opportunities as
a result of this combined entity.
" These
companies utilize similar operating strategies and
their core focus on slots coupled with the diversification
benefits should result in a highly visible cash flow
stream."
Penn
National executives say they don't mind working in
relative obscurity.
" We
are a completely different entity (than the Las Vegas
companies)," Penn National President and Chief
Operating Officer Kevin DeSanctis said. "When
you look at the markets in which we operate, we're
heavily dependent upon the local customer.
" Our
customers have a high repeat visitation rate. They
come in weekly and sometimes daily. Most of our customers
are within an hour drive time of our properties and
they don't want a room."
Penn
National, DeSanctis said, has never sought national
exposure, instead concentrating on a volume-based business
while expanding on a smaller scale.
The
majority of the company's operations are similar to
the locals casino market found in Las Vegas, where
slot machine play and food matter most.
When
the buyout was announced last November, shares in Penn
National jumped 26 percent in one day. They gained
as much as 40 percent in value by January and were
trading in the $60 price range on the Nasdaq.
The company completed a 2-for-1 stock split early last month and most analysts
expect the price run-up to continue. This past week, shares in Penn closed
at $30.87.
In
2004, without Argosy, Penn National reported net revenue
of $1.1 billion and pretax earnings of $283 million.
The company's current market capitalization, available
shares multiplied by the price per share, is $2.51
billion.
Penn
National is not considered a megaresort operator. The
company's largest property is the Hollywood Casino
in Tunica, Miss., which has 494 hotel rooms, 1,620
slot machines, 31 table games and reported pretax earnings
of $26 million in 2004.
Its
largest operation, however, is the Charles Town Races
and Slots, a racetrack-casino in Charles Town, W.Va.
The complex draws customers from heavily populated Maryland and Northern Virginia
and offers wagering on year-round thoroughbred racing, off-track betting from
simulcast races around the country and casino play on almost 3,800 slot machines.
Charles
Town had pretax earnings of $114.4 million in 2004
and Penn National is spending $35 million to add more
slots, a hotel and other amenities by year's end.
Penn
National has been in an acquisition mode since 2000,
when the company spent $195 million to purchase two
Mississippi properties: Boomtown in Biloxi and Casino
Magic in Bay St. Louis.
A
year later, Penn National bought Casino Rouge in Baton
Rouge, La., and Casino Rama in Ontario, Canada, for
$191 million.
After
buying Bullwhackers Casino in Black Hawk, Colo., in
2002 for $6.5 million, Penn National spent $599.9 million
to buy three Hollywood casinos in Aurora, Ill., Tunica
and Shreveport, La. The company later sold the Shreveport
property.
" We
look at a transaction to provide two critical things
to our company: economic growth and geographical growth," DeSanctis
said. "A company or casino we're purchasing has
to be something that compliments our current operations."
In
a recent investors presentation, Penn National officials
displayed a pie chart showing the company deriving
35 percent of its total revenues in 2004 from its West
Virginia operations.
A
second pie chart that added in the six Argosy properties,
shows 20.8 percent of all company revenues coming from
Illinois casinos, 20.2 percent coming from casinos
in Indiana and 18.3 percent deriving from the West
Virginia operations.
" We
don't want to rely on one casino or one property to
drive our revenues," DeSanctis said. "We're
clearly a company that is diversified enough that we're
not going to be impacted if changes happen in one of
our markets.
" Local
economic conditions can easily affect one of our properties,
as can regulatory action in various states. So that's
one reason we strive to have a good geographic mix
that fits into our operating structure."
Argosy
shareholders, who approved the transaction in January,
will receive $47 per share upon the deal's completion.
The buyout is still awaits approval from the Federal
Trade Commission, which filed a request for additional
information in February, and regulators in the three
states Penn National will be entering: Indiana, Missouri
and Iowa.
Argosy's
flagship property is the Argosy Casino in Lawrenceburg,
Ind., which caters to the Cincinnati market. The casino,
which has 2,248 slot machines, 95 table games and 300
hotel rooms, had pretax earnings of $145.7 million
in 2004.
While
completing the Argosy transaction, Penn National is
also planning for two other growth opportunities expected
to take place in 2006.
The
company bought the Bangor Downs racetrack in Maine
last year for $51 million and awaits licensing approval.
The track, which is within 90 minutes driving distance
of 295,000 adults, is the only place in the state eligible
to operate slot machines. Penn National said it will
spend another $74 million to add 1,500 gaming devices.
Meanwhile,
Pennsylania's gaming regulators are drafting standards
to allow 65,000 slot machines throughout the state.
Preparing
for this possibility, Penn National will spend $240
million to develop its Penn National Race Course into
an integrated racing and gaming complex with 2,000
slot machines.
Ultimately,
the company would like to operate 5,000 machines at
the racetrack.
Penn
National believes the track, which is within an hour's
driving distance of 841,000 adults, will generate $310
million in annual gaming revenue.
Jefferies & Co.
gaming analyst Larry Klatzkin said Penn National's
expansion plans make the company an attractive investment.
" We
like the Argosy acquisition tremendously and believe
it is a strong positive," Klatzkin said.
" The
expansions combined with the company's significant
generation of free cash flow and continuing the leveraging
of its balance sheet should leave Penn National in
a strong position going forward and ready to take on
the Argosy properties."
Reprinted
with permission from the author and publication. |