Skip to main content

Caesars’ Bankruptcy Tussle with Creditors May Be Near the Finale, Judge Responds to Mediator’s Resignation

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Caesars Entertainment Corp. is the closest it’s been to ending two years of rancorous court battles with bondholders over who should pay to fix the casino giant’s insolvent operating unit, which can’t afford to pay almost $20 billion in debt, Bloomberg News reported today. The company is giving creditors until midnight in New York to accept a sweetened offer of more than $5 billion in cash, new debt and stock in a reorganized company. A group of bondholders that have been the biggest obstacle to the company’s plan has agreed on the framework of a deal, people familiar with the talks said Thursday. Now the question will be whether the company’s more senior lenders — who were on board with previous iterations of the plan — will be willing to give up some of the gains they won at the negotiating table in order to get the plan approved. Those creditors, who hold Caesars’ bank loans and first-lien bonds, would need to give up “hundreds of millions of dollars” in recoveries, according to the offer Caesars disclosed on Wednesday. A deal would put the unit, Caesars Entertainment Operating Co., on track to exit one of the biggest bankruptcies of the past decade. Creditors including David Tepper’s Appaloosa Management have been battling the private-equity titans that acquired the company in a 2008 leveraged buyout, Apollo Global Management LLC and TPG Capital. Read more

In related news, Bankruptcy Judge A. Benjamin Goldgar provided comments on Wednesday regarding the resignation of the mediator in the case. Judge Goldgar offered clarification on some of the critical comments and misunderstandings he found within the resignation letter. Click here to read the court excerpt.