Marina Bay IR: Go or no go?
Las Vegas Sands Corp, the company behind the Marina Bay IR, may have to re-evaluate the project as it is struggling to raise capital.
Adelson's Las Vegas Sands may break loan agreement
By OSKAR GARCIA,Associated Press Writer <cite class="auth">AP - Friday, November 7</cite>
LAS VEGAS - Las Vegas Sands Corp., the international casino empire run by billionaire Sheldon Adelson, must raise new capital or slash development spending, or both, by next month to keep its lenders at bay, the company said Thursday. News that the company might break its loan agreements sent its shares plummeting 33 percent.
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The company said it is evaluating projects in various stages of development in Las Vegas, Pennsylvania, Macau and Singapore, and is meeting with a financial advisor to explore ways to raise capital. Adelson, 75, worked as a financial adviser and real estate investor before building casinos. He created the technology trade show Comdex in 1979, which he sold it to Japan's Softbank Corp. for $860 million in 1995. Adelson then bought the Sands Hotel and Casino, former home to the Rat Pack, in 1989. Seven years later, he was inspired by his honeymoon in Venice to erect The Venetian in its place, a $1.5 billion casino resort. The 4,027-room Venetian combined with the 3,066-suite Palazzo makes Las Vegas Sands operator of the largest property under one roof on the Las Vegas Strip. The news from Las Vegas Sands's regulatory filing sent the company's stock plunging $3.81, or 32.7 percent, on Thursday to $7.85, far below the top end of its 52-week range of $122.96. "This has the market spooked," said Robert LaFleur, an analyst with Susquehanna Financial Group. Adelson and his wife, Miriam Adelson, personally loaned the company $475 million in October so Sands could escape a similar predicament in the third quarter. Company spokesman Ron Reese said it could not comment beyond its regulatory filings until it reports its third-quarter earnings this month. In an interview in October, Adelson said Las Vegas Sands was looking to raise $2 billion in debt financing from Asian banks to finish work on some Macau expansion projects. The casino mogul controls nearly 70 percent of Las Vegas Sands personally and through family trusts.