Bally’s stock price surges on buyout offer from largest shareholder, hedge fund Standard General

Chicago Tribune · Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/TNS

Soo Kim, the chairman of Bally’s and founding partner of its largest shareholder, New York hedge fund Standard General, is doubling down on the company behind Chicago’s casino.

Standard General, which owns 23% of Rhode Island-based Bally’s, submitted an offer Monday to buy out the rest of the stockholders at $15 per share, valuing the company at about $648 million. That represents a premium to the current share price, but is less than 40% of what Standard General was willing to pay two years ago in an unsuccessful bid to buy the company.

“For whatever reason, the shares have not traded well,” Kim said. “There’s nothing more that we can do, other than speak through action, and our action is to multiply down on our commitment to this company and buy shares at a healthy premium to current shareholders.”

In 2022, just before Bally’s won a heated competition to build the first Chicago casino, Standard General bid $38 per share, valuing the company at nearly $2.1 billion. The stock price has been falling ever since, exacerbated by funding concerns faced by debt-laden Bally’s in building its proposed $1.74 billion Chicago flagship.

Kim blamed the valuation decline on “a lot of noise” about the company’s financial condition, as well as macroeconomic challenges such as inflation and higher interest rates.

Bally’s had $163 million in cash and $3.6 billion in debt at the end of the fourth quarter, according to its most recent financial reports.

Last week, Bally’s CFO Marcus Glover told the Nevada Gaming Control Board the company needed to bridge an $800 million funding gap to cover $1.1 billion in remaining costs to build the permanent casino at the Chicago Tribune’s 30-acre River West publishing site.

Bally’s Chicago, which opened a temporary casino at Medinah Temple in September, plans to break ground at the Freedom Center this summer and open the permanent casino in 2026. It received final planning and zoning approval from the city in December 2022 for an entertainment complex that included an exhibition hall, 500-room hotel, a 3,000-seat theater, 10 restaurants and 4,000 gaming positions.

In January, Bally’s revealed that it would have to relocate the 500-room hotel tower to avoid damaging city water pipes near the Chicago River.

Last year, Bally’s agreed to pay Tribune Publishing, owners of the Chicago Tribune and other newspapers, $150 million to vacate the Freedom Center by July. Tribune Publishing plans to relocate printing operations to the Daily Herald plant in Schaumburg, Illinois, which it purchased for an undisclosed price.