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  • Kerkorian Strikes Again

    Kerkorian Strikes Again

    Casino City Times, MA
    June 7 2004

    Most popular gaming on the internet? Visit the new
    online.casinocity.com! by Richard N. Velotta

    By Our Partners at the Las Vegas Sun

    LAS VEGAS -- MGM MIRAGE's surprise bid to buy out Mandalay Resort
    Group had the familiar signature of a legendary deal maker.

    Who else but Kirk Kerkorian, majority owner of MGM MIRAGE shares,
    could engineer such a stunning proposal to acquire one of the hottest
    casino companies on the Strip?

    It was only four years ago that Kerkorian, who has waged boardroom war
    involving companies such as Chrysler Corp. and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer,
    stunned the gaming world with an audacious acquisition bid for Steve
    Wynn's Mirage Resorts Inc.

    Observers were as stunned over the weekend as they were in 2000 when
    Kerkorian engaged Wynn -- a casino executive with a vastly different
    style.

    In the end, Kerkorian bought Mirage, although Wynn's negotiating
    resulted in the price for Mirage going up from $17 to $21 a share in
    the $6.4 billion deal.

    And, in a fairy-tale "all's well that ends well" finish, Wynn wound
    up taking his cut of the deal to buy the Desert Inn and turn the
    site into what promises to be the next big must-see Strip resort,
    Wynn Las Vegas, which will open next year.

    Kerkorian and his company didn't fare so badly either -- they took
    control of one of the prime Strip resorts Wynn built, Bellagio, and
    the property credited with generating Las Vegas' boom days, The Mirage,
    as well as Treasure Island, the Golden Nugget (which recently changed
    hands again), half of the Monte Carlo and one of Biloxi, Miss.'s best
    properties, Beau Rivage.

    "The game being played is one Kerkorian has played many times," Bill
    Thompson, chairman of the Department of Public Administration at the
    University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said at the time of the 2000 deal
    for Mirage Resorts.

    Thompson, contacted Sunday about the Mandalay Resort Group deal,
    said he could almost say the same thing now.

    "It's clear that he's found that the best opportunity for casino
    gambling in the world is in Las Vegas," Thompson said. "In one sense,
    he's voting on the Las Vegas Strip with this deal."

    But the fact that Kerkorian is making a play for Mandalay Resort Group
    indicates to Thompson that maybe the 87-year-old financier doesn't
    see as much opportunity in international deals as some experts have
    suggested.

    "Maybe England is not opening up like he expected," Thompson said in
    reference to Great Britain's deliberations on tax policies accompanying
    the expansion and deregulation of gambling in that country.

    MGM MIRAGE's decision in May not to bid any higher than $555 million
    to acquire Wembley Plc, a British operator of dog tracks in the United
    Kingdom and Rhode Island, lends credence to that theory. MGM MIRAGE
    bowed out of the bidding.

    "He's a great deal maker, but maybe there were a few things that didn't
    look right," he said. "Maybe stuff was not working out as he expected
    and he has some capital and he said, 'What can I do with my money?' "

    Whatever the answer is, it's not likely to come from Kerkorian
    himself. He shuns public attention, preferring to leave management
    of his business operations to trusted executives such as MGM MIRAGE
    Chairman and Chief Executive Terry Lanni.

    Kerkorian has earned a reputation as a shrewd investor with some of
    his most notorious deals occurring outside the gaming realm.

    In 1965, Kerkorian, a former World War II pilot, sold Trans
    International Airlines for a profit of more than $100 million after
    building the airline from a couple of war surplus planes.

    He used the profits to acquire the Flamingo in 1967 and to build
    the International, now the Las Vegas Hilton, in 1969. At the time,
    it was the largest hotel in the world.

    Kerkorian sold both of those properties to Hilton Hotels Corp., in
    1970, using the proceeds to buy the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer movie studio.
    The name became the cornerstone for his MGM Grand hotel-casino, which
    opened at the Strip and Flamingo Road in 1973. That hotel also was
    the largest in the world when it opened.

    He held the hotel and studio for several years, even enduring one of
    Las Vegas' worst disasters, a 1980 fire that killed 83 people. In
    1985, Kerkorian sold the property to Bally Entertainment Corp.,
    which turned the hotel into Bally's hotel-casino.

    Kerkorian picked up the Desert Inn in 1987 and the Sands in 1988. He
    quickly sold the Sands to Sheldon Adelson, who eventually transformed
    the site into the Venetian hotel-casino, and he sold the Desert Inn
    to ITT-Sheraton in 1993.

    Meanwhile, Kerkorian stripped away many of the MGM Studio's assets
    and sold them to Ted Turner in 1986, buying it back a few months
    later after Turner had secured its film library. In 1990, Kerkorian
    sold the studio again, this time to Giancarlo Parretti, an Italian
    financier. Kerkorian acquired the studio for a third time in 1996
    after accusations of financial misdealings threatened to close it.

    Kerkorian's various dealings in the early '90s enabled him to build
    the largest hotel in the world for the third time -- the MGM Grand
    at the Strip and Tropicana Avenue on the old Marina hotel-casino site.

    Both Kerkorian and Wynn considered buying the parcel across the
    street from the new MGM Grand and it was Kerkorian that emerged as
    the owner. He and partner Gary Primm built the New York-New York
    hotel-casino there, with Primm eventually selling his share of both
    that property and his three resorts on the Nevada-California state
    line to MGM Grand Inc.

    Kerkorian has shown the same deal-making tenacity in his investments
    in Chrysler Corp. Last month, he testified in a court case in U.S.
    District Court in Delaware in which he has sued DaimlerChrysler AG,
    claiming that company engineered a takeover of Chrysler but called
    it a merger in order to avoid paying the acquisition fee.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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