Articles Posted in Hotel Finance − Hotel Debt & Hotel Equity

Published on:

Author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
7 January 2007
Hospitality Lawyer on hotel finance in 2007. We recently featured our annual expert panel talking about “How will you finance your hotel project in 2007?” Today, I am delighted to present the thoughts of Patrick O’Neal, one of the industry’s’ real lender icons, whether in workouts or CMBS loan production. Patrick has been a great friend and client for more years that either of us probably care to count, but I have always found Patrick’s thoughts, to be unnervingly candid, full of humor and remarkably “spot on” in terms of their accuracy. PNC Real Estate Finance and the hotel world are very lucky to have him! So what does Patrick have to add to the perspectives we have just enjoyed?

For all of our www.HotelLawBlog.com readers, and those who would like to meet Patrick — and our other leading hotel industry capital providers — you will want to join us for the 17th annual Meet the Money® conference on May 3, 2007 in Los Angeles. Sign up now.

CONTINUE READING →

Published on:

Author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
4 January 2007
Hospitality Lawyer on hotel finance in 2007. Debt and equity financing of hotels and hotel mixed-use projects is critical and can be very challenging. Our clients take hotel financing seriously, and so do we. That’s why we host the annual JMBM Industry Outlook Roundtable every January and our Meet the Money® conference every May.

With the legacy of Meet the Money® propelling us forward, I was delighted to join with leading hotel industry experts for JMBM’s “Outlook 2007, Hospitality Roundtable.” They reflected on a very interesting year just passed and pulled out their crystal balls to see what would happen in 2007. I am pleased to share their take on what’s going on with hotel finance with the readers of www.HotelLawBlog.com. Some of it might surprise you.

CONTINUE READING →

Published on:

Author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
28 November 2006

Click here for the latest articles on Condo Hotels

Condo Hotel Lawyer Las Vegas. On November 30, 2006, I will be participating in the first two opening general sessions of IMN’s Symposium on Financing, Developing and Operating Condo Hotels at the Mirage in Las Vegas, Nevada. This will be an interesting opportunity to compare notes and take the current pulse of the industry. Is the bloom off the rose? Can condo hotel deals still be done? Where is the opportunity now? How do you capture it? What are the pitfalls? How do you make a condo hotel deal work today?

Why are more than 550 people coming to a condo hotel symposium in late 2006??? Obviously there is a huge continuing interest in the condo hotel phenomenon, but is the model sustainable in the current environment? Unless there are unique features, great sponsorship and market validation? Where are we? What is happening?
CONTINUE READING →

Published on:

Author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
12 November 2006

Click here for the latest articles on Condo Hotels

Hotel Lawyer on How to have a blow out of hotel-enhanced residential mixed-use. Donald Trump seems to find himself surrounded by controversy — whether it involves his giant kiosk in Chicago, his huge American Flag at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach or his big “hole” in Manhattan’s Soho. But whatever you think of the man, you have to be impressed by the latest demonstration of his brand power at the Trump International Hotel & Tower in Waikiki. According to the story by Allison Schaefers in Saturday’s Honolulu Star Bulletin, Trump and his Los Angeles-based partner, Irongate, set a new world record for residential development sales — selling more than $700 million of luxury units in just 8 hours, and selling out all 464 hotel suites and residences in the first day of what had been planned as a two-day sales event.

The Trump-Irongate sell out surpassed what is claimed to be the prior record established by Intrawest last December when it sold $425 million, comprising 318 units, of the first phase of hits Maui resort development. What does this mean?

CONTINUE READING →

Published on:

Author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
9 October 2006
If you are like me, you already have events scheduled on your 2007 calendar! I hope you have saved dates for the two annual hospitality conferences sponsored by the Global Hospitality Group® at Jeffer, Mangels, Butler & Marmaro LLP.

The Hotel Developers Conference will be March 7-8, 2007.

Meet the Money® will be May 3, 2007

CONTINUE READING →

Published on:

Author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
22 September 2006

Click here for the latest articles on Condo Hotels

We have been called in after-the-fact many times by developers who have been given unworkable condo documents drafted by expert condo lawyers. The problem is that they were experts in condos, but had scant experience with hotels, and no experience with condo hotels. Unfortunately, the best way to fix bad documents at the outset is to throw them away and begin again from scratch. Condo hotel deals are far too complex to try and bandage bad documents. But once they are in place, you may have to live with them for a long time, even if they are terrible.

CONTINUE READING →

Published on:

17 January 2001

THE CMBS MARKET IS HUGE … AND LARGELY A MYSTERY

The CMBS (Collateralized Mortgage Backed Securities) market has fundamentally changed the landscape in the United States for commercial real estate finance–the legal structure, ownership, management, and rules of the game. Securitization (1) has also forever altered the behavior of the participants and consequences that follow in the mortgage default dance. (2)
By 2000, the Federal Reserve estimated that 19 percent, or almost one-fifth, of all outstanding commercial mortgage debt in the United States was securitized. This amounts to almost $281 billion in mortgage loans. The amount has been growing at more than $50 billion per year and is expected to continue growing at this rate for a decade or more.

CONTINUE READING →

Published on:

This article will focus on certain key issues in hotel lending where lenders seem to have trouble recognizing the cost-benefit ratios. There are certain issues and reason why lenders just need to say “NO” in hotel lending.

THIS BLOG WILL BE POSTED SHORTLY. CHECK BACK OR SUBSCRIBE TO THE HOTEL LAW BLOG.

Contact Information