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MGM Mirage to Get U.S. Clearance to Acquire Mandalay (Update1)

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  • MGM Mirage to Get U.S. Clearance to Acquire Mandalay (Update1)

    MGM Mirage to Get U.S. Clearance to Acquire Mandalay (Update1)

    Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) -- MGM Mirage, the casino operator controlled by
    billionaire Kirk Kerkorian, will win U.S. Federal Trade Commission
    approval for a $4.8 billion takeover of Mandalay Resort Group without
    having to sell any Las Vegas casinos, people familiar with the matter
    said.

    The combination of MGM Mirage, the world's third-largest casino
    operator, and Mandalay would create the world's largest
    gambling-resort company. The proposed combination of No. 2 Harrah's
    Entertainment Inc. and Caesars Entertainment Inc., the industry
    leader, would supplant MGM Mirage and Mandalay as the world's biggest
    if the FTC approves that takeover. Harrah's offered to buy Caesars for
    $5.18 billion in July.

    FTC lawyers have concluded they lack evidence that the MGM
    Mirage-Mandalay combination would lead to higher room rates or fewer
    promotional discounts aimed at luring customers to the gaming tables,
    the people said. Together, the two companies would own almost half the
    hotel rooms on the Las Vegas Strip, a four- mile stretch of Las Vegas
    Boulevard between downtown and the airport.

    The five-member Federal Trade Commission seldom overrules its staff.

    MGM Mirage agreed to pay $71 for each Mandalay share. Mandalay shares
    rose 10 cents to $70.61 as of 1:20 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange
    composite trading. MGM Mirage shares rose 66 cents to $75.11.

    ``We are confident we will be able to close the transaction by the end
    of the first quarter,'' MGM Mirage spokesman Alan Feldman said. An FTC
    spokeswoman didn't immediately return a call seeking comment.

    Much Competition

    The FTC staff can't refute the companies' argument that casino hotels
    on the Strip, where MGM Mirage and Mandalay together operate 10
    casino-hotels, isn't a distinct market, people familiar with the case
    said. That's because casinos on the Strip face competition from those
    in downtown Las Vegas, the Bahamas, and some operated by American
    Indian tribes in California and Connecticut, they said.

    Las Vegas also faces competition from luxury casinos in Australia and
    Macao.

    To block a proposed merger, the government must prove that companies
    seeking to combine would gain power to raise prices in a distinct
    market.

    MGM Mirage operates the Bellagio, the Mirage, MGM Grand, the Boardwalk
    and the Treasure Island casino resorts on the Strip. Mandalay Resort
    Group owns Mandalay Bay, Luxor, Excalibur, Monte Carlo and Circus
    Circus. Mandalay, based in Las Vegas, also operates casinos in four
    other Nevada cities, including Reno, as well as in Tunica,
    Mississippi, and Elgin, Illinois.

    State Approvals

    The companies must also get approval from gambling regulators in
    Nevada and Illinois. MGM Mirage's Feldman said the company hopes to
    get a February hearing before the Nevada Gaming Commission on its
    application. Mandalay operates the Grand Victoria riverboat casino in
    Elgin, about 40 miles northwest of Chicago.

    MGM Mirage said last month it is considering selling one of two
    Michigan casinos to comply with the state's antitrust law. The
    company, which originally said it would sell Mandalay's 53.5 percent
    stake in the MotorCity casino in Detroit, said it was weighing offers
    for its Michigan property.

    MGM Mirage, based in Las Vegas, also operates casino resorts in the
    Primm Valley area 25 miles south of Las Vegas near the California
    border and another in Biloxi, Mississippi.

    Harrah's and Caesars will sell four casinos for $1.24 billion in cash
    to Colony Capital LLC as part of their attempt to win regulatory
    approval for their combination. The companies said they would sell two
    casinos in Tunica, Mississippi, one in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and
    another in East Chicago, Indiana.

    Last June, the FTC cleared Harrah's $916 million purchase of Horseshoe
    Gaming Holding Co. eight months after the deal was announced. The
    agency required no divestitures. The takeover gave Harrah's ownership
    of Binion's Horseshoe Casino & Hotel in downtown Las Vegas, along with
    casinos in Mississippi, Louisiana and Indiana.

    To contact the reporter on this story:
    James Rowley at [email protected]

    To contact the editor responsible for this story:
    Glenn Hall at [email protected]
    Last Updated: January 13, 2005 13:26 EST

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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