Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Colorado's Vail Resorts To Buy Whistler-Blackcomb For $1.4-Billion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Aug, 2016 10:04 AM
    VANCOUVER — Whistler Blackcomb Holdings, the owner of one of Canada's biggest and most popular ski resorts, is being sold to Colorado-based Vail Resorts under a friendly deal the two companies announced Monday.
     
    Dave Brownlie, CEO of Whistler Blackcomb Holdings, said the takeover would help his company fulfil its plans to grow and give it greater marketing exposure.
     
    "Whistler Blackcomb has enjoyed tremendous success by delivering an exceptional mountain experience for our passionate and loyal guests — both locally and from around the world," Brownlie said in a statement.
     
    "That's going to continue as we work with our new colleagues at Vail Resorts as well as our employees, local businesses, community and government stakeholders to make Whistler Blackcomb better than ever."
     
    When it opened in 1966, the Whistler resort featured a four-person gondola, a double chairlift and a day lodge. It has since grown to become one of the premier ski destinations in North America, serving as a host site for the Olympic Winter Games in 2010.
     
     
     
    Vail Resorts CEO Rob Katz said he is committed to further expanding the all-season resort, located about 125 kilometres north of Vancouver.
     
    "Whistler Blackcomb is one of the most iconic mountain resorts in the world with an incredible history, passionate employees and a strong community," he said in a statement.
     
    "With our combined experience and expertise, together we will build upon the guest experience at Whistler Blackcomb while preserving the unique brand and character of the resort as an iconic Canadian destination for guests around the world."
     
    Whistler Blackcomb (TSX:WB) shareholders are being offered C$676 million of cash and Vail stock (NYSE:MTN) worth about C$715 million, making the deal worth nearly C$1.4 billion when it was announced.
     
     
     
    Whistler Blackcomb shares closed in Toronto on Friday at C$25.14 — giving it a market value of about C$960 million prior to Monday's announcement.
     
    Shares of Whistler Blackcomb jumped to a new all-time high when markets opened Monday, rising above C$36 per share in Toronto. In New York, Vail Resorts stock was also trading at the highest in at least a decade, trading at about US$150 shortly after the open.
     
    Vail Resorts operates nine mountain resorts and two ski areas in the U.S. and Australia.
     
    The deal is expected to close this fall.
     
    DOWN THE HALF-PIPE: A LOOK AT WHISTLER BLACKCOMB, OWNER OF FAMED SKI HILL RESORT
     
    History: A group of businessmen from Vancouver led by Franz Wilhelmsen established Garibaldi Lifts Limited in 1960 in the hopes of developing an alpine ski area on London Mountain. That mountain was later renamed Whistler Mountain in tribute to a local marmot that whistled. In January 1966, the hill opened to the public, featuring a four-person gondola, a double chairlift, two T-bars and a day lodge.
     
     
    Tale of the Tape: Whistler Blackcomb employs about 3,800 people. Its resort features more than 100 marked runs, a mile-high vertical drop and 1,925 hectares of skiable area — about five times the size of Vancouver's Stanley Park.
     
    The Buyer: Vail Resorts operates nine mountain resorts and two ski areas in Colorado, Utah, California, Nevada, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan and Australia.
     
    Interesting Fact: From royalty to pot-smoking Olympians, many have graced Whistler's hills, including Prince William, Demi Moore, Ashton Kutcher and Ross Rebagliati, the world's first snowboard gold medallist at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Japan.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Boxing Legend To Be Remembered Today At Calgary Memorial

    Boxing Legend To Be Remembered Today At Calgary Memorial
    The boxing legend converted to Islam in the mid-1960s, changing his name from Cassius Clay.

    Boxing Legend To Be Remembered Today At Calgary Memorial

    Some Vancouver Companies Lure, Retain Workers With Jobs That Make A Difference

    Some Vancouver Companies Lure, Retain Workers With Jobs That Make A Difference
    VANCOUVER — As Michelle Reid watches Vancouver house prices soar while preparing for the arrival of her first baby, she sometimes kicks herself for not buying property 10 years ago

    Some Vancouver Companies Lure, Retain Workers With Jobs That Make A Difference

    No Escorted Temporary Absences For Man Convicted In Jane Creba Slaying

    No Escorted Temporary Absences For Man Convicted In Jane Creba Slaying
    Jorrell Simpson-Rowe was one of four people found guilty in Jane Creba's death.

    No Escorted Temporary Absences For Man Convicted In Jane Creba Slaying

    Inside The Vote: How The Liberals Convinced A Hesitant Caucus To Support C-14

    Inside The Vote: How The Liberals Convinced A Hesitant Caucus To Support C-14
    OTTAWA — Doug Eyolfson did not love the physician-assisted dying bill at first, but he ended up supporting it.

    Inside The Vote: How The Liberals Convinced A Hesitant Caucus To Support C-14

    Christian University Takes Fight Over Law School To Top Courts In Ontario, B.C.

    Christian University Takes Fight Over Law School To Top Courts In Ontario, B.C.
    TORONTO — A private Christian university that forbids sexual intimacy outside heterosexual marriage will be in Ontario's top court this week, seeking a green light for its proposed law school after the province's law society denied it accreditation.

    Christian University Takes Fight Over Law School To Top Courts In Ontario, B.C.

    Prominent Developer Amarjit Singh Sandhu, 56, Dead After 'Targeted' Shooting In Richmond

    Prominent Developer Amarjit Singh Sandhu, 56, Dead After 'Targeted' Shooting In Richmond
    Sandhu was rushed to hospital where he later died. At the scene, several bullet holes could be seen in the driver's side door of a black pickup truck.

    Prominent Developer Amarjit Singh Sandhu, 56, Dead After 'Targeted' Shooting In Richmond