Posted on 03/20/2016 10:52:40 PM PDT by CutePuppy
New York's famous Plaza Hotel is set to go on sale in an auction next month and experts believe that the five-star hotel could sell for more than $1billion.
Billionaire brothers David and Simon Reuben hold the mortgage for the storied five-star hotel and scheduled a foreclosure auction for April 26. The auction was prompted after the hotel's 75 per cent owner Sahara India Pariwar — whose chairman went to prison in 2014 for defrauding investors — defaulted on loan agreements... < snip >
Foreign investors are pouring capital into New York hotels at a historic rate. Much of the new capital is flowing from Chinese investors. According to JLL's hotels experts, Chinese could account for $5 billion worth of global hotel sales in 2015. ..... < snip >
(Excerpt) Read more at ftnnews.com ...
From a long but very informative article What Donald Trump's Plaza Deal Reveals About His White House Bid - NYT, by David Segaljan, 2016 January 16
..... Mr. Trump quickly agreed to a price of slightly more than $400 million, an unprecedented sum for a hotel at the time. Just a few years later, the Plaza wound up in bankruptcy protection, part of a vast and humiliating restructuring of some $900 million of personal debt that Mr. Trump owed to a consortium of banks. Never one for regrets, Mr. Trump today regards the purchase as a triumph. ..... < snip > ..... In the Plaza tale, Mr. Trump demonstrated both strengths (an ability to charm or strong-arm, as the occasion required) and weaknesses (a kind of hungry impatience that left him searching for new trophies as soon as one had been acquired). ..... < snip > In fact, the more you know about Mr. Trump's past, the more his run for high office looks like an effort to close the biggest deal of his life. "He has the ability to imagine what the other party wants him to be and then be that person," said Michael D'Antonio... "He presents the Trump that will work in the moment." ..... < snip > ..... There was, for instance, the moment in 1984 when he told The Washington Post he could handle the United States' side of nuclear arms talks with the Soviets. "It would take an hour and a half to learn everything there is to learn about missiles," he boasted. "I think I know most of it anyway." ..... < snip > Huge Debt, Lost Prize ..... Opinion was split over the merits of the deal. Among the many who thought that Donald Trump had overpaid was Donald Trump. ..... < snip > By 1990, the Plaza needed an operating profit of $40 million a year to break even, according to financial records that Mr. Trump disclosed at the time. The hotel had fallen well short of that goal, and with renovating expenses, in one year it burned through $74 million more than it brought in. But Mr. Trump didn't spend a lot of time sweating over the Plaza's finances. He was too busy with new challenges. A few months after the Plaza deal closed, he purchased the Eastern Air Shuttle for $365 million, and in 1990, he opened the Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost $1 billion to build. Some of the loans he took out to pay for deals were personally guaranteed. "The fact is, you do feel invulnerable," Mr. Trump told Timothy O'Brien, author of "Trump Nation," discussing this period in his life. "And then you have a tendency to take your eye off the ball a little bit and hunt around for women. And hunt around for models." A lack of focus was not Mr. Trump's only problem. The updraft in the real estate market of the '80s turned into a headwind by the early '90s, and more than $3 billion in loans $900 million of which were personally guaranteed went into default. Dozens of banks came calling and, after lengthy negotiations, a meeting was held in a large conference room in the law offices of Weil, Gotshal & Manges, the firm that represented the largest lender, Citibank. There, some 50 bankers and lawyers watched Mr. Trump sign over nearly all of his properties the Plaza, other buildings, the shuttle, the yacht, the jet in exchange for more favorable terms on his personal guarantees. The banks could have easily toppled Mr. Trump into personal bankruptcy, "but we all agreed that he'd be better alive than dead," said Alan Pomerantz, then head of the real estate department at Weil. "We needed him to help sell all of his assets, and the deal was that as he sold off more, we'd reduce his personal guarantee." In effect, the banks allowed Mr. Trump to remain solvent so that they could get the benefit of his gift for salesmanship. In exchange, the banks provided him with $450,000 a month to operate his business and cover personal expenses. It was so tight a leash that when Marla Maples, his girlfriend at the time, turned up on television waving the costly Harry Winston diamond she'd been given as an engagement ring, the paymasters wanted a word with the groom-to-be. ..... < snip > ..... None of the proceeds went to Mr. Trump, according to several people involved. Still, he told me that the sale was yet another victory. The terms were, to use one of his favorite words, fantastic, and relieved him of a vast personal debt. ..... Of course, it cost the Saudi-Singapore partnership $75 million less than Mr. Trump had spent for the same building seven years earlier. Mr. Trump also claimed in the interview that he owned 100 percent of the Plaza until the day it was sold, a version of events totally at odds with published reports at the time and the recollections of others involved in the deal. ..... < snip > ..... This may be yet another parallel to Mr. Trump's performance on the hustings, where he has bent the truth into so many outlandish shapes that PolitiFact anointed his entire campaign the 2015 Lie of the Year. ..... < snip >
The day Donald Trump called and asked for a one-on-one meeting in the winter of 1988, Tom Barrack was a relative newcomer to the high-stakes poker game of New York real estate. He had worked for nearly two years for Robert Bass, the Texas billionaire investor, and had played an important role in winning the Plaza Hotel for his boss the year before. Mr. Trump was the country's most quotable and ostentatious financial celebrity, a guy with a jet, a 282-foot yacht and a fondness for peach-toned marble. ..... < snip >
Of course, these days the renamed and re-branded Trump Organization is all about branding and licensing Trump name, not building things it's safer, and keeps the rich celebrities... well, rich and celebrated, e.g.:
From Trump golf club in Puerto Rico files for bankruptcy - CNBC, by Karma Allen, 2015 July 13
Owned by developer Empresas Diaz, the club uses the Trump name under a licensing agreement. Donald Trump does not own the club. "We merely licensed our name for a fee and have nothing to do with the ownership, development or entity," Eric Trump, executive vice president of The Trump Organization and son of Donald Trump, said in a statement. ..... < snip > ..... In 2014, Trump Entertainment Resorts, a Trump-branded casino in Atlantic City, filed for bankruptcy protection due to declining revenue and increased competition. The Trump International Golf Club Puerto Rico, which bears the name of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, filed for bankruptcy protection Monday, court documents show.
Well, it won’t be the Arabs....their oil money is dwindling. The Chinese will quickly move in and pick it up without a lot of bidders.
Bmk for comments
So many more reasons to diversify, especially for sovereign funds "Investors from Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Malaysia and Singapore, to name a few, have also proven willing to move outside their traditional comfort zones in trophy office properties and into the U.S. hotel sector." ...
That said, Chinese have been very active of late in the trophy real-estate acquisitions and, [even] with their own markets crashing, have more than enough interest in diversification and yuans to outbid anybody.
The “Trump Presidential Plaza New York” has a ring to it
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plaza_Hotel
“”Donald Trump bought the Plaza Hotel for $407.5 million in 1988 (equivalent of $814 million today). Trump commented on his purchase in a full-page open letter he published in The New York Times: “I haven’t purchased a building, I have purchased a masterpiece the Mona Lisa. For the first time in my life, I have knowingly made a deal that was not economic for I can never justify the price I paid, no matter how successful the Plaza becomes.”
After Trump’s divorce from Ivana Trump, who was the Plaza Hotel’s president, Trump sold the hotel for $325 million in 1995 (equivalent of $505 million today) to CDL Hotels International Ltd. and Saudi prince Al-Waleed bin Talal.[13] It was sold in 2004 for $675 million (equivalent of $846 million today) to Israeli-owned Manhattan-based developer, El Ad Properties.””
The banks could have easily toppled Mr. Trump into personal bankruptcy, "but we all agreed that he'd be better alive than dead," said Alan Pomerantz, then head of the real estate department at Weil. "We needed him to help sell all of his assets, and the deal was that as he sold off more, we'd reduce his personal guarantee." In effect, the banks allowed Mr. Trump to remain solvent so that they could get the benefit of his gift for salesmanship. In exchange, the banks provided him with $450,000 a month to operate his business and cover personal expenses. It was so tight a leash that when Marla Maples, his girlfriend at the time, turned up on television waving the costly Harry Winston diamond she'd been given as an engagement ring, the paymasters wanted a word with the groom-to-be. ..... < snip > ..... The banks shopped the Plaza around, without success, for a few years before finally selling it in a deal that valued it at $325 million to a partnership between Prince Alwaleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia and CDL Hotels International of Singapore in 1995. None of the proceeds went to Mr. Trump, according to several people involved. Still, he told me that the sale was yet another victory. ..... < snip > ..... more than $3 billion in loans $900 million of which were personally guaranteed went into default. Dozens of banks came calling and, after lengthy negotiations, a meeting was held in a large conference room in the law offices of Weil, Gotshal & Manges, the firm that represented the largest lender, Citibank. There, some 50 bankers and lawyers watched Mr. Trump sign over nearly all of his properties the Plaza, other buildings, the shuttle, the yacht, the jet in exchange for more favorable terms on his personal guarantees.
From The Backstory on Donald Trump's Four Bankruptcies - TSC, by Emily Stewart, 2015 September 15
..... Four years later, Trump and Ivana had split, and the hotel had millions of dollars in debt. ..... < snip > ..... In November 1992, the now-billionaire filed for bankruptcy protection for the Plaza after the hotel was unable to meet its debt service payments. A month later, federal bankruptcy judge Prudence Abraham approved a plan for Trump to reorganize more than $550 million in debt. As part of the restructuring and to receive easier payment terms, he gave a 49% stake in the property to Citibank (C) and five other lenders. He kept his post as chief executive without pay and no longer had a role in the day-to-day operations of the luxury hotel. Three years later, in 1995, Trump made a deal to sell the Plaza to Singapore-based international property and hotel conglomerate CDL Hotels International and Saudi Arabian Prince Walid bin Talal. The deal largely entailed buyers paying off most of $300 million owed to creditors, according to the New York Times. The last $25 million was to be converted to equity held by a Citibank-led consortium, and the buyers also agreed to pay down the first mortgage on the property, held by the Industrial Bank of Japan. 1992, Plaza Hotel
From By the Numbers: Donald Trump's $4.7 Billion in Bankruptcies - DR, by Jimmy Atkinson, 2015 July 30
Shortly after striking a deal on the Taj Mahal, Trump returned to bankruptcy court when he was unable to cover the interest payments related to a prominent Manhattan hotel. In 1988 Trump bought the Plaza Hotel, which overlooks Central Park, for approximately $390 million. That price tag represented an increase of more than 1,500 percent from the $25 million paid for the property just 13 years earlier by the Westin Hotel company. ..... < snip > ..... by 1992, the hotel's cash flows were insufficient to cover the interest on some $550 million in debt related to the purchase and subsequent renovations. Trump filed for bankruptcy in November 1992, and about five weeks later a judge approved a plan that called for Trump to give up 49 percent of his ownership in exchange for group of creditors included Citigroup and the Industrial Bank of Japan. As part of the restructuring, Trump stayed on as CEO of the hotel but was not paid a salary and did not have a role in the day-to-day operations of the hotel. Three years after filing for bankruptcy, Trump sold the Plaza for $325 million to a group that included a Singapore businessman and Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal. Trump remained a minority partner in the hotel following the sale, but didn't see a dime from the sale. Proceeds from the sale went to paying down the debt held by banks, which was reduced from about $300 million to $25 million. The remainder of the debt was converted into an equity stake. In 2012, Indian conglomerate Sahara Group paid $570 million for a 75 percent stake in the Plaza. ..... Bankruptcy #2: Plaza Hotel in 1992
..... Ultimately, the value of Trump's ownership stake in the reorganized companies was worth very little: Though Trump did receive $40.5 million when the post-bankruptcy Taj Mahal was sold, it came in the form of stock in THCR which ultimately experienced multiple bankruptcies of its own and today is close to worthless.
excerpt:
“...and more than $3 billion in loans $900 million of which were personally guaranteed went into default. Dozens of banks came calling ...There, some 50 bankers and lawyers watched Mr. Trump sign over nearly all of his properties the Plaza, other buildings, the shuttle, the yacht, the jet in exchange for more favorable terms on his personal guarantees.”
Well sure. But Ted Cruz did the wrong paperwork when he disclosed his $1.2 million loan with Goldman-Sachs and Citibank, so there!
YAWN...
If you owe a bank a million, they own you. If you owe a bank a billion, you own them.
So then its great the US has a 19 trillion dollar debt because we then own China?
At the very least, they have an enormous interest in the continued welfare and prosperity of the U.S.
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