People Inc. Bids $48.30 Per Share for MGM. The Stock Already Trades Above It.
Barry Diller's People Inc. offered $18 billion for MGM Resorts, but the market immediately priced the stock past the bid, which tells you everything about what Wall Street thinks this offer is actually worth.
$48.30 per share. That's People Inc.'s opening bid for the roughly 74% of MGM Resorts it doesn't already own. The implied enterprise value sits around $18 billion. MGM closed above $50 on the news. The spread between offer and market price is the market's way of saying: not enough.
Let's decompose this. People Inc. already holds 26% of MGM's voting shares. At $48.30, the actual cash outlay for the remaining stake is approximately $9.2 billion. The implied EV/EBITDAR multiple lands around 5.5x on 2027 projected earnings. Two weeks ago, Fertitta's bid for Caesars priced at 6.6x. Apply that same multiple to MGM and you're looking at something closer to $83.85 per share. The gap between $48.30 and $69 is not a rounding error. It's $5.3 billion in equity value that Diller is hoping the board leaves on the table.
The timing is instructive. MGM just sold Northfield Park for $546 million, generating $420 million in net cash. Q1 revenue came in at $4.45 billion (beat), while EPS missed at $0.49. BetMGM continues to grow. The digital business is the part of this story that makes the 5.5x multiple look almost insulting... you're pricing a gaming company with a scaling digital sportsbook at a multiple below its brick-and-mortar peer. An owner I advised on a mixed-use deal once told me, "when someone offers to buy your best asset at your worst asset's price, they're not making a deal... they're making a bet you won't notice." That applies here.
The structural question is the BetMGM joint venture with Entain. It's a 50/50 split. A full People Inc. takeover restructures the governance around that asset, and Entain's interests don't automatically align with Diller's. Any valuation of MGM that doesn't independently price the digital business is incomplete. Stifel has MGM at $50-$55. Truist set a $55 target. Neither of those figures accounts for what a bidding war or a strategic premium for BetMGM control would do.
This is a first move, not a final offer. Diller knows the board will reject $48.30 (the stock already told him that). The real signal is that gaming's consolidation wave... Caesars, now MGM... is repricing the entire sector. For anyone holding gaming-adjacent hospitality assets, the comp set for your next appraisal just shifted. Check your cap rate assumptions against what acquirers are actually paying per dollar of EBITDAR. The answer may surprise you.
Let me be direct. If you're running a property inside the MGM portfolio or operating near one, the deal itself doesn't change your Monday morning. But the valuation math changes your Tuesday afternoon conversation with your owner. Gaming-sector M&A is repricing what hospitality assets are worth in mixed-use and entertainment corridors. If you're anywhere near a casino market... Las Vegas, Atlantic City, regional gaming hubs... pull your trailing 12-month NOI and run it against the multiples these deals are implying. Then bring that analysis to your ownership group before they read the headline and form their own opinion without your context. The operator who walks in with the comp set data and says "here's what this means for our asset" is the one who looks like they're running the business.