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Australia's Star casino shareholders approve A$300 million rescue package

Australia's Star casino shareholders approve A$300 million rescue package

Business Times25-06-2025
[SYDNEY] Star Entertainment Group's shareholders approved on Wednesday (Jun 25) an A$300 million (S$250 million) rescue package that will allow the embattled Australian casino group to remain operational, according to a company presentation.
The rescue bid is being led by US casino firm Bally's Corp and the Mathieson family, which is Star's largest existing shareholder.
The proposal put to shareholders at a Sydney meeting was approved by more than 98 per cent of investors' proxy votes, according to company slides shown at the event that was live-streamed. The final result of the vote will be announced later on Wednesday.
Bally's said it has applied to the New South Wales and Queensland governments and regulators for approval to run casinos.
'We look forward to the completion of our probity review so that we can get on with the critical mission to put The Star on a sustainable path,' Soo Kim, Bally's chairman, said in a text message after the vote.
'We are raring to get on with it.'
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Australia's second-largest casino operator after Blackstone-controlled Crown Resorts, Star has been struggling to stay afloat amid a growing debt crisis and regulatory investigations over the past two years.
The rescue deal consists of multi-tranche convertible notes and subordinated debt instruments, and after the notes are converted, Bally's and the Mathieson family will control around 56 per cent of Star's issued capital.
Star chairman Anne Ward said the company had no other option than to support the Bally's-led bid after interest from Oaktree and Salters Brothers collapsed earlier this year.
'The strategic investments ... provide cash funding and assist Star's ability to continue as a going concern, helping to avoid outcomes such as voluntary administration, which is likely not in the best interests of shareholders,' Ward told the meeting.
Star said in March that it would sell half of its A$3.6 billion Queen's Wharf project in Brisbane to Hong Kong companies Far East Consortium International and Chow Tai Fook Enterprises for just A$53 million. It has also sold a theatre attached to its main casino in inner-city Sydney as part of its efforts to stay afloat.
Bally's owns 19 casinos across 11 US states, according to its website, and the Star investment is its first in Australia. REUTERS
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