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A deal inside one of the world's largest casino conglomerates just baffled Wall Street

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MGM MGM China, Jim Murren, Pansy Ho, Grant Bowie
MGM MGM China, Jim Murren, Pansy Ho, Grant Bowie

(Jim Murren, chairperson and executive director of MGM, left; Pansy Ho, chairperson and executive director; and Grant Bowie, CEO and executive director.Reuters)

Nobody understands what just happened between MGM Resorts and MGM China, but it's making Wall Street question a recent, fragile sense of stability in the world's gambling center, Macau.

On Tuesday, MGM and its Chinese partner, MGM China, announced a stock transaction deal. MGM Resorts agreed to acquire 188.1 million shares of MGM China and boost its ownership stake in the entity from 51% to 56%. For that, it will pay $325 million in stock, cash, and deferred cash.

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In exchange, Pansy Ho, the CEO of MGM China and a member of Macau's founding gambling family, will also acquire 4 million MGM shares. That will increase her ownership to 4.8%.

This is notable is because no one understands why MGM International would do this. Macau's casino industry is just starting to stabilize after collapsing under the weight of mainland Chinese government regulation and a number of casino heists from 2014 to 2015.

During that period, there were months when gaming revenues fell 50% from a year before. The VIP gamblers were basically chased out as government scrutiny forced almost a quarter of the junkets that funded their play to shut down.

It was ugly, and the industry has just started recovering from the carnage. As such, this deal seems to only serve Ho. It gives her exposure to US real estate at a time when Macau's "recovery" looks more and more like it's going to be L-shaped. Meanwhile, according to Deutsche Bank, MGM China gets a 17% equity premium.

Pansy Ho MGM
Pansy Ho MGM

(Pansy Ho, Hong Kong's richest woman and the daughter of Macau gambling godfather Stanley Ho.REUTERS/Tyrone Siu)

Here's Wells Fargo's Cameron McKnight on the deal:

  • "Not sure what MGM gains from this transaction. MGM already has control of and consolidates MGM China, so we don't see any immediate benefit from purchasing another 5% — especially when Macau's fundamentals are still challenged and the tone of many of our industry conversations is 'very glum.' ...

  • "Macau purchase appears expensive ...

  • "Pansy Ho swapping Chinese for US real estate exposure. By continuing to sell down her MGM China and increase her MGM US stake, Pansy Ho is arguably reducing Chinese and increasing US exposure. Some investors are asking whether Pansy Ho is a continued seller."

And here's Deutsche Bank's Carlo Santarelli (emphasis ours):

"In short, we expect investors to be a bit confused by the rationale for this transaction ... In our view, MGM Resorts is inexpensive and MGM China is trading at top of the range multiples, on our forecasts, with meaningful ambiguity in future results given the wave of new supply in a questionable top line recovery environment ... Lastly, in a period in which we view domestic gaming fundamentals favorably, MGM is using its equity to grow its Macau position, a market where we struggle with fundamentals."

That "wave of new supply" Santarelli mentioned started coming online last year, when three new casinos put 938 more tables on Macau. It's not over, either. Wynn Entertainment will open another casino next week, and Las Vegas opens another next month.

All of these places were planned in the boom, before the government turned its back on the industry. All told, around $23 billion worth of projects and an estimated 5,711 tables should hit the market by the end of 2018 (though the government has been known to change that figure).

Macau Supply Chart
Macau Supply Chart

(Union Gaming)

So you can see why investors may be weary of Macau right now. Not only is China's mainland economy slowing, which means fewer gamblers, but they also don't know if they can trust the government to leave it alone. And, as you can imagine, the Chinese Communist Party does what it wants.

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