The new company resulting from Fertitta Entertainment‘s acquisition of Caesars Entertainment would own four of Atlantic City’s nine casinos, a move set to reshape the local market and that has fueled concerns of concentration.

Fertitta Entertainment, the parent company of Golden Nugget Atlantic City, announced Thursday it would be acquiring the Las Vegas casino giant in an all-cash deal valued at about $17.6 billion, including roughly $11.9 billion in assumed debt.

In Atlantic City, the deal raised immediate questions about regulatory review and potential divestitures. The properties under the new ownership structure would include Golden Nugget Atlantic City, Caesars Atlantic City, Harrah’s Resort Atlantic City, and Tropicana Atlantic City.

While New Jersey regulators have previously allowed a single operator to hold as many as four casinos when the market included 12 properties, it remains unclear whether current oversight authorities would require the company to sell off one or more casinos to maintain competitive balance.

Officials have also not indicated whether the newly formed company would proactively divest any of its Atlantic City holdings as part of the transaction.

The Casino Control Act, the law governing casino gambling in New Jersey, has a clause prohibiting “undue economic concentration.” However, the legislation does not define a specific number of casinos one entity can own, nor a percentage of the market that can be owned. 

David Katz, an analyst at Jefferies, said a key question is how the new company will deal with “notable overlap” in multiple markets, including Atlantic City, reports The Press of Atlantic City. Regulators might seek to force the sale of some properties within a single market, the analyst suggested.

“In our view, the resolution of this long-rumored transaction could nonetheless act as a catalyst for additional deal activity,” he wrote in a note to investors.

Among locals, a key concern is whether Golden Nugget could end free parking for all customers, a trait that makes it unique in the Atlantic City market. In comparison, Caesars’ three casinos charge among the highest parking rates in the city.

Under the terms of the agreement, Caesars shareholders will receive $31 per share in cash, representing a 49% premium to the company’s unaffected share price as of Feb. 25, 2026, the last trading day before reports of a potential transaction emerged.

The Las Vegas-based casino operator’s board unanimously approved the deal and recommended shareholders vote in favor of the merger agreement.

Original article: https://www.yogonet.com/international/news/2026/05/29/122180-caesars-buyout-would-expand-fertittas-footprint-to-four-atlantic-city-casinos-raising-concentration-concerns