By Matt Wirz And Matt Jarzemsky 

BlackRock Inc. gave up its leadership role in negotiating a debt-restructuring plan for Caesars Entertainment Corp.'s largest unit Thursday night, people familiar with the matter said. The move prompted the disclosure of hundreds of pages of documents about confidential discussions with the casino giant in the latest twist in the complicated and high-stakes talks.

BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, stepped down from a steering committee of senior bondholders because it deemed a tentative deal Caesars reached with the bondholder group unsatisfactory for holders of Caesars's loans, which BlackRock also holds in some of its funds, according to people familiar with the matter.

By making the confidential information it had received public, BlackRock also freed itself up to trade Caesars's securities. Creditors aren't permitted to trade during confidential negotiations when they have access to inside information about a company.

The law firm that released the documents Thursday night didn't identify BlackRock as the bondholder that prompted the disclosure.

Caesars is trying to get enough creditors to back a restructuring plan for the unit, Caesars Entertainment Operating Co., before a mid-January interest-payment deadline, according to people familiar with the negotiations. The tentative deal the company reached Thursday with the bondholder group would convert it into a real-estate investment trust, which would be largely owned by the senior bondholders and loan holders.

A group negotiating on behalf of the loan holders disclosed details of the restructuring talks Thursday evening in a so-called cleansing of its own, but the BlackRock release was far larger. The 475-page file gives a blow-by-blow account of the negotiation process that began in September.

While BlackRock resigned from the bondholder group's steering committee, it remains a member of the broader group, the people said. The decision to stay involved in some capacity shows the fine line large asset managers often walk in complex restructurings when they hold multiple types of a company's debt.

It also highlights the difficulty Caesars is facing in trying to reach an agreement with creditor groups that, at times, may have conflicting interests. Caesars Entertainment Operating Co. has about $18.4 billion in debt, much of which is held by hedge funds that buy the debt of troubled companies.

Despite the overnight developments, Caesars's deal with the bondholder group remains intact, people with knowledge of the talks said. The company is trying to formalize a so-called restructuring support agreement with the group by early next week, they added.

The status of the company's negotiations with the loan holders, however, is less clear. In a statement late Thursday, a steering committee for the loan holders said Caesars hadn't reached an agreement with the bondholders that they find acceptable.

"Despite the release of information by certain holders of bank debt and a single holder of first-lien notes related to our negotiations, the company remains in active discussions with creditors in an effort to reach an agreement in the near term," a Caesars spokesman said in an emailed statement. He declined to elaborate on which creditors are currently negotiating with the company.

Caesars took on a heavy debt load as a result of its 2008 leveraged buyout by private-equity firms Apollo Global Management LLC and TPG. The business, formerly known as Harrah's Entertainment Inc., was also hobbled by the financial crisis, the collapsing gambling industry in Atlantic City, N.J., and the company's failure to get a foothold in the Chinese gambling hub of Macau.

Multiple creditor groups have sued the company, saying it engaged in improper financial maneuvering as it fought to stave off bankruptcy. Caesars has said the suits are without merit.

Write to Matt Wirz at matthieu.wirz@wsj.com and Matt Jarzemsky at matthew.jarzemsky@wsj.com

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