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Thread: Vail Resorts for Sale

  1. #1
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    Vail Resorts for Sale

    saw this article on denverpost.com, $700 mil and everything is yours according to the article. Didn't see this anywhere else on the board, so hopefully its not a rerun.

    Dude


    The Denver Post


    Wanted: Buyer for Vail Resorts
    By Jason Blevins
    Denver Post Staff Writer


    Friday, July 09, 2004 - Vail Resorts is courting potential buyers interested in acquiring the company, according to more than a dozen sources in the Vail Valley.

    The publicly traded ski and resort company has hired a New York investment banking firm to help sell its assets, several sources said.

    Vail Resorts declined to comment.

    "It's our company policy not to speculate on our stock price or potential transactions," said Vail Resorts spokeswoman Kelly Ladyga.

    A buyer calling for all of the company's 35.2 million shares at the current stock price would pay close to $700 million.

    Vail Resorts' stock has hovered around $19 - a two-year high - for several weeks. The summer months are generally a time when the stock languishes because revenues decline without skiers. The company offered shares at $22 in its initial public offering in February 1997.

    Vail Resorts owns Vail, Beaver Creek, Keystone and Breckenridge ski areas in Colorado. It paid $99 million for the Heavenly ski area on the Nevada- California border in 2002. It has grown its lodging wing from a few boutique hotels in the Vail Valley to a collection of more than a dozen luxury hotels across the country. The company also has expanded its real estate wing by developing high-end property in the Vail area.

    Leading the rumored list of possible buyers is Mike Shannon, 46, who ran Vail Associates from 1987 to 1992, when George Gillett owned the two-resort ski company. In the last decade, Shannon has grown his California-based KSL Recreation Corp. into a major resort company, with top-tier hotels nationwide.

    Earlier this year, Shannon sold all of KSL's equities to a Florida hospitality firm in a $1.4 billion deal.

    Shannon was not available for comment.

    "Yeah, we've all heard the Shannon rumor," said Gerald Engle, founder of the Cordillera Group, which built one of the Vail Valley's first golf communities. "He's got a bunch of money in his pocket, and he's always said he wanted to come back and buy Vail."

    Shannon launched KSL in 1992 with funding from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., a buyout firm with business ties to Apollo Management LP, the majority stockholder of Vail Resorts.

    In March, Apollo sold 1,325,000 shares of Vail stock for $15.30 a share to an unnamed buyer. The company still owns 6.12 million shares of Vail Resorts' class A stock and controls two-thirds of the company's board of directors. The two other largest shareholders are investment manager Ron Baron and Ralcorp Holdings, who combined with Apollo control nearly three-quarters of Vail Resorts' stock value.

    Apollo officials did not return a request for comment this week.

    Beyond Shannon, other potential buyers are a Wall Street investment firm (not the firm hired by Vail Resorts), a European investment group and an investment team from Dallas, several sources said.

    "I heard from a Wall Street firm looking at Vail Resorts," said Avon-based developer Jerry Jones, a former Vail Associates executive. "They were looking at a real estate play, and they needed some information."

    Ed Ryberg, winter sports coordinator for the U.S. Forest Service's Rocky Mountain region, said a group of investors from New York contacted him recently. The group was exploring Forest Service policy involving permits for a multiresort company that was restructuring ownership, Ryberg said.

    He said the group did not identify which ski company it was looking into.

    "They were very vague," Ryberg said.

    Dennis Orcutt, the former head of U.S. Bank in Colorado who pioneered ski-area lending in the 1980s and 1990s, said Wall Street and investors would probably value Vail Resorts at $725 million, or six times its earnings. The company had $635 million in debt and $95 million in cash, according to an April 30 financial report.

    Orcutt said Wall Street has long struggled to place a value on real estate opportunities within resort companies.

    "One of the reasons for that is that once your real estate is sold, your cash flow is gone," Orcutt said. "The question for a new investor at Vail Resorts is, what else they can do with the company? I mean, they've already tried to do just about everything they can. They've bought hotels and jumped into real estate. What's left on the table for a new investor?"

    In early June, Vail Resorts CEO Adam Aron announced his company had recently finished its best quarter ever, hinting that its fiscal 2004, which ends July 31, could be its best year for operating income.

    The company this summer launched a $500 million renovation of the aging Lionshead and Vail villages, which promise to significantly increase Vail Resorts' real estate revenues in the next five years.

    Staff writer Jason Blevins can be reached at 303-820-1374 or jblevins@denverpost.com .
    Last edited by The Dude; 07-12-2004 at 10:50 AM.

  2. #2
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    Let me check how much change is under the sofa cushions.

  3. #3
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    Re: Vail Resorts for Sale

    Originally posted by The Dude

    Staff writer Jason Blevins can be reached at 303-820-1374 or jblevins@denverpost.com .
    heh, tonsil varnish always gets the good assingments

  4. #4
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    Question

    Hmmm, one of my college friends out East works for Apollo. I'll have to ask him when I see him in a few weeks why they're looking to dump Vail. Maybe they've done all they could, and with record earnings expected, they can get out on a high note.

  5. #5
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    Figures. Every year I get a letter from their lawyers asking me if I will accept the settlement offer from the class action lawsuit from a decade ago (bonus money we were supposed to get, then VailAss declared bankruptcy). I always say no. .16 cents on the dollar aint worth it. I just like telling them no every year. Thus making them spend more money on attorneys fee's.

    But what is ironic was that VailAss was looking at Tremblant last year along with Killington to possibly buy one or the other. 2 weeks ago rumor was going that Tremblant might be sold, then it wasn't. Rumor was that they pulled out of buying Tremblant at the last moment. Makes sense now, but rumors are always rumors so take them for what they are.

    But Tremblant is still on the market for sale. Unoffically though. I can't see it being sold though. To much debt to negociate through, the serious possibility of a Resort Wide Union strike just before opening.

  6. #6
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    Originally posted by SLCFreshies
    Hmmm, one of my college friends out East works for Apollo. I'll have to ask him when I see him in a few weeks why they're looking to dump Vail. Maybe they've done all they could, and with record earnings expected, they can get out on a high note.
    First of all, ask your buddy if Leon Black (your friends boss) has come out of the closet yet....

    Than, please realize that there's no more land left to sell, Bachelors Gulch was his last scam....


    This also puts the lid on trying to develope Gilman, guess it's not economically feasible...If you think there's money in lift tickets, you're kidding yourself. Leon is a douchebag, is Gilette in a position to reaquire?

  7. #7
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    Another story about the sale of Vail from the Denver Post today:
    http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,...303331,00.html

    Here's probably the most interesting part:
    "Some analysts suspect the buyout firms want to dismantle the company and sell its assets piecemeal."

    First they buy everything up, then they sell it off...

  8. #8
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    Colorado mags can kiss those cheap tickets goodbye when this gets broken up. It was a good run.

  9. #9
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    TJ...just curious since you brought it up....class action lawsuit ? What for?

  10. #10
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    I was number 10 in the 12 sources that they questioned!
    Skiing Sucks! What a stupid sport!

  11. #11
    sledneckripper Guest
    Did they sell it?

  12. #12
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    GEAR SWAP JONG

  13. #13
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    I wouldn't buy that flat crowded pretentious shithole for $15. Kiwi.

  14. #14
    sledneckripper Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Lane Meyer View Post
    I wouldn't buy that flat crowded pretentious shithole for $15. Kiwi.
    ha, me neither.

  15. #15
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    I'll buy it... NOT.

    who would

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