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Street Talk

Star launches $750m equity raise at 60¢ a share

Embattled casino operator The Star Entertainment Group rolled the dice on a $750 million equity raise priced at 60¢ a share on Monday evening, after Street Talk revealed preparations for the cash call on Sunday.

Star last raised $800 million in February at $1.20 a share. Oscar Colman

The offer price was a 20 per cent discount to Star’s 75¢ last traded price. It is also substantially lower than the $1.20 a share at which Star last tapped equity capital markets for $800 million in February.

The latest equity raise is split into a $161 million placement and a $589 million rights issue. The latter was on a one-for-1.65 pro rata accelerated non-renounceable entitlement offer.

Barrenjoey was mandated as the sole broker. King & Wood Mallesons acted as Star’s legal adviser.

As flagged by Street Talk, Star has also secured a $450 million debt package backed by Westpac and Barclays. Together, the equity and debt package would eliminate Star’s existing loans, which were part bank debt/part US private placement bonds. It would also bankroll Star’s costs at Queen’s Wharf in Brisbane.

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Star has previously estimated project costs of $2.9 billion. It has been a dispute with the builder, Multiplex, which has delayed construction. It is now slated for a phased opening from April 2024.

It comes after harrowing full-year results, where Star posted a $2.44 billion loss, mostly thanks to the $2.17 billion written off the value of its casinos. It had only $43.8 million in cash flow from operating activities, down from $176.2 million in the much quieter (for casinos) 2022 fiscal year.

Key financials were all by far the worst since Star was spun out of Tabcorp and listed on the ASX in June 2011.

Sarah Thompson has co-edited Street Talk since 2009, specialising in private equity, investment banking, M&A and equity capital markets stories. Prior to that, she spent 10 years in London as a markets and M&A reporter at Bloomberg and Dow Jones. Email Sarah at sarah.thompson@afr.com
Kanika Sood is a journalist based in Sydney who writes for the Street Talk column. Email Kanika at kanika.sood@afr.com.au
Emma Rapaport is a co-editor of the Street Talk column. Prior to that, she was a markets reporter at The Australian Financial Review. Connect with Emma on Twitter. Email Emma at emma.rapaport@afr.com

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