Coinstar headed to Alaska buyer as Apollo sells it to repay outstanding bonds

- Coinstar is being sold by Apollo to Alaska’s Arctic Slope Regional Corp.
- ASRC will repay over $750 million in debt and interest in January.
- Creditors had restructured Coinstar’s debt in 2023 due to financial struggles.
Coinstar is being sold in a deal that will clear its debt in one sweep. The coin-exchange and crypto kiosk operator, owned by Apollo Global Management, has agreed to a surprise sale that triggers a full bond repayment next month.
According to Bloomberg, people familiar with the matter allegedly say the buyer is tied to Alaska Native investments from the far north of the state.
The transaction has not been made public before. The buyer is Arctic Slope Regional, a company created in 1972 after a US government settlement with Indigenous residents of Alaska.
Debt repayment clears path as Alaska Native company takes control
As part of the takeover, the new owner will repay more than $750 million in principal, plus all accrued interest, in early January. A private notice sent to bondholders confirmed the timeline, according to Bloomberg.
The bonds involved in the Coinstar deal are structured as whole business securitizations, meaning they are backed by the full cash flow of the exchange.
Some analysts later worried the debt might need another overhaul if pressure on Coinstar’s business continued, but the planned repayment reportedly removes that risk.
Arctic Slope Regional (ASRC) oversees a wide mix of portfolios that include construction, petroleum refining, and government contract services, based on information published by the company.
ASRC is one of roughly a dozen regional corporations formed under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, passed in the early 1970s, which granted millions of acres of land and $1 billion in compensation to Alaska Native groups in exchange for land claims.
Coinstar entered Apollo’s portfolio in 2016, running over 24,000 kiosks that let users turn loose change into cash. After the pandemic slowdown, Coinstar pushed deeper into digital assets. Last year, it began letting customers use cash to buy cryptocurrency through kiosks or a mobile app. The sale now hands control of Coinstar to an Alaska-based owner while closing the book on its bond debt.
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Jai Hamid
Jai Hamid has been covering crypto, stock markets, technology, the global economy, and the geopolitical events that affect markets for the past 6 years. She has worked with blockchain-focused publications including AMB Crypto, Coin Edition, and CryptoTale on market analyses, major companies, regulation, and macroeconomic trends. She has attended London School of Journalism and thrice shared crypto market insights on one of Africa’s top TV networks.
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