banner



Who Does Donald Trump Owe Money To

Skip to Content

All the president's debts: To whom Donald Trump owes money

Debts of more than US$1 billion are tied to the Covid-struck commercial real estate market

Financial Times
Robert Armstrong and Joe Rennison
Oct 30, 2020October 30, 20205 minute read Join the conversation
A view of Trump Tower in New York City.
A view of Trump Tower in New York City. Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images

These are tough times in the real estate market. The COVID-19 crisis has hit asset values, particularly commercial real estate in cities such as New York. Investors holding debt with upcoming maturities are preparing for tricky negotiations with their debtors.

The negotiations will be trickier if the debtor is the president of the United States.

Virtually all of Donald Trump's debt — there is at least US$1.1 billion of it, according to his government financial disclosures and other documents — is backed by real estate, mostly linked to a small number of buildings and golf courses that form the core of the Trump business empire. About US$900 million of that debt will come due in Trump's second term, should he win the November 3 presidential election.

On paper, Trump is not particularly levered: his net worth has been estimated at US$2.5 billion by Forbes. But the economy is still on a precarious footing, and if his debts come under strain, he could play hardball with his creditors, as he has in the past.

  1. U.S. President Donald Trump addresses thousands of supporters during a campaign rally at Capital Region International Airport October 27, 2020 in Lansing, Michigan.

    Canada should be prepared for 'extreme' outcome if Trump wins election: Former U.S. ambassador

  2. Rosenberg Research's David Rosenberg and BMO Capital Markets' Brian Belski.

    The Bear and the Bull: David Rosenberg and Brian Belski on where markets are headed next

  3. Democratic U.S. presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe Biden makes a statement in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., October 28, 2020.

    U.S.-Canada trade issues won't go away under Biden

The situation is made more pressing for the U.S. president because his primary source of income in recent years — his work on television — "is drying up", according to an investigation by The New York Times. Citing the president's tax filings, the Times also said much of that income was invested in golf courses that are money losers. So while the president is asset-rich, it is unclear how much liquidity he has access to. The Trump Organization declined to comment.

The president's creditors can be broken into five groups.

1. Trump owes US$447 million as part of his partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, on towers in New York and San Francisco

Mr Trump owns 30 per cent of 1290 Avenue of the Americas in New York City and 555 California Street in San Francisco, giving him a pro-rata share of the US$1.5 billion debt on the two buildings, which comes due over the next two years. The debt is owed by the partnership, not Trump himself, but changes to the value of the debt, or any default, would directly affect his equity value in the buildings. The loan on 1290 Avenue of the Americas was initially made by Deutsche Bank, UBS, Goldman Sachs and the state-owned Bank of China, but they sold it into the bond market in 2012, as a commercial mortgage-backed security. The mortgage on 555 California Street is held by U.S. insurers Met Life and Pacific Life, the companies said. It expires next September, according to filings from Vornado.

California Street is a 1.8 million square foot office complex, and while the income from the property was down 5 per cent in the second quarter of this year, it is 99 per cent occupied, according to filings from Vornado. 1290 is a 2.1 million sq ft office and retail tower in Midtown Manhattan; Vornado's latest filings do not provide up-to-date occupancy figures for it.

The value of each building has probably taken a hit during the Covid-19 crisis. Office real estate prices have fallen 5 per cent and 13 per cent from a year ago in San Francisco and New York, respectively, according to Green Street, a real estate research group.

2. The bond market: US$257 million in loans taken against several of the most famous Trump properties have been packaged, along with a bunch of non-Trump loans, into commercial mortgage-backed securities

The banks that originated these mortgages sold them to a CMBS trust, bundling them with other loans and transforming them into tradable debt securities. A servicer is responsible for collecting payments from borrowers. Should borrowers fail to make a payment, a special servicer steps in to get the borrower paying again or foreclose. It is these debt collectors that could be crucial should Mr Trump's properties fall into arrears.

In total, there are four Trump properties, all in New York, split across six CMBS deals, according to data from Trepp. Most are office buildings and condominiums. The largest is a US$100 million loan on Trump Tower, at 725 Fifth Avenue, which accounts for just over 10 per cent of a 2012 deal packaged by Wells Fargo.

Most of the Trump loans are small enough that they are not the driving force behind the CMBS's performance. All the properties are up to date on their payments, according to data from Trepp. There has been little apparent impact on occupancy rates since the Covid-19 crisis began.

However, one loan — the US$6.5 million mortgage on the Trump International Hotel at 1 Central Park West, New York — has been flagged as being at risk after income on the property dropped dramatically. The property has two tenants, a parking garage and the now-closed Triomphe Restaurant. Should the property slip further, it will be passed to its special servicer, Midland Loan Services, part of PNC. Midland declined to comment.

Supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump march from Trump Tower on 5th Ave to Times Square with what they say is the biggest Trump flag in the country, in the Manhattan borough of New York City, U.S. October 13, 2020.
Supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump march from Trump Tower on 5th Ave to Times Square with what they say is the biggest Trump flag in the country, in the Manhattan borough of New York City, U.S. October 13, 2020. Photo by REUTERS/Soren Larson

3. Trump owes up to US$340 million to Deutsche Bank

Trump's biggest bank lender has financed his hotels in Chicago and Washington, and his Miami golf resort.

According to Mr Trump's tax returns, disclosed by The New York Times, both National Doral in Miami and the International Hotel in Washington have generated big losses. The Doral suffered US$162 million in losses between 2012 and 2018, and the Washington hotel lost US$55.5 million between 2016, when it opened, and 2018.

4. Trump has at least US$25 million in debt with four small banks and one asset manager

All of the loans are between US$5 million and US$25 million. Most do not mature within the next four years. Two of them are mortgages on Trump family properties, in the New York suburbs and in Palm Beach, Florida; two are on Trump golf courses in New Jersey and Washington, DC; and one, which matures this year, is on a residential tower in Midtown Manhattan.

The New York apartment market has experienced a 17 per cent price decline this year, according to Green Street.

5. There is a US$50 million debt to Chicago Unit Acquisition Trust, secured against the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago

This debt is mysterious. The trust is a corporation owned by DJT Holdings LLC — that is, Donald J Trump. Trump appears to owe the money to himself. Asked about this unusual arrangement by The New York Times in 2016, Trump said: "I have the mortgage. That is all there is. Very simple. I am the bank." But he is the debtor, too, and it is not a typical mortgage; it is a "springing loan", meaning it only comes due under specific conditions — typically a credit event such as a decline in credit rating. It has been suggested that this arrangement could be part of a tax avoidance strategy.

Additional reporting by Laura Noonan in New York

© 2020 The Financial Times Ltd

Top Stories Newsletter logo

Financial Post Top Stories

Sign up to receive the daily top stories from the Financial Post, a division of Postmedia Network Inc.

By clicking on the sign up button you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. You may unsubscribe any time by clicking on the unsubscribe link at the bottom of our emails. Postmedia Network Inc. | 365 Bloor Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4W 3L4 | 416-383-2300

Who Does Donald Trump Owe Money To

Source: https://financialpost.com/financial-times/all-the-presidents-debts-to-whom-donald-trump-owes-money

Posted by: blackpereve.blogspot.com

0 Response to "Who Does Donald Trump Owe Money To"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel