TOP MGM EXECUTIVE RETIRING
21 November 2008
Pro-internet gambling executive is 65 years old
The chairman and chief executive of the US giant land
gambling group MGM Mirage, J. Terrence Lanni (65) is to
retire at the end of this (November) month, a company
spokesman has announced. The resignation has nothing to
do with recent allegations of false educational claims
that have swirled around the veteran gambling executive,
Lanni and spokesmen emphasised.
Bloombergs reports that MGM Mirage is majority-owned by
billionaire Kirk Kerkorian, and that Lanni has
recommended to the board of directors that President and
Chief Operating Officer Jim Murren (47) is the ideal
executive to succeed him. Lanni hopes to remain on the
board.
"It's time for a younger generation to take over," Lanni
said in a telephone interview with the news agency. He
also cited a desire to spend more time with his family.
Later, he added in a company statement: “I believe it is
now time to step aside from full-time engagement and
turn over the reins to the new generation. Jim [Murren]
is fully equipped to lead the company through these
turbulent times in the global economy and take it to new
levels of growth and success.”
In a subsequent interview with the Las Vegas
Review-Journal, Lanni said: "Frankly, I came very close
to making this decision a year ago. The challenges that
we are facing as a company I believe are best addressed
by a younger person. Jim is the person to lead the
company."
Lanni served as chairman for more than 13 years,
expanding the company from one property in Las Vegas to
17 resorts worldwide. He oversaw MGM Grand Inc.'s
combination with Mirage Resorts in 2000 and Mandalay
Resort Group in 2005. The company had $7.7 billion in
revenue last year. Prior to joining MGM Mirage, Lanni
spent 18 years as a senior executive at Caesars World,
including 14 years as president and COO.
Lanni leaves as MGM Mirage and other casinos struggle
with the worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression, reports Bloombergs. Its shares have plunged
87 percent this year as it has tried to get enough cash
to cover loans and finish the $11.2-billion CityCenter
project on the Las Vegas Strip. The group saw its
third-quarter profit this year fall 67 percent from a
year ago. The company has undergone several cost
reduction measures, including corporate restructuring
and downsizing, and other strategic budgetary
initiatives.
MGM Mirage Senior Vice President of Public Affairs Alan
Feldman told the LVRJ: "Terry considered retirement -
and did in fact retire - almost ten years ago. It was
the unparalleled opportunities presented by the mergers
with Mirage Resorts (2000), Mandalay Resort Group (2005)
and the initial planning and development of CityCenter
that brought him back to the company.
"Further, the company has been actively implementing a
succession plan for almost 2 years including the
appointment of Jim Murren as COO more than a year ago."
Heir apparent Jim Murren joined MGM Grand in 1998 as
chief financial officer after spending 14 years on Wall
Street as an equity analyst and managing director of
Deutsche Bank. Murren was named company president in
1999, prior to the buyout of Mirage Resorts. In 2007 he
relinquished his CFO duties to take on the
responsibilities of chief operating officer, overseeing
the day-to-day operations of the company's hotel and
casino properties as the second most senior exec in the
company.
Murren is well informed on company policies and
strategy, having served on the group management
committee with Lanni, MGM general counsel Gary Jacobs
and Chief Design and Construction executive Bob Baldwin.
According to LVRJ, Lanni will have a comfortable
retirement; in 2007 his basic salary was $2 million, to
which a further $10.7 million was added in incentives
and perks.
In a company statement, Murren said he was honoured that
Lanni had recommended him as his successor. "As a direct
result of Terry's leadership, we have a remarkable depth
of seasoned management." Murren said. "I am confident of
our company's ability to manage through the current
economy and emerge stronger, more vigorous and
well-positioned to capitalize on future opportunities as
the economy rebounds from its current slowdown."
MGM Mirage majority shareholder Kirk Kerkorian praised
Lanni and said he played a key role in the casino
operator's growth and expansion. "The company will
always be indebted to Terry for his many years of
leadership and wisdom," said Kerkorian, a 91-year-old
Los Angeles billionaire who controls about 53 percent of
the company's shares. "We are delighted that he will
remain as a member of the board and that the company
will have available his wealth of experience and
institutional knowledge."
MGM Mirage controls 10 Strip resorts, including MGM
Grand, Bellagio, The Mirage and Mandalay Bay. The
company operates 44 percent of the Strip's available
hotel rooms. In total, MGM Mirage owns and operates 17
resorts in Nevada, Mississippi and Michigan. It has 50
percent partnerships in four other properties in Nevada,
New Jersey, Illinois and Macau.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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