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People Inc. Offers $48.30 Per Share to Take MGM Private. The Market Already Says It's Not Enough.

Barry Diller's People Inc. wants to buy the rest of MGM Resorts at a $18.8 billion valuation, but the stock closed above the offer price on day one, which tells you everything about where this negotiation is actually headed.

People Inc. Offers $48.30 Per Share to Take MGM Private. The Market Already Says It's Not Enough.

MGM Resorts closed at $50.69 on June 1, the day People Inc. confirmed its $48.30 per share go-private offer. The stock is trading above the bid. That's not enthusiasm for the deal as structured. That's the market pricing in a bump.

Let's decompose this. People Inc. already owns 26.1% of MGM's common stock. The offer values the full enterprise at roughly $18.8 billion including debt. MGM reported $4.5 billion in net revenue for Q1 2026 alone. Annualize that (conservatively, since Q1 included strong Macau GGR and Strip performance), and you're looking at a company generating north of $17 billion in revenue being taken out at roughly 1.1x trailing revenue. JPMorgan pegs fair value closer to $55 per share. Stifel agrees the bid is low, particularly when you compare the implied multiple against the Fertitta-Caesars deal announced days earlier at $17.6 billion. Two major casino operators going private in the same week isn't coincidence. It's a thesis... that public market valuations are structurally discounting physical gaming assets and digital optionality (BetMGM contributed 6% of revenue mix but is the fastest-growing segment).

The risk allocation here is worth examining. Diller and former IAC CEO Joey Levin both sit on MGM's board. Diller initiated this position six years ago at materially lower prices. A 26.1% holder making a go-private bid while occupying a board seat creates a governance dynamic that MGM's independent directors will need to navigate carefully. The 24% premium over May 29 pricing sounds generous until you note that the 90-day VWAP premium exceeds 30%, which means the stock was depressed relative to intrinsic value for months. Buying at a "premium" to a trough is a different proposition than buying at a premium to fair value.

For the owner side of the hotel equation, the interesting question is what happens to MGM's $42.2 billion asset base under private ownership. Public companies face quarterly earnings pressure that distorts capital allocation. A private MGM could accelerate the Osaka integrated resort timeline, restructure the VICI Properties lease arrangements without market scrutiny, or consolidate BetMGM's economics more aggressively. It could also strip costs in ways that a public board wouldn't approve. Private ownership removes the reporting discipline. Whether that's liberation or risk depends entirely on which side of the capital stack you're sitting on.

The consensus analyst target before this bid was $47.02. The offer is $1.28 above consensus. That's not a premium for control... that's rounding error. I've audited enough take-private transactions to know that a bid trading underwater on day one typically moves 10-15% before close (if it closes at all). The 22 analysts rating this a "Hold" are collectively saying: this company is worth more than what's on the table. The question is whether Diller agrees, or whether he's anchoring low and waiting for the board to negotiate against itself.

Operator's Take

Here's who should be paying attention: if you're an operator at any MGM-managed or MGM-branded property, the ownership structure above you may be about to change, and that changes the capital plan, the renovation timeline, and the management philosophy. Private owners optimize differently than public ones. I've seen this movie at three different casino companies. The first 18 months after a take-private, discretionary CapEx gets reviewed line by line, staffing models get pressure-tested, and anything that doesn't produce measurable returns gets cut or deferred. Don't wait for the memo. Pull your property's capital plan now, identify which projects are approved but not yet started, and build your case for why each one is essential... because someone new is about to ask that question, and you want the answer ready before they do.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: MGM Resorts
🏢 Caesars Entertainment 📊 Capital allocation 👤 Fertitta family 👤 Joey Levin 🏢 JPMorgan 🌍 Las Vegas Strip 🌍 Macau gaming market 🏢 Stifel 👤 Barry Diller 📊 Gaming asset valuation 📊 Go-private transactions 🏢 MGM Resorts International 🏢 People Inc.
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.