Bizwatch, Jun. 17, 1996
LUCK, BE A HILTON TONIGHT
When Stephen Bollenbach left the top financial job at the Walt Disney Co. to run the Hilton Hotel Corp. in February, he vowed to make Hilton a leader of the $20 billion U.S. gaming industry. Bollenbach hit the jackpot with just one roll of the dice last week, when Hilton agreed to acquire Bally Entertainment in a $2 billion stock swap that creates the world's largest casino company. "Big guys win in any consolidating industry," Bollenbach says.
Among the benefits of bulking up, the deal will land Hilton on the boardwalk in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where Bally owns two huge gaming palaces. Hilton has five casino hotels in Nevada but had been shut out of the lucrative Atlantic City market. The combined companies will rake in the chips at 15 casinos from Las Vegas to Istanbul, Turkey, and plan to open five more by the end of the decade. But Hilton, which last year earned half of its $353 million in operating income from gambling, is hardly turning its back on the lodging business. "We will continue to grow our hotels [as well as] gaming and maintain them at 50-50," Bollenbach says. So travelers will still find beds at Hilton without having to risk losing their shirts.
BUY NOW, WIN NEVER
It had all the timing of a perfect slap shot. With his Florida Panthers facing off against the Colorado Avalanche for the Stanley Cup, owner Wayne Huizenga unveiled plans last week to sell 50% of his three-year-old team to the public. The offering would make the Panthers only the second U.S. sports team to sell stock as well as seats. Basketball's Boston Celtics went public in 1986, when they were still top contenders. But since then the stock has produced a cellar-dwelling annual return of less than 1%.
Panther shareholders will probably fare no better, despite the wizardry of Huizenga, 56, whose triumphs include forging a handful of video stores into the Blockbuster Entertainment empire. But that business was never plagued by fickle fans or soaring team salaries that can fly off with profits. "This won't be a growth stock like Blockbuster," Huizenga acknowledges. "Investing will be a matter of pride. We're trying to build community spirit and get Joe Fan to rally around the team."
HUIZENGA'S HOLDINGS
FLORIDA MARLINS FLORIDA PANTHERS MIAMI DOLPHINS JOE ROBBIE STADIUM FRONT ROW COMMUNICATIONS,cable sports network MIAMI MOTORSPORTS, racetrack facility (50%)
D'AMATO'S STOCK TIPS
"I am no Hillary Clinton," was how G.O.P. Senator Alfonse D'Amato responded to reports of his dealings with Stratton Oakmont Inc., a New York brokerage that has drawn ongoing scrutiny for alleged securities violations. But then last week a Securities and Exchange Commission report concluded that the brokerage had bent its own rules to secure D'Amato shares in a hot new computer stock in 1993 that netted him a $37,125 profit in a single day. New shares are often doled out by brokerages to favored customers before the rest of the public gets a chance. That makes comparisons to the First Lady's windfall in a series of 1978-80 sweetheart commodity deals seem apt.
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