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Hospitality baron Fertitta expands leisure push with $18 billion Caesars buyout

By Thomson Reuters May 28, 2026 | 6:14 AM

By Anshuman Tripathy

May 28 (Reuters) – Hospitality billionaire Tilman Fertitta’s firm will buy Caesars Entertainment in a $17.6 billion deal, the companies said on Thursday, expanding his leisure empire.

The deal, which will take one of the Las ​Vegas Strip’s most prized casino operators private, includes about $11.9 billion in ‌assumed debt, the companies said.

Shares of the casino operator were up 1.6% in morning trading and have gained about 16% since the deal was first reported in February.

Caesars faces mounting pressure as fewer visitors to Las Vegas — its core market — dent revenue at resorts, hotels and casinos, ‌while ​its online betting arm trails larger rivals like ⁠FanDuel and DraftKings and faces ⁠growing competition from prediction markets.

Fertitta, the U.S. ambassador to Italy and San Marino and owner of Fertitta Entertainment, offered $31 per share — a nearly 50% premium to the stock’s closing price before the deal was first reported and about ​8% to its last close on Wednesday.

Caesars merged with smaller rival Eldorado Resorts in 2020 to form one of the biggest casino and entertainment companies ⁠in the U.S.

The group runs more than 50 ⁠casinos across North America — including Caesars Palace, Harrah’s and Eldorado — ​and a retail and online sports-betting platform.

Meanwhile, Fertitta Entertainment owns the Golden Nugget Hotel ​and Casinos, the NBA’s Houston Rockets and — through its restaurant and ‌hospitality arm — more than 600 properties across 15 countries.

If completed, the acquisition would add Caesars’ vast footprint to Fertitta’s entertainment and hospitality empire, with the combined casino holdings likely to become a key focus for regulators.

TD Cowen analyst Lance Vitanza, ⁠however, said, “The deal appears more likely than not to receive the necessary approvals given Fertitta’s role in the current administration.”

The billionaire donated actively to President Donald Trump’s 2024 ⁠campaign.

Caesars’ top executives, including ‌CEO Tom Reeg and CFO Bret Yunker, are expected to ⁠stay on. The deal includes a “go-shop” period through July ​11, allowing ‌Caesars to weigh alternative proposals.

Macquarie analyst Chad Beynon views ​the likelihood ⁠of a competing bid as low, citing a robust premium, deal size and regulatory complexity.

Morningstar’s Dan Wasiolek agreed, noting that peers Las Vegas Sands, MGM and Wynn each hold only a few billion in cash and face heavy capex commitments to expand in existing and new markets.

(Reporting by Anshuman Tripathy in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi ​Majumdar and Vijay Kishore)