La Costa Resort Debt Sold at Big Loss



Lori Weisberg
The San Diego Union-Tribune
February 18th, 2010

In a move that may stave off foreclosure for the La Costa Resort and Spa, a private equity fund has purchased $380 million in debt on the property at a steep discount from the lender.
 
KSL Capital Partners, which invests in leisure properties, has acquired the loan for a sum in the low $100 million range, said Alan Reay of Atlas Hospitality Group, which tracks hotel industry transactions. A report in Commercial Real Estate Direct, an industry online news service, said the purchase price was estimated to be $120 million.
 
Representatives of KSL Capital and KSL Resorts in Carlsbad, which manages the 479-room hotel, could not be reached for comment.
 
The willingness of the lender, Citigroup, to accept the discounted price reflects the dramatic plunge in hotel values over the last two years, estimated to be between 50 percent and 80 percent for California hotels, Reay said.
 
Hardest hit in the lodging industry has been the resort hotels. Just last year, the St. Regis Monarch Beach in Dana Point fell into foreclosure.
 
“For lenders, it is extremely tough for them to foreclose on a resort hotel,” Reay said. “It’s just bad, bad public relations, and you affect the business because people don’t want to book meetings and weddings at a hotel that’s in foreclosure. So a lot of lenders, especially on resort hotels, are opting to sell the loan at a discount rather than go through a foreclosure.
 
“It just damages the future business, and if you’re the lender and you’re going to own the hotel you’ll be damaging yourself.”
 
In 2001, the resort was acquired by the former KSL Recreation Corp. for $120 million, significantly less than the $250 million that former owner La Costa Corp., a subsidiary of Sports Shinko of Japan, paid in 1987.
 
KSL Capital Partners, which has no ownership interest in La Costa, was formed in 2005 by Eric Resnick and Michael S. Shannon, who was a founding principal of KSL Recreation Corp. in 1992. The primary owner of La Costa today is Goldman Sachs affiliate Whitehall Street Global Real Estate Limited Partnership, which took over the property in 2007.
 
The discounted loan purchase is emblematic of what is increasingly happening in a struggling industry saddled with high debt and depressed values. Hotel broker Bob Kaplan said he recently brokered a sale of the Wyndham Orange County, which sold for half its original purchase price and for $10 million less than the $31 million mortgage, which the owner had defaulted on. The owner, he said, showed up at the courthouse steps seeking to repurchase the debt at a discount.
 
“The (La Costa) lender’s motivation is they made a business decision that it’s only worth $120 million, so let’s get out of Dodge and go on with business,” said Bob Kaplan of PKF Consulting. “It’s just an economic decision. I think the stigma of being in foreclosure is a small factor. They’ve done the analysis to determine that was their best choice to get out and minimize their losses.”

  Mission Plaza Hotel & Suites Sold
IRVINE, Calif., September 1 / -- Atlas Hospitality Group announced the sale of the lender-owned Mission Plaza Hotel & Suites near SeaWorld in San Diego, California. Atlas Senior Vice Presidents Tim L. Edgar and Sachin J. Shah represented both the seller, an affiliate of Miami-based special servicer LNR Partners, Inc., and the buyer, an affiliate of Reven Capital and Jet Stream Hotels & Resorts.

  Mission Plaza Hotel in San Diego Has New Owners
Mission Plaza Hotel & Suites in San Diego, which was foreclosed on earlier this year by its lender, has been sold to an affiliate of La Jolla-based Reven Capital and Jet Stream Hotels & Resorts.

  Mission Plaza Hotel Sold
The San Diego Mission Plaza Hotel & Suites, which fell into foreclosure earlier this year, has been purchased by a San Diego investment group that has been looking to start acquiring hotel properties.

  Orange County Hotel Sales Jump in First Half of 2010
The number of transactions rose 67 percent, while the dollar volume increased 615 percent, says Atlas Hospitality.

  Hotel Sales Show Investors Lose Some, Win Some
IRVINE, CA-Prime Hospitality LLC has acquired the 299-room Marriott Ontario Airport hotel in a sale that was brokered by locally based Atlas Hospitality Group on behalf of the hotel's receiver―and a deal that reflects how some of the same owners and investors who are losing their properties in defaults and foreclosures these days are buying other properties. For example, the owner who lost the Ontario Marriott was San Clemente-based Sunstone Hotel Investors, a REIT that is now buying other properties.

  Park Hyatt Aviara in Danger of Going into Default
In yet another sign of the troubled luxury hotel market, owners of the Park Hyatt Aviara resort in Carlsbad are close to defaulting on their $186 million loan, which has been moved into special servicing.

  $186.5Mln Loan Against Carlsbad, Calif., Resort Moved to Special Servicing
A $186.5 million loan against a 329-room resort hotel in Carlsbad, Calif., has been moved to special servicing after the borrower had likely been dipping into its own pockets for several months to keep the debt current.

  Hotel Deals Generate 615% More Revenue
Hotels have become hot properties in Orange County and across the state, with deals and sales dollars up significantly, Irvine-based Atlas Hospitality Group reported this week.

  Hotel Sales Zoom, $580M Deal May Be in Works
IRVINE, CA-The number of hotel sales in California rose by 57% to and dollar volume climbed 155% to more than $631 million in the first half of this year, according to a new report from Irvine-based Atlas Hospitality Group. Alan Reay, founder and president of Atlas, tells GlobeSt.com that the spike in hotel sales was expected but that the first-half numbers for 2010 could be eclipsed if the 1,651-room Manchester Hyatt in San Diego is sold.

  As Hotel Industry Improves, Buyer Interest Rises
REAL ESTATE: 1st-Half Sales Transactions Up About Two-Thirds Locally

  Hotels Values Are Down, but Lack of Supply Halts Sales
REAL ESTATE: Lenders hold on to, see more distressed hotels

  California Hotel Sales Skyrocket in First Half
The volume and dollar value of hotel sales in California increased dramatically in the first half of this year, according to a report by Irvine-based hotel broker Atlas Hospitality Group.

  Marriott Ontario Airport Sold
IRVINE, Calif., Aug. 18 / -- Atlas Hospitality Group President Alan X. Reay is pleased to announce that Atlas has sold the Marriott Ontario Airport in Ontario, California. Prime Hospitality LLC purchased the hotel.

  Hotel Sales Up in California
California hotel sales jumped 59% in the first six months of the year, according to a recent analysis published by Atlas Hospitality Group, a hotel brokerage. Large transactions, which Atlas defines as $5 million or more, grew 16.7% in individual sales and 229% in dollar volume in the first half of the year.

  Local Hotel Deals Jump 67 Percent from Record Lows
SD County Market Gains Traction as Riverside Slips Further

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