Penn National Gaming gets approval to acquire M Resort
The M Resort is shown near the Interstate 15 and St. Rose Parkway interchange.
Thursday
19 May 2011
1:19 p.m.
Updated
19 May 2011 3:36 p.m.
Sun Archives
The Nevada Gaming Commission today approved Penn National Gaming's move to acquire the M Resort -- a process that began last year when Penn bought the resort’s debt, worth some $1 billion -- from lenders for $230.5 million. The vote was 5-0.
M Resort CEO Anthony Marnell III will continue to run the property with General Manager Jody Lake. No significant changes will be made in management, while the property’s roughly 1,400 employees should experience no disruption in their jobs, Marnell said.
The resort, which opened in March 2009 when the economy was plummeting, already has benefited by tapping into Penn National’s customer database of 2.2 million people, Marnell said.
The marketing relationship enabled the resort to rent an additional 1,324 room nights in the first quarter compared with a year ago, increasing occupancy by 3.8 percentage points to 86.3 percent, executives said.
M is mailing marketing pieces to about a half million of Penn National customers, Marnell said. The property's convention business also is improving, executives said.
M will be debt-free once the acquisition is consummated, as the debt purchased by Penn will go away, they said.
First quarter revenue at the resort rose $600,000 to $39.8 million from a year ago and pre-tax earnings rose $1.7 million to $6.2 million. The latter figure, a key performance indicator, represents earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.
Commissioner Dr. Tony Alamo asked Marnell how long he would stay on at the resort after having lost his equity investment.
Marnell said he had a five-year commitment on paper but is committed to long term improvement at the property. He said he is negotiating with Penn for an equity position in the resort.
“This was never really about the money,” he said. “It’s about creating something unique … I’m excited about it and I’d like to see the vision finished.”
Alamo said Marnell should not be blamed for losing the property he built to the bank.
“This was not an operational issue for you … you guys created a heck of a property out there,” Alamo said. He commended the property for its uninterrupted payments to vendors and for the continued employment of its workforce.
Pennsylvania-based Penn National is a rarity in the recession: It is flush with cash and pursuing numerous casino acquisitions around the country. The company, which has long sought to add a major Strip casino to its national portfolio, also is nosing around Las Vegas for future acquisition opportunities.
Including M Resort, Penn will have 18 casinos and racetracks in North America.
Share
Discussion 1 comments
Comments are moderated by VegasInc editors. Our goal is not to limit the discussion, but rather to elevate it. Comments should be relevant and contain no abusive language. Comments that are off-topic, vulgar, profane or include personal attacks will be removed. Full comments policy.
Additionally, we now display comments from trusted commenters by default. Those wishing to become a trusted commenter need to verify their identity or sign in with Facebook Connect to tie their Facebook account to their VEGAS INC account. For more on this change, read our story about how it works and why we did it.
Only trusted comments are displayed on this page. Untrusted comments have expired from this story.
Post a comment
Commenting requires registration.
If you have a LasVegasSun.com account, you are already registered.

CONGRATULATIONS AND THANKS TO THE LEADERSHIP OF PENN NATIONAL. YOU HAVE BEEN INKED AS THE MOST DESIRABLE SUITOR FOR ANY AND ALL THE OTHER BRIDESMAIDS ON AND OFF THE STRIP. YOU WAITED AND KEPT YOUR HAND CLOSE, NOW YOU OWN ONE OF THE FINEST CASINOS IN LAS VEGAS. YES, IT IS DISTANT, AND YES IT IS GOING TO TAKE TIME TO PRODUCE ITS POTENTIAL. BUT, WITH THE COST REDUCED BY SUCH SIGNIFICANT DEGREE IT SHOULD PROVE A STERLING ACQUISITION. KUDOS, TOO, TO THE MARNELLS FOR THEIR STEWARDSHIP AND DESIGN EXCELLENCE.
THE BILLS ARE STILL DUE ON THE REST REIGNING THE STRIP...AND MAY THEY FACE THE MYRIAD CONSEQUENCES THEY CREATED. MGM AND HARRAH'S ARE LOST IN WOODS OF SELF CREATED EXCESS HUBRIS AND VACANT ACCOUNTABILITY. WYNN AND SANDS, TO USE A SAILING EXAMPLE, HAVE STOLEN THEIR BREEZE.
MAY THE M RESORT ENJOY A FULL BOUNTY OF SUCCESS.
Penn Gaming has a reputation in Pennsylvania for really low end buffets. Cost cutting is rampant with their food quality. If they use the Pennsylvania model at the M and cut corners on food quality they will lose a huge amount of the affluent Anthem and Seven Hills customers.The locals are pretty smart.
I wish the M nothing but the best. I think it's an amazing property. I visit there several times a month and prefer it to many of the strip casinos. I hope the new ownership keeps the local flavor.