Dubai World, the sovereign wealth-backed investor and joint venture partner in MGM Mirage’s CityCenter development project, has sued the casino operator for breach of contract following the debt-strapped company’s disclosure earlier that it was at risk of defaulting on its loans.
The disclosure by the US company controlled by Kirk Kerkorian in early March, which also included a warning of a “substantial doubt about [MGM Mirage’s] ability to continue as a going concern” puts the $8.8bn luxury resort project in jeopardy, Dubai World said.
The current path of the project is simply unsustainable given our partner’s financial troubles,” Dubai World said in a statement announcing the suit.
The suit, filed in Delaware Chancery court, could compound MGM Mirage’s recent financial woes as the recession has left its gaming tables emptier, while frozen credit markets make refinancing any of its debt difficult.
Last week, the company reported fourth quarter revenue fell to $1.6bn from $1.9bn and a loss of $1.1bn from a profit of $872m a year ago.
The owner of some of the world’s best-known casinos, including Bellagio, MGM Grand and Mirage casinos in Las Vegas, faces $1.2bn of bonds that are due this year and another $1.2bn in 2010. It won an eleventh hour reprieve from lenders, giving it two months to raise cash from new debt, its controlling shareholder or asset sales.
Dubai World’s statement said that costs had been “significantly over budget despite downsizing certain of the facilities”. It said: “This has caused Infinity World to make capital contributions far in excess of the levels originally estimated by MGM.”
Infinity World, a subsidiary of Dubai World, which invested $4.3bn in the project, filed the lawsuit.
By Dubai World’s recounting, MGM Mirage’s initial $7.5bn estimate on the cost of building CityCenter, the massive luxury resort, shopping mall and residential complex between the Bellagio and Monte Carlo resorts on the Las Vegas Strip, underestimated the cost by $1.3bn. MGM Mirage’s $1.8bn in financing fell far short of an anticipated $5bn financing package.
Felicia Hendrix, a Barclays analyst, said the legal action “raises questions about Dubai World and MGM’s long term relationship”, despite MGM Mirage management’s declarations last week that the relationship was “outstanding”.
Dubai World and MGM Mirage, of which it owns 9.4 per cent, have been close partners.
MGM Mirage declined to comment and Dubai World was not available for further comment.
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