Penn National Gaming
#3708
Rank
$2.83B
Marketcap
United States
Country
Mr. Jay A. Snowden (Pres, CEO & Director)
Ms. Felicia Rae Kantor Hendrix (Exec. VP & CFO)
Mr. Todd George (Exec. VP of Operations)
Summary
History
Background and early history
Beginning: Pitt Park Raceway, Inc. and the Pennsylvania National Turf Club
In 1967, Pennsylvania enacted a law allowing thoroughbred horse racing with parimutuel wagering. Two companies that later formed part of Penn National Gaming were founded in 1968 by groups seeking one of the four available racing licenses: Pitt Park Raceway, Inc., formed by several Erie area businessmen, and the Pennsylvania National Turf Club, established by a group of Central Pennsylvania investors. The Turf Club was awarded one of the licenses, and soon began construction on Penn National Race Course. The complex included a motor speedway, which held its first races in 1971, and the horse track, which opened in 1972.Pitt Park Raceway, meanwhile, was denied in its initial application, but received one of a second round of licenses issued in 1970. The first Pitt Park racing meet opened in 1971 at The Meadows, an existing harness racing track. Pitt Park lost half a million dollars in its first meet, leading its owners to sell the company to a group of investors, including Philadelphia insurance businessman Peter D. Carlino. After another unsuccessful season at The Meadows, Pitt Park changed its name to the Mountainview Thoroughbred Racing Association and moved to Penn National Race Course. Starting in 1973, as a tenant of the Turf Club, Mountainview held 100 nights of racing there each year.
Reorganization and renaming to Penn National Gaming
In 1982, Carlino purchased Penn National Race Course from the financially struggling Turf Club. The Turf Club continued to operate its own racing meet each year, now as a tenant of Carlino.The companies involved with Penn National Race Course were reorganized in 1994 in preparation for an initial public offering. PNRC Corp., which had been incorporated in 1982, was renamed as Penn National Gaming, with Mountainview and the Turf Club as its subsidiaries. Carlino's son, Peter M. Carlino, who had earlier managed Mountainview, was Penn National's first CEO, a position he held until 2013. In May 1994, Penn National Gaming became a public company via an initial public offering on the Nasdaq, raising $18 million to pay down debt and fund construction of off-track betting parlors.
Expansion
Penn National expanded beyond its first racetrack with the acquisitions of Pocono Downs in 1996, Charles Town Races in 1997, and, in 1999, a half interest in Freehold Raceway and the operations of Garden State Park.The company acquired its first standalone casino properties in 2000, buying Casino Magic Bay St. Louis and Boomtown Biloxi from Pinnacle Entertainment for $201 million. This was followed in 2001 by the acquisition of Carnival Resorts & Casinos, including ownership of Casino Rouge in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and the management contract for Casino Rama in Ontario. Next, in 2002, it bought the Bullwhackers Casino in Black Hawk, Colorado from the Hilton Group for $6.5 million.In 2003, Penn National bought Hollywood Casino Corp. for $328 million plus $360 million in assumed debt, gaining three casinos in Aurora, Illinois; Tunica, Mississippi; and Shreveport, Louisiana. The acquisition, which doubled Penn National's revenues, was part of a continuing strategy to shift away from the horse racing business and into the casino business. The company planned to rebrand its other properties under the Hollywood Casino name.In 2005, Penn National acquired Argosy Gaming Company for $1.4 billion plus $791 million in assumed debt, adding five casinos and one horse track to its portfolio . The purchase again doubled Penn National's size, making it, at the time, the third largest publicly held gaming company in the country .In November 2006, a deal for Penn National Gaming to acquire Harrah's Entertainment fell through.In 2007, Penn National acquired the Zia Park racino in Hobbs, New Mexico for $200 million.An attempt in 2007 to take the company private with a $6.1 billion buyout fell through for prospective buyers Fortress Investment Group and Centerbridge Partners.In November 2012, Penn National announced a plan to spin off a new real estate investment trust with ownership of most of its properties, in an effort to reduce taxes and cost of capital, and overcome license ownership restrictions. The REIT owned the land and buildings for 21 of Penn National's 29 casinos and racetracks; Penn National continued to operate all but two of the properties under a lease agreement. The spin-off was completed on November 1, 2013, creating Gaming and Leisure Properties, Inc. . As of June 2022, the GLPI trust owned over 50 casino properties, which it leased to companies including Caesars Entertainment, Boyd Gaming Corp., Casino Queen, and Cordish Cos.In July 2013, Penn National sold the Bullwhackers Casino to a local investor group.In April 2015, the company agreed to purchase the Tropicana Las Vegas for $360 million.In August 2016, the company agreed to purchase Rocket Games for $60 million.In May 2017, Penn National acquired the operating assets of Bally's Casino Tunica and Resorts Casino Tunica for a total of $44 million, and leased the two casinos from GLPI, which had simultaneously purchased the real estate assets.In October 2018, the company acquired Pinnacle Entertainment for $2.8 billion in cash and stock. To ensure regulatory approval for the deal, Pinnacle sold four of its properties to Boyd Gaming prior to the merger. The result was the addition of twelve new properties to Penn National's holdings, all of them leased from GLPI. In connection with the sale, Penn National sold the real estate of Plainridge Park Casino to GLPI for $250 million.In 2019, Penn National made two purchases in conjunction with Vici Properties. Penn National bought the operating businesses of the Margaritaville Resort Casino in Louisiana and Greektown Casino–Hotel in Detroit for $115 million and $300 million, respectively, while Vici bought both properties' real estate assets and leased them to Penn.On January 29, 2020, the company purchased a 36% stake in Barstool Sports for $163 million. The company also has an option in the deal to increase its stake to control or full ownership in three years.During the COVID-19 pandemic, Penn faced the prospect of financial issues brought on by resort closures. As a result, Penn sold the land occupied by the Tropicana Las Vegas to GLPI. Penn sold the land for $337.5 million in rent credits, and the sale was finalized in April 2020. Penn continued to operate the Tropicana until 2022, when it was sold to Bally's Corporation. Throughout 2021, Penn launched its Barstool Sportsbook mobile app in twelve states. This included Pennsylvania, Michigan, Illinois, Iowa, New Jersey, and Indiana. The app provides online sports betting for 20 sports.In August 2021, Penn National agreed to acquire Score Media and Gaming Inc., a digital media company, for $2 billion. The companies have had a strategic partnership since 2019. Score Media operates theScore app, a top sports media app, which provides sports scores, news, and betting information to users.In September 2021, Penn National opened a career center at Hollywood Casino Morgantown.
Penn Entertainment
In February 2022, Penn National announced a strategic partnership with Sports Betting Exchange in Louisiana. In April 2022, theScore’s online sports betting platform and app, theScore Bet, started taking bets in Canada and became the official gaming partner of the Toronto Blue Jays.In August 2022, the company changed its name to Penn Entertainment to reflect its diversification into sports content and other entertainment. That same month, the company announced it was purchasing the remainder of the Barstool shares and taking full control of the digital media company.
Mission
Vision
Key Team
Ms. Harper H. Ko (Exec. VP, Chief Legal Officer & Sec.)
Ms. Christine LaBombard (Sr. VP & Chief Accounting Officer)
Mr. Richard Primus (Sr. VP & Chief Information Officer)
Mr. D. Eric Schippers (Sr. VP of Public Affairs & Chairman of the Penn National Gaming Foundation)
Ms. Jennifer Weissman (Sr. VP & Chief Marketing Officer)
Ms. Wendy Hamilton (Sr. VP & Chief HR Officer)
Mr. Albert T. Britton (Sr. VP of Regional Operations)
Recognition and Awards
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penn_Entertainment
https://in.investing.com/equities/penn-national-gaming-inc
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/PENN/profile?p=PENN
https://www.comparably.com/companies/penn-national-gaming/mission
https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/penn-national-gaming
https://sec.report/CIK/0000921738
Mr. Jay A. Snowden (Pres, CEO & Director)
Ms. Felicia Rae Kantor Hendrix (Exec. VP & CFO)
Mr. Todd George (Exec. VP of Operations)