Las Vegas Sands Plunges on Default, Bankruptcy Risk (Update4)
By Beth Jinks
Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Las Vegas Sands Corp., billionaire
Sheldon Adelson's casino company, fell the most in New York
trading since going public after saying it may default on debt
and face bankruptcy.
The casino owner, which had $8.8 billion in long-term debt
at the end of June, said in a regulatory filing today that it
probably won't meet the requirements of loans arranged by
Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc. unless it cuts spending on developments, boosts
earnings at its Las Vegas Strip casinos and raises more capital.
The reversal of fortune is a black eye for the 75-year-old
Adelson, who was once America's third-richest man on the
strength of his Las Vegas Sands holdings. The Las Vegas-based
company's dwindling cash flow is threatening $16 billion worth
of developments in Macau, China, and Singapore, where Las Vegas
Sands is building resorts to cater to wealthy Asian gamblers.
``They need to raise money,'' said Keith Foley, a New York-
based analyst at Moody's Investors Service Inc. ``It's getting
to the point where they need to do something now.''
The shares dropped $3.81, or 33 percent, to $7.85 at 4:04 p.m.
in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, the biggest decline
since its initial share sale in December 2004. Las Vegas Sands had
tumbled 91 percent before today this year as investors dumped the
stock, worried that falling casino winnings and the global
financial meltdown would leave the company without enough cash.
More Capital
Spending declines on the Vegas Strip and restrictions on
visas in Macau have stemmed the flow of cash into Las Vegas
Sands. Today's admission comes after Adelson, who holds a stake
of more than 64 percent, invested an additional $475 million in
September to avoid violating the terms of a loan, and hired an
unidentified investment bank to raise more capital with his help.
Las Vegas Sands' rush to raise capital ``points to the
deterioration of fundamentals, not just for the company, the
fundamentals of Las Vegas,'' said Dennis Farrell, a debt analyst
with Wachovia Capital Markets LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The casino owner said it doesn't expect to meet a maximum
leverage ratio covenant in the fourth quarter. That would
trigger defaults that might force it to suspend development
projects and ``raise a substantial doubt about the company's
ability to continue as a going concern.''
``Sheldon still has considerable resources, and we doubt he
will sit on the sidelines and watch LVS go bankrupt,'' Robert
LaFleur at Susquehanna Financial Group LLLP, said today in a
client note he titled ``Scary Post-Halloween 8-K Filing.'' ``The
question is how much dry powder does he have, and what can he
do?''
Deep Pockets
In a July conference call, Adelson suggested he would step
in to help the company with any financing it might need, saying
a friend described him as ``the tallest person I know when you
stand on your wallet.''
``And I'm saying right now, the company will not have
liquidity problems,'' he said at the time.
Ron Reese, a spokesman for Adelson, didn't return an e-mail
seeking an interview.
Las Vegas Sands made a filing with regulators today to
allow it to quickly sell stocks or bonds if it finds investors.
``The offering shows what their intent is, but it doesn't
mean they'll be successful,'' said Foley. ``How and when is
uncertain, and their ability to successfully do that is
uncertain.''
Adelson founded the Comdex computer expo in 1979, later
selling the business and using the proceeds to build the
Venetian Resort Hotel Casino in Las Vegas.
U.S. Projects
He is also building a $600 million condominium in Vegas and
a $600 million casino resort in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. The
risk of default applies to some of Sands' U.S. unit loans.
``It would be prohibitively expensive to raise outside debt
capital at this time,'' said Farrell. The company will probably
sell more stock, which would hurt existing shareholders
including Adelson.
Other alternatives might be another investment from
Adelson, an injection of cash from an outside investor or a loan
from foreign banks, said Farrell.
The filing, which affects its U.S. unit's debt, sparked new
concerns that Las Vegas Sands won't finish Singapore's first
casino or a 20,000-room complex of hotels and casinos in Macau.
The Chinese territory overtook the Vegas Strip as the world's
biggest gambling market in 2006.
`Other Alternatives'
Should Sands fail to raise capital, ``we would need to
immediately suspend portions, if not all, of our ongoing global
development projects and consider other alternatives,'' the
company said in the filing.
Las Vegas Sands owns the Venetian and Palazzo casino
resorts on the Las Vegas Strip, plus the Macau Venetian, Sands
and Four Seasons, and had expected sufficient earnings from the
properties to fund its expansion and pay loans.
Las Vegas Strip casino gambling revenue slid 6.7 percent
this year through August, on track for its biggest annual
decline on record, as airlines cut back capacity and consumers,
battling declining home values, job losses and the worst
financial crisis since the Great Depression, spent less.
China increased visa restrictions on some mainland
residents traveling to Macau, causing casino gambling revenue in
the former Portuguese colony to fall to 26 billion patacas
($3.28 billion) in the third quarter from 28.9 billion patacas
in the second.
Adelson plans to sell Sands' Four Seasons apartment hotel
in Macau as a co-operative and wants to sell the attached mall
space.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Beth Jinks in New York at
bjinks1@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: November 6, 2008 16:15 EST