Thursday, March 19, 2009

As Jay Leno says: "You know the economy is bad... when Terrible Herbstsin Las Vegas is filing bankruptcy.


Herbst Gaming said today it has reached an agreement with lenders to file for Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection and split the company in two, with bank lenders becoming equity owners of Herbst's casinos and the Herbst family receiving 90 percent of equity in a separate slot route company in exchange for a new gaming device license agreement.
The reorganized casino company would own 10 percent of the equity in the new slot route business.
The restructuring effort will help protect employees' jobs, ensure that vendors are paid in full and allow the company to continue functioning "on a 'business as usual' basis" throughout the bankruptcy process, Herbst Chief Executive Officer Troy Herbst said in a statement.
The Las Vegas company, which employs 5,400, owns 12 casinos in Nevada, two in Missouri and one in Iowa. The company has been pummeled by a downturn that has hurt budget properties and cost-conscious consumers – the primary business at its Terrible's-brand casinos and slot machines the company operates in bars, grocery stores, gas stations and other small slots locations.
Herbst began negotiations with lenders after missing debt payments last year. The effects of the economic slump were compounded by an ill-timed purchase in 2007 of Primm's three casinos, which piled on hundreds of millions in debts as earnings fell.
While the company continues to generate positive cash flow, it has "more debt than our operations can support," Herbst said. Herbst said vendors will be paid under the same terms throughout the bankruptcy process, including vendors that supplied goods and services immediately prior to the forthcoming Chapter 11 filing.

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