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Park Place Announces Agreement to Sell Las Vegas Hilton to Colony Capital PDF Print E-mail

LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--12/24/2003--Park Place Entertainment Corporation (NYSE:PPE) today announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to sell the Las Vegas Hilton to an affiliate of Colony Capital, LLC, a Los Angeles based international private investment firm, for approximately $280 million. The transaction is expected to close by the end of the second quarter of 2004 and is subject to customary closing conditions outlined in the purchase agreement.

   "The Las Vegas Hilton has been a longstanding and distinguished member of the Park Place family, and it has a legendary place in the history of Las Vegas," said Park Place President and Chief Executive Officer Wallace R. Barr.

   "However, as we move forward, the company's strategy is to focus on core assets. In Las Vegas, those assets are Caesars Palace, Bally's, Paris and the Flamingo - all located at the key intersection of Flamingo Road and the Las Vegas Strip. Divesting the Las Vegas Hilton allows us to concentrate on and reinvest in those assets while continuing to reduce our overall level of indebtedness," Barr added.

   "The hotel-casino and the prime real estate on which it sits are truly irreplaceable assets," said Thomas J. Barrack, Jr., Chairman and CEO of Colony Capital. "We look forward to this opportunity to further enhance and reposition the property."

   Under the terms of the agreement, Colony will purchase all the assets of the Las Vegas Hilton Hotel and Casino, and will assume certain related current liabilities. The aggregate consideration may be adjusted for changes in net working capital.

   Colony expects to enter into an agreement with Hilton Hotels Corporation pursuant to which the hotel will continue to use the Hilton brand. The firm intends to continue the operation of the property as a hotel-casino, and may construct additional facilities on land that is currently unused. Colony, one of the few private investment firms licensed in gaming, owns Resorts International in Atlantic City and is a partner in Accor Casinos in Europe. Nicholas Ribis, vice chairman of Resorts, will be a partner in the Las Vegas Hilton acquisition.

   Park Place intends to use the net proceeds from the sale - estimated at $265 million after taxes - to reduce borrowings under its revolving credit facilities. The company expects to report a gain on sale of approximately $85 million after taxes, or $0.28 per diluted share, in the quarter in which the transaction closes. Until the sale is completed, the Las Vegas Hilton will be accounted for as an asset held for sale.

   Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization and other non-cash charges (EBITDA) at the Las Vegas Hilton for the twelve months ended September 30, 2003 totaled approximately $12 million. Depreciation and amortization was $18 million, and operating income was ($6 million). For the twelve months ended September 30, 2003, the company's pro forma fully diluted GAAP earnings per share would have been $0.39 instead of $0.36, and the leverage ratio would have been 4.17X vs. 4.37X. These pro forma calculations assume that the after-tax proceeds would have been used to pay down borrowings on the company's revolving credit facilities.

   "The sale of the Las Vegas Hilton will have a meaningful impact on our financial position and should add to our earnings going forward," said Park Place Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Harry C. Hagerty. "Pro forma for the sale, our total debt at year-end 2003 would be approximately $4.3 billion, representing a decrease of nearly $1 billion over the last two years. From a cash flow perspective, the sale will be beneficial since capital expenditures at the Las Vegas Hilton have exceeded EBITDA for the last two years.

   "The transaction has the potential to be more accretive to earnings than the figures presented above would suggest," added Hagerty. "Those figures assume that the net proceeds would have been used to pay down debt on our revolver, which is a low return investment. In both the projects we have already announced and others under consideration, we hope to earn higher returns."

   Opened in July, 1969 as The International, then the largest hotel in Las Vegas, the Las Vegas Hilton immediately took its place as the home of legendary entertainment. Barbra Streisand was the featured performer at the opening gala and Elvis Presley made his famous Las Vegas comeback at the hotel during its opening month.

   Rising 30 stories above the desert skyline, the hotel adjoins the 3.2 million-square-foot Las Vegas Convention Center. The resort features three distinct casinos, nearly 3,000 guest rooms and suites, 13 restaurants, a pool, spa and fitness centers and more than 200,000 square feet of conference space.

 
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