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Hospitality Lawyer: Fortunes will be made... or lost... in the wake of the Financial Bailout Bill and the Panic of 2008. What happens AFTER the Bailout Bill...
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Hospitality Lawyers at JMBM don't create economic cycles or events like the Panic of 2008, but we often help our clients and friends find the fortune-making deals or put a tourniquet on life threatening hemorrhaging for owners, developers, investors and lenders.

These times remind this hotel lawyer of some time-tested wisdom. Hetty Green, one of the world's most successful investors who lived in the 19th century said, "Next to my children I love a good panic more than anything else." And why would those words be relevant today? That is the penultimate question today at www.HotelLawBlog.com.

The Panic of 2008 will create great opportunities and lethal traps. It no longer matters whether the Bailout Bill passes... you will make your own destiny.

The Panic of 2008 is creating investment opportunities and hazards that haven't been seen for decades. Whether or not the $700 billion bailout bill passes, many will go bankrupt. Many will get rich. But many hundreds of billions of dollars of assets will change hands in the coming months.

Cash will be king. Due diligence will matter, and you will find out who your friends really are. In this article, I want to give you one hotel lawyer's collection of "idea nuggets" gathered at the recent Phoenix Lodging Conference, some data presented there by the experts, and tell you why the deleveraging of the economy -- and the hospitality industry -- will create opportunities and problems of the greatest magnitude in recent memory.

Just as Hetty Green loved her children, I love a vibrant, healthy economy and a prospering lodging industry. But I don't have any silver bullets when the spirits of panic and financial crisis presentthemselves. So like Hetty Green, next to a vibrant economy, I can find much to love about a good panic. The opportunities are incredible, and they are finally upon us.

The Panic of 2008 -- "Idea Nuggets"
I have already talked about the panic of 2008 and won't repeat the information provided earlier. ThePanic of 2008. Financial Crisis impact on the Lodging Industry. Hospitality Lawyer's take.But I think some of the "idea nuggets" I gleaned at the recent Phoenix Lodging Conference will set the stage for what is about to happen. Here are a few sound bites I picked up at meetings with industry leaders. I know the authors of all of them, but many are too "shy" or would find itpolitically unattractive to have their candid views aired in public. All of them are colored by thelenses and beliefs I hold. So brilliance belongs to the speakers, but I take all blame for my perceptions, if wrong.

EBITDA from 2007? 2008? Or what?
Hospitality Lawyer: What does The Panic of 2008 and the Financial Crisis all mean to us in the hospitality industry?
OK. What do I think? Here it is in straight street English:
- The Liquidity Crisis or Panic of 2008 will be a scary driver in hotel values. First, all the "smart money" will leave hotel financing and hotel purchases for the more lucrative purchase of discounted notes. Why finance or buy properties at "yesterday's prices" when the lenders, driven by capital emergencies imposed by regulators and accounting rules, are forced to sell their portfolios and notes at deep discounts to get cash. The bailout legislation will not necessarily solve this problem -- it depends on the price at which they buy.
- For more than a year, the "smart money" and vultures have been waiting on the sidelines for deep discounts in note values, figuring the lenders would be forced to discount deeply when they could no longer afford to hold. Property owners with well-performing properties would not befirst. It has taken a long time, but now the major mortgage bankers are seeing hotel debt regularly being sold at 30% or more discounts. Where possible, companies are buying their own debt because they feel that they are the best bargains in the market. In urgent situations, some debt is now being transacted at $.11 on the dollar even though virtually all of this debt is fully
performing (ESA's mezzanine debt).
- Most hotels continue to perform well, at least in the major markets. According to Jan Freitag of STR, occupancy year to date through August 2008 is still around 70% for luxury, upper upscale and upscale hotels. But if they are starved for capital, because it is all going to deeply discounted notes, sooner or later the value of viable, performing hotels will be driven into the ground. Lower values are created by higher cap rates, falling revenues, fire-sale prices from liquidation of assets of insolvent lenders, and an absence of lenders and buyers in the marketplace.
- Ultimately, the hotel industry is driven by the growth or decrease in the US GDP, the availability of airline seats to take people to destinations, the cost of oil, the increase in hotel rooms supply, and the demand for hotel rooms. The US economy has remained remarkably resilient until now, but is staggering in the Panic of 2008 and the indecisive government position. According the PKF, Airline capacity is being cut and will be cut further before November 1, 2008. The decline in airline seat capacity alone will cause a 1 to 1.5% decline in hotel room demand. Although the cost of oil fluctuates, the generally higher price levels discourage travel for both business and
leisure travelers. Hotel rooms supply is increasing at more than 2.5% a year -well above 20 year averages- and is overwhelming the flat-to-declining occupancy growth (i.e. supply growth is overwhelming occupancy/demand growth). We say "hold the rate," but the will or capacity to resist rate cuts may fall off a cliff.

Benefits and detriments of leverage, and the vicissitudes of changing cap rates and LTVs.
We have talked about cap rates and their critical importance on hotel values. They go hand in hand with leverage -debt coverage ratios (DCRs) and loan to value ratios (LTVs). To emphasize this point made earlier about cap rates, if a hotel produces $1 million in NOI, at a 5% cap rate, it is worth $20 million, at a 7% cap rate, it is worth $14 million, and at a 10% cap rate, it is only worth $10 million.
The value implied at three different cap rates -5%, 7%, and 10% for NOI at $1 million, $700,000, and $500,000. I selected these cap rates because many hotels have been valued in the 5%-6% cap rate range in the past couple years, and many experts at the Lodging Conference seem to think we are headed back to 10% cap rates or more.

Many of the same experts also think that lodging revenues might fall as much as 30% to 50% in some markets. So that is why I applied these 3 cap rates to 3 different levels of NOI -at $1 million, $.7 million (a 30% reduction from the original $1 million NOI), and at $.5 million (a 50% reduction).

Of course it is worth remembering that many are now anticipating BOTH an increase in cap rates AND a decrease in NOI. Therefore, it is entirely possible that a hotel valued only a year or two ago at $20 million (with $1 million of NOI at a 5% cap rate) could be worth only $5 million to $7 million at a 10% cap rate with a 50% or 30% reduction in NOI -down from the original $10 - 20 million based on 2007 NOI.

And in a deleveraging economy, if LTVs (loan to value ratios) drop to 50%-60% from their former 70%-80%, the financeability of a property valued in 2006 or 2007 at $20 million could go from $16 million (80% of $20 million) to $2.5 million (50% of the $5 million valuation resulting from a 10% cap rate on $500,000 in NOI). Numbers will vary, but you see the mind boggling difference between a property that can justify a loan of $16 million (when valued at a 5% cap rate and 80% LTV) to $2.5 million (when valued at a 10% cap rate and 50% LTV). There is a financing "gap" of $13.5 million, when the effects of the hypothetical changes in cap rate, NOI and LTV all collide.

Opportunity or Crisis?
It all depends on where you stand. If you have cash and liquidity, you will be KING (or QUEEN). Otherwise, these times may be more than merely interesting, and you may want to consult your hotel bankruptcy lawyer. In fact, even as a King or Queen (with cash), these are likely to be times when your hotel bankruptcy lawyer will be your best friend to navigate these perilous waters.

Relationships and access to the "right people" will also be critical. The hotel lawyers at JMBM have been there and done that. Our team still has the veteran experience
from the last great downturn of 1988-1992. We were one of the top 25 law firms in the U.S. for the Resolution Trust Corporation, and handled billions of dollars of troubled assets for the RTC and troubled banks.

Today, we are dusting off our technology and SWAT teams for hotel and real estate workouts, receiverships, bankruptcies and opportunistic buyers. GET READY. It is coming.

P.S. In case you want to know a little more about Hetty Green ("Next to my children I love a good panic more than anything else."). According to American Heritage Magazine, in inflationadusted dollars, Hetty Green is the richest American woman in history. When she died at age 81 in 1916, her estate was valued at more than $100 million, which would be the equivalent of $17 billion today. In her own day, Hetty was more famous for her eccentricities and her parsimony than for her wealth.

Jim Butler, Hotel Lawyer
Author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
Jim Butler - Wednesday, October 15, 2008
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Poll
How do you expect luxury travel to perform in times of economic downturn?.

Providers of luxury travel products are going to witness shorter stays by their customers and an increase in seasonality.

People are going to become more value conscious and will opt for those luxury offers that represent a convincing value-for-money proposition. Providers of overpriced services are those to feel the pinch.

Both people paying for their personal trips and firms paying for their top executives' business trips will cut back on travel expenses, thus affecting all luxury travel providers.

It is going to be business as usual. Those people opting for high-end travel products are not going to be affected by the looming crisis.

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