- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Coaching Changes
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message

Fertitta Offers Record 15% Loan Rate to Save Empire
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:25 am
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:25 am
Finance baws, this is your shot
quote:
Texas billionaire Tilman Fertitta is looking to raise more debt to keep his casino and restaurant empire afloat through year-end if the Covid-19 shutdown persists. The offering is ending a near one-month drought in the market for risky corporate loans.
The businessman is offering potential lenders an interest rate of at least 15% to participate in a new $250 million loan for his Golden Nugget casinos and hundreds of restaurants under the Landry’s Inc. umbrella that have been ravaged by the coronavirus, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
The loan, which matures in October 2023 and is being arranged by Jefferies Financial Group Inc., is one of many levers Fertitta is pulling to shore up liquidity. The pandemic has brought the travel and leisure industry to a near standstill, leaving Fertitta’s businesses shuttered and burning cash while tens of thousands of his employees have been furloughed.
The company has already drawn $300 million of existing credit lines in full and Fertitta is injecting $50 million of his own cash into the business, said one of the people, who asked not to be named because the details are confide
quote:LINK
ased on initial discussions with investors, the loan is being offered at a spread of 14 percentage points over the benchmark London interbank offered rate and at a discount of about 96 cents on the dollar, the people said. That puts the all-in yield above 15%. The spread is the highest ever seen in the U.S. leveraged loan market excluding companies in bankruptcy, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Fertitta sees the new loan as an expensive insurance policy in the event that none of these businesses can reopen before the end of the year, the same person said.
Representatives for Fertitta’s companies and Jefferies did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The leveraged loan market has been slower to recover from the recent turmoil than the high-yield bond market, which reopened last week to borrowers seeking to replenish credit lines and to improve liquidity.
While the restart is good news for companies that need cash, the cost of borrowing has soared. Only two months ago, sentiment in the credit market was so robust that debt investors allowed Fertitta to take a $200 million dividend out of the company, doubling the size initially targeted. That debt cost Fertitta only 2.5 percentage points over Libo
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:27 am to Dire Wolf
Hopefully he goes broke and that cheapass has to sell the rockets
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:31 am to Dire Wolf
What is he losing money on? He’s not paying any employees.
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:35 am to JG77056
quote:
what's he losing money on
James Harden
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:38 am to JG77056
He has aboot $5 billion. It seems that he would prosper if he lent money to his companies at 15%. Is the NBA going to bail him out?
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:38 am to Dire Wolf
How leveraged was this guy before this? Geez
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:39 am to JG77056
quote:
What is he losing money on? He’s not paying any employees.
I'm not defending Fertitta but businesses have a lot more expenses than just payroll baw
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:39 am to KiwiHead
Are NBA, MLB players still drawing full salary?
Seems there'd be a clause that the owners have that they wouldn't have to pay if no games are played
Seems there'd be a clause that the owners have that they wouldn't have to pay if no games are played
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:41 am to jmarto1
quote:
How leveraged was this guy before this? Geez
Buying the rockets for 1.4 billion probably freezes up a lot of liquidity.
Beyond that his business is all around entertainment, restaurants, and casinos. He couldn’t be more exposed if he tried
I am just am humble salesmen so what do I know.
This post was edited on 4/10/20 at 8:43 am
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:42 am to TheCaterpillar
quote:
15%!!!!!
Some of the cruise lines have take 10+% loans recently
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:44 am to JG77056
quote:Commercial real estate isn’t cheap. He’s still gotta pay for the the buildings and property, maintenance and upkeep, insurance, utilities, any existing loans the businesses had, and at least some managers and corporate office employees
What is he losing money on? He’s not paying any employees.
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:49 am to East Coast Band
quote:Haven't kept up with it but there were talks about cutting NBA salaries in half last week I believe.
Are NBA, MLB players still drawing full salary?
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:53 am to fallguy_1978
quote:
Some of the cruise lines have take 10+% loans recently
Yeah I knew that, but I guess I hadn't seen 15%.
Just think about the difference between a 5% and 3% mortgage rate in terms of long term money owed and now think about the difference between 10% and 15% on hundreds of millions of dollars. Gives me chills
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:54 am to DownSouthCrawfish
Don’t worry, our media will make them out to be victims while 17 million other people are going unpaid.
Posted on 4/10/20 at 8:55 am to East Coast Band
quote:
MLB players still drawing full salary?
The MLB capping pay at 170 mil thru the end of May.
Players are getting checks but a humbling amount compared to their real salaries
Posted on 4/10/20 at 9:14 am to DownSouthCrawfish
quote:Received a notification earlier this week that said they were still receiving their full salaries.
Haven't kept up with it but there were talks about cutting NBA salaries in half last week I believe.
Posted on 4/10/20 at 9:23 am to Dire Wolf
He bought the Rockets for $2.2 B with a lot of debt, he also recently leveraged up more to buy some restaurant chains. I think using the Nuggets rev as collateral on the bonds. His past bonds have been at 6.75% ($745 M) and 8.75% ($670 M).
Dude has a serious burn rate with some expensive monies.
Dude has a serious burn rate with some expensive monies.
Posted on 4/10/20 at 9:29 am to GACornrowWallace
Carnival cruise borrowed at 11% recently. Let that sink in.
Posted on 4/10/20 at 9:36 am to JG77056
quote:
What is he losing money on? He’s not paying any employees.
Holy crap
Back to top


10








