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Australia’s Crown Set to Back $6.5bn Blackstone Buyout Offer

Crown received a fourth non-binding offer of A$13.10 a share, having dismissed Blackstone’s previous bid of A$12.50 as not ‘compelling’


Crown Resorts
The finding that Crown Resorts is unfit for its licence is in line with previous inquiries in the two other states where the company founded by billionaire James Packer has casinos. Photo: Reuters.

 

Australia’s biggest casino operator, Crown Resorts, said on Thursday its board was likely to back an improved A$8.87 billion ($6.46 billion) buyout proposal from US private equity firm Blackstone unless a higher offer emerged.

Crown received a fourth non-binding offer of A$13.10 a share, having dismissed Blackstone’s previous bid of A$12.50 as not “compelling”.

A person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters the near 5% price rise agreed after initial due diligence was supported by major investors, including founder James Packer, who collectively own around 60% of Crown stock.

There are hopes of signing a deal by January-end, said the person, who was not authorised to speak publicly on the matter and so declined to be identified.

Investment manager Perpetual, Crown’s third-largest shareholder with a 9.2% stake, said it was in favour of the revised proposal in the absence of a better offer.

Packer, who holds 37%, did not respond to a request for comment. Blackstone, which owns 9.9%, declined to comment.

 

Deal Likely by June

The deal, which requires approval from casino regulators in three Australian states and a shareholder vote, could be completed by the end of June, said a second person familiar with the matter.

Crown shares jumped as much as 9% to A$12.68 on Thursday morning, their highest price since June 4, but still well below Blackstone’s offer indicating market doubt about a rival bid.

The revised offer puts Blackstone in the box seat to win control of Crown, which has faced devastating misconduct inquiries in every state it operates in, while protracted Covid-19 lockdown measures has caused a drop in visitors.

Following the latest offer, the casino operator said it will engage with Blackstone on a non-exclusive basis and give the investment manager the opportunity to finalise due diligence.

 

Vote in Favour ‘Likely’

Crown said if Blackstone makes a binding offer of at least A$13.10 per share and if there are no superior offers, its board intends to recommend shareholders vote in favour of the proposal.

“It is likely that a deal will get done,” said Steve Johnson, chief investment officer at Forager Funds Management, which owns Crown shares.

“The increase in offer price is a welcome step in the right direction and we are supportive of the board continuing a push for an appropriate firm offer for shareholders,” he said.

After an inquiry in July last year urged Crown be stripped of its gambling licence for its main Melbourne resort, Australia’s second-biggest casino operator Star Entertainment Group withdrew a A$9 billion mostly scrip buyout proposal.

Star, subject to a separate regulatory inquiry over its actions to counter money laundering, has left open the possibility of re-entering the fray. In an emailed response on Thursday, it reiterated it “remains open to exploring potential value enhancing opportunities with Crown”.

Crown remains open to talks with Star and expects its peer to have more room to manoeuvre after the regulatory inquiry wraps up, said a third person familiar with the matter.

Public hearings on Star are due to begin in March.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years and has a family in Bangkok.

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