Showdown expected at Revel sale hearing

ByWAYNE PARRY Associated Press AP logo
Sunday, October 5, 2014
wpvi

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- The losing bidder in a bankruptcy court auction for Atlantic City's former Revel Casino Hotel isn't read to fold just yet.

Revel's management chose Brookfield Asset Management as the winner with a $110 million bid last week. But Florida developer Glenn Straub says the auction was rife with improprieties, and will challenge the result at Tuesday's hearing in Camden.

"We absolutely are going to challenge it," Stuart Moskovitz said. "We believe this entire auction was done improperly, from start to finish."

Among the polo-playing developer's main complaints is that Revel improperly accepted a bid from Brookfield after a specified deadline, that Revel's attorneys reneged on an agreement to share information with him on competing bids, and that six hours of closed-door meetings on what was supposed to be the first day of bidding was improper.

Straub's $90 million "stalking horse" bid set the floor for the auction; he will earn a $3 million breakup fee if the casino goes to someone else.

Spokesmen for Brookfield and Revel spokesman declined comment on Straub's plan to challenge the result, which came after bidding that lasted almost all day Tuesday and ended at midmorning Wednesday.

Moskovitz said Straub is considering whether to make an offer exceeding $110 million at the hearing, which the lawyer says the judge has the power to accept.

Revel, Atlantic City's newest casino, closed on Sept. 2 after just over two years of operation, during which it never turned a profit.

The casino hotel cost $2.4 billion to build; the $110 million winning bid represents a 95 percent discount on that price.

Brookfield also owns the Atlantis Paradise Island casino in the Bahamas. It is a global firm with headquarters in Toronto, with $200 billion in assets under management.

Brookfield told securities regulators in August that it was unable to make an interest payment due that month on the Las Vegas Hard Rock, and was trying to work things out with its lenders.

The company said its deals are financed with so-called non-recourse debt.

"In other words, lenders get the asset if the investment does not work out, but they do not have the ability to go after Brookfield for a bad loan or mortgage," spokesman Andrew Willis said last week. "This is standard risk management for asset management firms."

He said the company is in "productive negotiations" with Hard Rock's creditors.

"Any issue with the Hard Rock's finances are specific to that property," and would not affect Brookfield's ability to complete the Revel purchase, he said.