(Click above image to enlarge)
One picture is supposed to be worth a thousand words but we think that millions can be added (about subtracted value) by compositing the above picture with a few words it well deserves.
For more information about how the above rendering of the arena evolved, see: Really Now! The subject of Rendering the Atlantic Yards Arena Realistically Revisited (Saturday, September 12, 2009).
For more about the Net LOSS to the public that the arena will be, see: To The Brooklyn Paper: Yes, the Atlantic Yards Arena Will Cost the City, But the REAL Story Is That It Will REALLY, REALLY Cost the City (Saturday, September 26, 2009).
For why this image, despite best efforts, cannot dependably represent the future, see: Blasting From the Past: Ouroussoff on a Stand-alone Arena (Two Cheers Forward, And One Absolutely Cheerless Look Backward) (Wednesday, October 7, 2009).
For a vivid WNYC radio account about why local merchants and businesses should probably always have much to fear from monopolistic sports arenas and stadiums as neighbors, see: A Cautionary Tale for Local Businesses Around the Proposed Atlantic Yards Arena Site (10.28.09).
Friday, October 30, 2009
ESDC’s Bond Buyer Happy Talk About Restructuring and Refunding Arena Bonds
We can’t help noting that our critique of ESDC’s sloppy work vis-à-vis its hoped-for issuance of tax-exempt bonds for an Atlantic Yards Nets basketball arena (So Many Unchecked Approval Boxes: Why Any Sensible Bond Buyer Should Probably Steer Clear of Buying Atlantic Yards Nets Arena Bonds) published Wednesday has been quickly followed up by two happy talk articles in which Frances Walton, ESDC’s chief financial officer, endeavors to convey the notion that ESDC’s preparations are in better shape than we and the Wall Street Journal asserted. Specifically, an article in Reuters, Thursday (NYS sets big bond sale, waits on other large issues) and one in the Bond Buyer today (Atlantic Yard Bonds May Be Sold, Escrowed: Official, By Ted Phillips).
Of the two articles, the one that interests us the most is the one in the Bond Buyer. (The Reuters article, and its headline, also addresses an unrelated proposed issuance of bonds for the World Trade Center site.) Develop Don’t’s Destroy has a report of the Bond Buyer article up at: Atlantic Yards Arena Bond Sale Still a Big Struggle, 10.30.09.)
In the Bond Buyer article Ms. Walton says, “The structure and the timing of the bonds are still in flux.” No kidding. Apparently things are so much “in flux” that Ms. Walton envisions the “flux” about how the bonds would be structured would carry right through until after the bonds were issued. The Bond Buyer article has Ms. Walton providing the information that the arena bond transaction would be issued:
We are sure that Ms. Walton (who used to be in the habit of taking our legal advice when she joined us at the state agencies where she began in public finance) knows that a bond deal that is issued in order to be immediately “restructured” is pretty dead-on target to be exactly the kind of “black box” deal that the IRS has repeatedly found doesn’t meet its requirements for tax exemption (thus making bonds taxable). We also find curious the notion that if, as Ms. Walton suggests, the “court ruling went against you” (which is to say that no arena could be built) that ESDC would “just refund the bonds.” We can definitely understand Ms. Walton’s reference to an “early call” to redeem the bonds when for various reasons* the arena can’t be built, but the phrase “refund the bonds” in general public finance parlance means keeping bonds outstanding (i.e. not its not like “refunding” a ticket price and sending people home when your headline act doesn’t show up). Issue the bonds in order to immediately refund them and keep bonds outstanding with a different structure? The IRS surely ought to like that.- Not! (We refer once more to our comment about “black box” transactions.) Why talk about keeping bonds outstanding when you find out that the arena can’t, in fact, be financed? It wouldn’t be possible. The IRS would consider that an over-issuance prohibited by the tax code, making the bonds taxable (once again) as “arbitrage bonds” (retroactively to their date of issuance).
(* In Ms. Walton’s attempt to paint an optimistic picture she refers to only ONE “court ruling” as preventing the building of the arena. As per the more detailed analysis of our previous post there are a number of separate rulings that could make the arena unfinancible. One ruling would prevent the developer from getting the southern half of the site needed for the arena. An entirely separate legal action is likely to prevent the developer from getting the northern half of the property needed. Other rulings would simply deprive ESDC of any ability to proceed, period. Ironically, a number of the legal actions brought against the mega-project highlight the very poor record ESDC officials have when it comes to making accurate representations about the megadevelopment and its financing.)
Of the two articles, the one that interests us the most is the one in the Bond Buyer. (The Reuters article, and its headline, also addresses an unrelated proposed issuance of bonds for the World Trade Center site.) Develop Don’t’s Destroy has a report of the Bond Buyer article up at: Atlantic Yards Arena Bond Sale Still a Big Struggle, 10.30.09.)
In the Bond Buyer article Ms. Walton says, “The structure and the timing of the bonds are still in flux.” No kidding. Apparently things are so much “in flux” that Ms. Walton envisions the “flux” about how the bonds would be structured would carry right through until after the bonds were issued. The Bond Buyer article has Ms. Walton providing the information that the arena bond transaction would be issued:
. . . with the expectation that it would be coming out of escrow to be restructured. That’s one of the possibilities they are looking at,” Walton said. “But they’re also looking at the structure with an early call ... if something changes, if the court ruling went against you, you’d just refund the bonds. Those are the two different approaches.”The article then notes that, “Forest City Ratner spokesman Joe DePlasco declined to comment on the deal.”
We are sure that Ms. Walton (who used to be in the habit of taking our legal advice when she joined us at the state agencies where she began in public finance) knows that a bond deal that is issued in order to be immediately “restructured” is pretty dead-on target to be exactly the kind of “black box” deal that the IRS has repeatedly found doesn’t meet its requirements for tax exemption (thus making bonds taxable). We also find curious the notion that if, as Ms. Walton suggests, the “court ruling went against you” (which is to say that no arena could be built) that ESDC would “just refund the bonds.” We can definitely understand Ms. Walton’s reference to an “early call” to redeem the bonds when for various reasons* the arena can’t be built, but the phrase “refund the bonds” in general public finance parlance means keeping bonds outstanding (i.e. not its not like “refunding” a ticket price and sending people home when your headline act doesn’t show up). Issue the bonds in order to immediately refund them and keep bonds outstanding with a different structure? The IRS surely ought to like that.- Not! (We refer once more to our comment about “black box” transactions.) Why talk about keeping bonds outstanding when you find out that the arena can’t, in fact, be financed? It wouldn’t be possible. The IRS would consider that an over-issuance prohibited by the tax code, making the bonds taxable (once again) as “arbitrage bonds” (retroactively to their date of issuance).
(* In Ms. Walton’s attempt to paint an optimistic picture she refers to only ONE “court ruling” as preventing the building of the arena. As per the more detailed analysis of our previous post there are a number of separate rulings that could make the arena unfinancible. One ruling would prevent the developer from getting the southern half of the site needed for the arena. An entirely separate legal action is likely to prevent the developer from getting the northern half of the property needed. Other rulings would simply deprive ESDC of any ability to proceed, period. Ironically, a number of the legal actions brought against the mega-project highlight the very poor record ESDC officials have when it comes to making accurate representations about the megadevelopment and its financing.)
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
So Many Unchecked Approval Boxes: Why Any Sensible Bond Buyer Should Probably Steer Clear of Buying Atlantic Yards Nets Arena Bonds
Pity the poor bond buyer who even thinks about buying bonds that might be offered on the market to finance the proposed Forest City Ratner Atlantic Yards Nets basketball arena. It is not your typical bond deal. Bond deals are usually really tight affairs, very “belt and suspenders.” We have never seen so many loose ends and approvals that are not in place. Many of those approvals may never be in place. Government officials may even try not to do what’s normally required. Do you remember when the subprime crisis resulted in underwater bonds across the commercial mortgage backed security industry? Everybody looked back in wonder and asked themselves how basic common sense requirements were ignored. The Atlantic Yards Nets arena bonds may be the municipal bond industry’s embodiment of the same kind of extreme folly: Basic standards of professional practices, dotting the i’s and crossing the t’s to protect the investor have simply been abandoned and one day everybody may wonder why.
Oh, by the way: We think we know whereof we speak. We used to oversee the legal aspects of bond issuances for six agencies that were the state’s largest issuers of municipal bonds. This is NOT the kind of show we ran. Far from it.
ESDC Board Didn’t Approve the Smaller Redesigned 675,000 Square Foot Arena
We have been unable to get out of our mind the startling information that the Empire State Development Corporation did not actually approve the issuance of bonds for the proposed new Forest City Ratner Atlantic Yards Nets basketball arena. (See: Saturday, October 03, 2009, Did the ESDC board members know they were approving a 675,000 sf arena? And should there have been opportunity to comment?- Image of document below from that article)
Sure, when the ESDC board met and voted on September 17, 2009, they approved the financing of an arena in Brooklyn but what they approved was the financing of a 850,000 square foot arena, not the 20% smaller 675,000 square foot arena that developer Forest City Ratner currently plans to build. Building the smaller arena based on the board’s approval of a larger one for the same price would be a classic example of shortchanging the approving public agency, no different from sending Jack to the store with the price of a ten-slice pizza pie and having him come back with only eight slices of that pie plus no change. (In a less classic way, the public is also being shortchanged in that the arena is projected to be a $220 million net loss to the public.)
And PACB Approval for Substantially Restructured Financing Is Missing
The fact that the current arena plan has NOT been approved by the ESDC board seems to match up perfectly with the fact that the issuance of the bonds for the arena has also NOT been approved by the New York State Public Authorities Control Board. (See: Friday, June 20, 2008, Given 50% arena cost increase, DDDB asks PACB to reconsider AY approval.) In December 2006 the PACB approved the issuance of bonds for the arena in the amount of $637.2 million (to finance an arena costing $528.9 million exclusive of financing costs), but the cost of the arena has shot way up so that even the much smaller arena is now projected to cost 45% more, an amount stated to come to $772 million (without financing costs) which will likely be $930 million when financing costs are included. (See: Wednesday, September 09, 2009, FAQ: the reason for a new architect; curiously unchanged arena costs; why Gehry was dropped; and "vaportecture".)
(PACB approval figures from 2006 above- click to enlarge- from Atlantic Yards Report article: Wednesday, June 06, 2007, Privately financed? Court documents finally specify the housing bonds behind Atlantic Yards funding.)
New Unapproved Principals in the Transaction
The list of approvals that haven’t been obtained to finance the arena is rather long. We wrote recently about how ESDC hasn’t approved, but ought to, the recently arrived on the scene Russian oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov:
We were noting how that the Prokhorov approval was not on the agenda for the ESDC board’s meeting last week (October 22, 2009) and how ESDC may try to sidestep this approval (which approval it certainly should be doing) irrespective of whether it is actually a legal requirement. (Sidestepping reviews and approvals wherever possible is a tradition with the Atlantic Yards. Central to getting the megadevelopment approved was the use of an ESDC override of the city zoning process to avoid the community’s review and comment through ULURP.)
Litigation Highlighting Absence of Environmental Review for Revamped Transaction
Meanwhile, the mega-project is the subject of litigation for a number of other approvals and reviews that were not done. One new lawsuit challenges the fact that when the project changed substantially ESDC tried to sidestep a supplemental environmental impact statement to address all its significant changes. (See: Monday, October 19, 2009, AY doomed? New lawsuit targets ESDC over unrealistic project timetable, failure to issue SEIS, and failure to address renegotiated MTA deal.) That lawsuit was brought by twenty community groups, led by Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn and the Council of Brooklyn Neighborhoods. There will also be a second lawsuit about the lack of an environmental review for the substantially revised transaction brought by a separate set of plaintiffs, 13 community and public interest groups comprising the Brooklyn Speaks coalition. That lawsuit with its complementary theme of a necessary review and approval work being circumvented is expected to focus on the mega-monopoly’s effect on traffic. (See: Saturday, October 17, 2009, DDDB: new lawsuit challenging Atlantic Yards environmental review will be filed on Monday.)
Litigation Highlighting Sidestepping of Compliance With Public Authorities Accountability Act
There is a lawsuit against the MTA that seeks to annul any attempted transfer by the MTA of half the land the developer is going to need if it is ever to build the arena. (See: Tuesday, October 13, 2009, MTA lawsuit, which might affect arena financing, charges that Public Authorities Accountability Act was violated.) That lawsuit was filed on the eve of oral arguments on the eminent domain case (brought in its original form in January 2006) that could (and should) result in the developer being unable to procure (through eminent domain abuse) the other half of the site it will need to build the arena. The lawsuit against the MTA points out that when the MTA approved numerous new concessions for the developer (worth hundreds of millions of dollars) last June, including a revised deal with the MTA taking less money for its land, the MTA essentially ignored the Public Authorities Accountability Act enacted in 2005 which has procedures requiring bidding and appraisals when authorities like the MTA dispose of authority land. Those procedures are specifically to prohibit sweetheart deals like the one put through.
Litigation Continuing From 2007 Highlighting Many More Steps That Were Skipped
We also should not forget to mention that there is another a case on appeal that has been awaiting a decision since oral argument on September 17, 2008. That case was originally brought in the spring of 2007 and cites, among a long list of other actions government officials failed to take, inadequacies of the original environmental review. This was before the project changed substantially. It also challenges as defective an agency determination of blight (in order to take the land required for the arena) that artificially shaped the boundaries of the “blight” around the prime real estate the developer coveted for his mega-monopoly.
Litigation You Need a Scorecard to Keep Track of (And You Need to Add More)
There are now so many lawsuits lined up against the Atlantic Yards mega-project for the things that were not done by government officials sidestepping requirements as they rushed the project forward that the Brooklyn Paper decided that it was necessary to publish a docket scorecard. (See below.) The problem is that the published scorecard isn’t even complete. It leaves out the upcoming lawsuit being brought by the Brooklyn Speaks coalition and it leaves out the legal actions that have been repeatedly won by Henry Weinstein, a developer and owner of property within the megadevelopment footprint who sued his tenant (developer Shaya Boymelgreen) and the Atlantic Yards developer for collusive behavior to deprive him of control over his property. Interestingly, ESDC itself has been implicated in the defendant developers’ collusion which was all tilted toward the goal of the megadevelopment’s site acquisition. (See: Wednesday, October 21, 2009, More maneuvering at the corner of Carlton and Pacific with Boymelgreen firms pushed toward bankruptcy by (alleged) tenant.)
The scorecard chart also doesn’t include a lawsuit that has so far been lost even though it was refiled once. That lawsuit was brought by tenants within the footprint of the project who asserted that they will be improperly removed especially in light of recently evolved and disclosed facts about how much longer the project will take than originally asserted by the public agencies promoting it. (See: Wednesday, May 07, 2008, Another win for Ratner; state appellate court denies appeal on relocation case.)
Wall Street Journal Dubious That Loose-end Deal Can Be Pulled Together
It is not surprising that even before all these lawsuits were filed pointing out the multiple deficiencies the Wall Street Journal was running an article assessing that issuance of the arena bonds is going to be really “tough” to pull off. We wonder if they even know the half of it. For the Wall Street Journal article and other commentary on it see: Sale of Nets' Arena Debt Is Tough Shot, by Serena Ng and Matthew Futterman, October 15, 2009, Sale of Nets' Arena Debt Is Tough Shot (on No Land Grab), The Wall Street Journal, by Serena Ng and Matthew Futterman, October 15, 2009, Wall Street Journal calls arena debt "a toss-up," given market for sports and apparent tension between bankers and bond insurers (Atlantic yards Report- Friday, October 16, 2009), Wall Street Journal: Atlantic Yards Arena Bond a Tough Sale, (DDDB- 10.16.09), WSJ: Atlantic Yards bond sale a "toss-up" (Field of Schemes- October 16, 2009).
One of the major reasons the Wall Street Journal is reporting that the deal is very iffy is that the bonds must be issued by the end of December to satisfy an IRS deadline in connection with using a loophole to get around the (Senator) Moynihan amendment that prohibits the financing of sports stadiums and arenas with tax-exempt bonds. This deadline is one reason public officials were taking so many shortcuts to rush problematic revisions through at the last minute. To be fair, much of the last-minute rush was also fully attributable to the developer’s last minute brinkmanship as a tactic to wrest additional concession from public agencies that might not have been granted without this ploy. The proposed arena design was not revealed until day before the ESDC board meeting (after public hearings) and the orchestrated disclosure of the Russian oligarch’s involvement as owner and development partner was held back until a few days after that board meeting.
Riskiness Identified
It is not absolutely clear from reading the Wall Street Journal article what ALL the problems with the deal are but the riskiness of a deal full of holes is apparently a big part of what is going on. Problematic negotiations reportedly involve the rating agencies (who are supposed to assess risk) and the bond insurer (who gets paid to assume risk once they have done their own assessment of the risk they are taking on). The Journal notes that:
Lack of projected revenue is also reportedly an issue. The Journal puts it this way:
August 25, 2008, Is This Seat Taken? In Front Rows of New Ballparks, No, by Ken Belson, April 21, 2009, Will $900 Baseball Tickets Sell? March 30, 2009, Sports Business: Help Wanted: Must Sit in Fancy Stadium Seats, by Richard Sandomir, April 22, 2009.)
It may be that fans, driven away by high prices, are changing their habits, for instance substituting visits to minor league teams instead of major league franchises. (See: Teams Get Their Day in Downturn, by Corey Kilgannon, June 12, 2009.)
Attendance is down for basketball in general. (See: In Some N.B.A. Arenas, the Crowds Are Thin, by Howard Beck, December 18, 2008.) And revenue for the Nets si down in particular. (See: Friday, July 10, 2009, While Nets' attendance went down 3% last year, ticket revenue went down 29%.)
Beyond the Economic Risk, Shortcuts as Red Flags for Real Risks
But the economic risk of poor attendance is not really what we are focusing on here. We will let bond buyers further assess that risk on their own. We are more concerned with the other risks being introduced by public officials intent on taking shortcuts to please a developer. Each shortcut should be considered a red flag for what is going on overall and it looks to us like some serious incompetence.
We note that at the very same meeting where ESDC negligently overlooked having its board approve the reduction in the arena’s size ESDC’s staff, attentive to apparently higher priorities, executed a slick maneuver that quietly slipped a last-minute authorization to advance another $25 million to the developer into the package of other concessions.
It will be interesting to see if ESDC ever decides to start clearing up at least a few of the many loose ends that exist and, if so, exactly which loose ends it winds up admitting through subsequent corrective action. For instance, one thing that could sink ESDC’s legal boat is that it hasn’t done any cost benefit analysis of Atlantic Yards or other related benefits analysis. Might ESDC one day come out with a cost benefit analysis? Or is ESDC likely to stonewall across the board, thinking that even some cleanup actions could involve a slippery slope of admitting defects?
We pointed out in an earlier post that Warner Johnston told us that the ESDC board “has pretty much finished with Atlantic Yards.” As such, the ESDC board did not approve Russian oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov’s involvement in the megadevelopment at the board meeting last week and perhaps just won’t. Being “pretty much finished with Atlantic Yards” could also mean that the board won’t be asked to actually approve the arena although the board has another meeting scheduled for November 19, 2009. (See: Thursday, October 22, 2009, Mark your calendars: next ESDC board meeting is November 19.)
No Pro Hockey
The size reduction of the planned (vs. “approved”) arena is not just quantitative, not just a 20% comparative reduction of 850,000 “apples” (of square feet) to 675,000 “apples” (of square feet), it also qualitatively affects function. The reduced 675,000 square foot arena that is now planned will still function as a basketball arena (the “apple” of the developer’s eye) but it will not function as an arena for a hockey team as the originally proposed 850,000 square foot arena would have. Simultaneous denoting the significance of this and of how sloppily irresponsible our public officials’ discussions of the arena has become, is the way that Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz laughably issued an invitation early this month to the Long Islanders hockey team to play in Brooklyn despite the fact that the arena will now be too small and narrow to accommodate that sport. (See: Thursday, October 08, 2009, From hoops to hockey? Markowitz, contemplating Islanders' move to Brooklyn, disregards the planned arena's limitations.)
The inability to use the arena for hockey as previously proposed also undermines the already enfeebled economic viability of the arena. To wit, from a New York Post article covering Markowitz’s gaffe:
Blowing Off PACB Approval
In addition to NOT having the board approve the smaller arena, ESDC officials have said that they don’t plan to get a new PACB approval for the changes that have occurred even though the arena (and the rest of the megadevelopment) has changed so substantially. (See: Thursday, July 23, 2009, ESDC, FCR face, answer, evade tough questions (subsidies, cost-benefit analysis, etc.); meeting marred by heckling and chaos.) When asked, ESDC Senior Counsel, Steve Matlin simply suggested that it wasn’t needed.
Our previous comment on his answer that approval was not needed was:
PACB Was Set Up to Deal With a World Defaulting NYS Issuers Including ESDC (Before It Adopted a New Name)
The PACB was set up to approve financings during the financial crisis of the mid-1970's when defaulting state agency and city bonds had to be rescued. Defaults by one state issuer can affect the broader market for other state issuers. The PACB was set up to ensure financial stability and order and promote economic sobriety to counter the kind of activity that had led to defaults. ESDC, then known by its official statutory name of New York State Urban Development Corporation (“UDC” - It now uses a “d.b.a.”) was one of the main agencies that had to be rescued. A big part of why it had to be rescued was that it had pushed forward pell-mell, driven by politics. It exercised bad judgment doing deals that were not wise though they were politically desired. We know this quite well because we worked at the agency that was called upon to financially rescue them. Our agency was able to come to the rescue because it had avoided similar trouble by virtue of the fact that it was more conservatively managed. Our agency was still dealing with the aftermath of the cleanup when we arrived to work there at the beginning of the 80's. That was when UDC/ESDC was still unable to access the financial markets.
PACB Grabs The Public Policy Reins
Although the PACB was set up to ensure financial responsibility on the part of state finance agencies, its gate-keeping approval function has been taken advantage by political leaders so that projects that make poor public policy sense aren’t allowed to proceed. A case in point was Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver’s blocking of Mayor Bloomberg’s West Side stadium in Manhattan. (See: Remarks by Speaker Sheldon Silver, PACB Decision Press Conference, State Capitol, Albany, NY, Monday, June 6, 2005 and Stadium opponents do sack dance over Silver vote, by Albert Amateau, June10 -16, 2005.)
PACB, The Legislative Branch’s De Factor Check On the Power of Governor-Dominated Authorities
Whether or not the PACB’s policy oversight was part of what was originally intended when the PACB was created, it has allowed representatives from the state’s legislative branch, the Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate Majority leader, to have a de facto check on authorities that are otherwise under the political control of the governor. For projects to be approved, votes of the PACB must be unanimous. The PACB, frequently referred to as “three men in a room,” consists of three voting members: the governor and the aforementioned two legislative body leaders. (Minority senate and assembly leaders are on the PACB but have no vote.)
PACB Statute Including Its Duties
The statute governing the PACB (Article 1-A of the Public Authorities Law, sections 50 and 51) calls for the PACB to approve financings by the state’s public authorities including specifically UDC/ESDC (and its subsidiaries). ESDC, as noted, led the state into the financial difficulties the PACB was constituted to address. The statute actually states that those approvals “shall be” the PACB’s “duty.” (emphasis supplied):
Bottom line, ESDC through its subsidy is proposing to issue bonds requiring PACB approval. Further, the approval required from the PACB is not just with respect to issuance of the authority’s bonds. It applies to any state authority financing of a project, “any commitment. . . any agreement . . . indebtedness for the purpose of acquiring, constructing, or financing any project.” The required PACB approval therefore applies to the ESDC administration of the hundred million dollars the state is making available to the project and the ancillary financing agreements, probably even including the state’s allowing the developer to use naming rights to finance the mega-development.
PACB Approval Required (Like Board Approvals)
How do we know that the 20% reduction in the size of the arena, its functionally diminished and changed potential use coupled with its 45% increase in cost (and its shift to being a clearly identified net loss for the public) mean that the arena’s financing needs to go back to the PACB for approval? Because we have experience in obtaining billions of dollars of approvals from the PACB and have seen the many other deals that the PACB routinely requires go back to it for approval when there are significant changes in the parameters of what is being financed. One pretty good indicator in itself is that even though ESDC screwed up and didn’t have its board approve the smaller arena, it was felt that the deal had changed so substantially in other aspects that a new ESDC board approval was needed. The two approvals, board and PACB, tend to go hand in hand.
Riskier New Financing Involves Almost Double the Burden
The public is getting a lot less for what it is putting into the deal and the current transaction is much more likely to be headed for a default. In the original transaction that the PACB approved, each square foot of arena (850,000 square feet total) had to generate income to support a cost of $749 p/s/f of construction and financing costs ($637.2 million total). In the new transaction, each square foot of arena (675,000 square feet total) now has the much more onerous burden of supporting the cost of $1,378 p/s/f of construction and financing costs ($930 million total). That’s almost double the burden. Doesn’t that sound like a deal that has become much more financially precarious?
Can Riskier Financing Get Around PACB’s Approval?
Is ESDC thinking that it will be able to avoid going back to the PACB by keeping down the amount of the bonds actually issued? The Wall Street Journal reports that despite the hugely escalated overall and p/s/f costs of the arena that the bonds issued might be only about $700 million:
Something to Take With Equanimity?
Keeping the total bond amount down to $700 million would substantially increase the equity (or other debt) that would need to be furnished to finance the arena, probably by about $230 million. An increased cushion of equity is often considered to reduce risk but it is far from a panacea when the financing numbers don’t otherwise work. When the numbers don’t work the extra equity can just be part of the set-up for all sorts of litigation against and between the overstretched principals when cash flow runs short. That litigation can itself formidably strain project resources.
One thing to note is that the developer, Forest City Ratner, is not financially strong at this point and, depending on what happens, may actually go under. That, plus the need for equity and cash infusions to close the financial holes in the deal, is the reason that Prokhorov has been introduced to pour in his Russian cash.
Atlantic Yards as Political Poison Ivy: Are Politicians Rashly Sacrificing the Power of Precedent?
We think it is interesting that politicians are so afraid of the political poison ivy that Atlantic Yards represents that they would be willing to let Atlantic Yards set a precedent for the future, a precedent that a project with very substantial revisions potentially “careening off toward failure” does not require PACB approval. That precedent, if it is allowed to be established, could give any governor virtually unfettered latitude to continue unchallenged with degenerated projects substantially altered from their original underwriting and originally assessed public benefits. The senate and assembly leaders and state comptroller would thereby lose all future say.
What if the PACB does not, as it needs to, approve the substantially revised mega-project? The PACB statute does not set forth a remedy although it would put the state and its future administrations at a substantial moral remove from any defaulting bonds. It would also make the project vulnerable to clawback of funds theoretically “committed” by the state. Notably, though many other statutes dictating state procedures have them, the PACB statute does not contain a savings clause that says that actions (like bond issuances) taken without required PACB approval remain valid once taken. Since these kinds of things have never been put to the test there is no litigation to help predict future outcomes. Yet our public officials are so wedded to serving the developer here that they are willing to push the envelope to an extraordinary extent.
Bond Counsel Front and Center: The Tradition of Defaulting Issuers Skipping Away Because of Skipped Approvals
The role of bond counsel in municipal bonds transactions was created in the 1800's when bond issuers across the nation were disavowing and refusing to pay (defaulting) bonds, saying that proper procedures had not been followed and that required approvals for the issuance of bonds had not been obtained. Those claims allowed the issuers to walk away from the bonds, leaving the bond holders without recourse. These days, bond counsel participates in transactions to assure bond buyers that all required procedures have been followed and approvals obtained. The thinking is that the bond counsel law firm can be sued if the firm’s opinion is legally and negligently wrong and the bonds default as a result. No doubt some poor bond counsel will have to opine that arena bonds are being properly issued despite the lack of all the various approvals we have been talking about. For what it’s worth, the bond counsel itself will probably want to rely on an opinion from the agency’s in-house lawyers that all necessary approvals have been obtained, even though the agency staff is pushing the envelope far as possible for political reasons.
Will Tax-exemption Shortcuts Lead To Declaration That Bonds Are Taxable?
There are more hazards that bond buyers will probably want bond counsel’s help in sorting out. One is the issue of whether the Nets arena bonds can be considered safely tax-exempt. Bond counsel normally provides an additional opinion (not a guarantee) with respect to municipal bonds as to whether the interest on the bonds is tax-exempt. For the arena bonds that opinion is going to be especially important because of some of the shenanigans going on in New York involving the New York City Department of Finance and the way it has set real estate tax assessments in anticipation of supporting the tax exemption of municipal bonds. The originally responsible Finance Commissioner, Martha Stark, resigned her post, probably not on good terms, at a time when multiple scandals were going on. (See: Tuesday, April 28, 2009, Finance Commissioner Stark resigns, but the Yankee Stadium issue is ignored.)
One of the scandals with respect to the commissioner and her department was her participation in the apparent manipulation of real property tax assessments documented in e-mails with respect to bonds for Yankee Stadium. (See: Sunday, April 19, 2009, Keeping up with Bloomberg and Friends: Stark New Scandals and Is it True WSJ Readers Don’t Commit Murder?) That raises questions about whether the bonds whose tax exemption is based upon the validity of those figures are truly tax-exempt. (See: Saturday, November 8, 2008, Does Questionable Assertion of Attorney-client Privilege Point to Yankee Stadium Bond Taxability?) The same concerns apply to the Nets arena bonds and many of the same cast of characters were involved. It is not clear where further congressional investigation into the conduct of New York public officials is likely to lead. In time, it could lead to a declaration that the Nets arena bonds are not tax-exempt. Such a declaration would likely be retroactive to the bonds date of issuance.
Dual Purpose Strategy Acknowledging Deal Vulnerabilities?
We noted that the Wall Street Journal reported that the bond issuance may be kept down to $700 million. The decision to restrict the amount of bonds being issued to a lower number such as that may be tactical decision with a two-fold purpose. It can bolster ESDC’s hope not to be summoned back the PACB as noted before. It also throttles back on the chance that the bonds will be deemed taxable because they are being supported by artificially inflated real estate property assessments and tax equivalency payments.
“Public Purpose” vs. “Public Purpose”
Once upon a time a core component of every bond counsel opinion was that the bonds were being issued for a “public purpose.” Theoretically that is still true and it may be turn out to be unusually true in the case of any arena bonds that get issued. Unless public agencies were issuing bonds for a public purpose states and localities didn’t have authority to issue them. Theoretically that could even go to the bonds’ tax exemption since a valid state or local government issuance was at the heart of the original theory of why municipal bonds could be tax-exempt. The tax law has been greatly affected and made much more complex in recent decades by a distracting overlay of federal legislation designed to take away tax exemption where it was once readily recognized.
The concept of “public purpose” for the purpose of issuing valid municipal bonds is separate and distinct from the concept of “public purpose” for the purpose of having a valid taking or condemnation under the laws applicable to eminent domain. Nevertheless the two concepts can have some overlap. The latter eminent domain concept is being litigated right now in one of the project litigations before New York’s highest court. One of the arguments before the court goes to whether ESDC actually has the power to exercise the eminent domain it is exercising given that ESDC’s exercise of its powers is specifically pursuant to the restrictive provisions of Article 18 of the constitution which links eminent domain use to affordable housing. Conceivably, the court will find that Article 18 has not been complied with and that ESDC therefore has not properly exercised its powers. This is one theory under which ESDC’s eminent domain abuse seizure of property would be prevented. Would this also negate ESDC’s power to issue (or have issued) any bonds? We don’t know. We haven’t looked at it but we are sure it is one more thing bond counsel will need to look at as they rack up a bill.
Postponing the Day of Reckoning For Dealing With Loose Ends
How is it possible that arena bonds could be issued with so many loose ends and the uncertainly of the litigation? The developer has been publicizing the fact that he has a plan. Essentially his plan involves postponing the day of reckoning for dealing with the loose ends. He is proposing to divide the transaction into two parts. The bond transaction would be separated from the real estate transaction in order to issue the bonds before the end of the year. The real estate financing which involves the majority of the loose ends that need to tied up would defer having to deal with any loose ends by “closing the transaction in escrow.” Bond proceeds held under the bond resolution would not be advanced to fund the real estate transaction unless and until identified loose ends are cleaned up. More typically big single project financings involve a simultaneous closing of both the bond and real estate side of the transaction. Since the two need to mirror each other that is the best way to minimize risk.
(BTW: We have sometimes heard people refer to the “bonds being issued in escrow.” Do not expect anything like that to be the case. Among other things we doubt it would qualify as meeting any deadlines for IRS purposes.)
Close But No Cigar
If you can’t close the two sides of the transaction simultaneously it is good to close them as close together as possible. There is always the risk that loose ends won’t be cleared up and that bonds will have to be redeemed (`origination risk’- we’ll get back to this in a moment) but if there is a long interregnum between the closings the risks rise that other unidentified problems will crop up during the delay or even because of it.
PR For The Times?
Interestingly, in coverage by the New York Times the developer apparently with some bravado (and bluff?) indicated to the reporter that bonds might be issued much earlier than necessary to meet the tax deadline and therefore probably much further in advance of the possibility of the actual real estate closing that would break the “escrow.” Here is how the Times described the awkward scenario this summer:
“Should go smoothly”? Do we detect some more bluffing PR? We also note that this article written just three and one half months before the Wall Street Journal article has a very different (lower) figure for the amount of bonds that are supposed to be issued.
Bond Mechanics: Risk of Non-Origination (Enter Mr. Prokhorov?)
Once the bonds were issued interest on the bonds would have to paid to the bond holders. This could be done out of the capitalized interest account under the bond resolution (essentially the bond holder’s own money paid back to them) and earnings from the escrowed bond proceeds. The Times article states something else: That “the developer” would be “responsible for the annual debt payments.” That might be the what is being arranged but we suspect it is a PR slant. The slant might be based on the concept that the developer was “borrowing” money from the resolution to pay the debt service. However, to the extent that the earnings on the short term investment of the bond proceeds (in taxable markets) during the escrow period don't cover the (tax-exempt) interest rate on the (long term) bonds (the possible negative arbitrage) that deficiency is a cost that will ultimately need to be covered if the bonds are redeemed early.
Unless and until the real estate side of the deal closed there would be no assurance that there would be income to pay bond holders long term. If the real estate side of the transaction didn’t close within a reasonable period of time the bonds would have to be redeemed without ever financing the arena. ESDC’s board materials set March 31, 2011 as that outside date.* That means the `origination risk’ would have materialized. Then the only way that the bond holders would be paid in full is if someone came up with the cost of the bond issuance that would have been spent, likely out of bond proceeds, at the time of bond issuance. In other words someone (Mr. Prokhorov?) is likely to have lost their gamble and be out of pocket about $20 million. Mr. Prokhorov, or his equivalent, will also have to pay to cover any negative arbitrage by that time too. What could make that additional amount a comparably very large would be whatever the spread is between the investment and bond rate and the extended length of time occurring since the bond closing. Having someone associated with the borrower face these risks is an important part of minimizing the possibility that the developer might at some point decide to just walk away. (Bankruptcy of the financially weak Forest City Ratner could pose similar problems.)
(* See: Wednesday, October 21, 2009, As AY endgame approaches, would judges stop the MTA/ESDC from proceeding? Or might the pending cases affect bond sale?)
Shifting Around to Cover Risk
We have heard that Mr. Prokhorov is facing restrictions on getting his capital out of Russia for this transaction. If Mr. Prokhorov is the one who shoulders this risk then the non-origination based redemption will be the time when whatever collateral he has put up gets accessed and converted into (probably) U.S. currency. It could be that there is some risk with respect to accessing this collateral in which case the bond insurer will probably be asked to cover it. This could be one of the things the proposed bond insurer is balking at in the negotiations.
Fixed on Redemption Risk
The forfeited cost of issuance is not a loss that rating agencies should let the bond holders be exposed to, but the bondholders will face what is known as redemption risk. One has to ask why a bond buyer would want to get involved in a transaction as ugly and warty as this one. Why not just buy something clean? The answer is that as with “junk bonds” the buyers might see some compensation in a higher interest rate. The Wall Street journal article indicates that the bonds being issued will be issued at a fixed “annual interest rates of roughly 6.5%.” If the real estate side of the transaction never closes, the bond buyer’s investment, including the buyer’s transactional hassle and expense, will be for naught. The bond buyer would have done better by investing in alternative investment opportunities that would have locked in longer term advantages. The “ouch” factor is greatest if interest rates are down and the redeemed bonds were trading at a premium.
Variable Risks
The implications of redemption risk are less significant when variable rate bonds are issued. They always trade at par. But those bonds are harder to issue since the financial meltdown and they don’t reward buyers with a higher interest rate to help buyers overcome a “why bother” reaction when they consider what a bad case of the uglies these bonds will likely have. Another problem with a variable rate structure is that any liquidity provider who stands ready to buy the bonds at par becomes a defacto guarantor who pays off if the bonds are declared taxable (and in other comparably negative situations). These bonds will probably face enough of an concern about taxability that no one will want to deal with that possibility.
What Inconsiderate Shortcuts Signify
That nearly sums up why we think any sensible bond buyer would want to steer clear of this arena bond transaction if it ever issues. The pervasive odor of shortcut and developer accommodation should put buyers on notice that the tip of this iceberg betokens deeper problems that have not yet been duly considered or adequately protected against.
A Sales Pitch: A Duty to Put the Public Interest First When Buying Bonds
One other thought we’ve had is this. We remember the advertisements for municipal bonds by firms like Lebenthal that conveyed the message, rather like World War II savings bonds (which bore very low interest rates), that it is good to buy municipal bonds because bonds also benefit the community. Similarly a lot of people used to be attracted to government and the field of public finance because of the possibility of doing good for the community. The proposed arena bonds are antithetical to that notion. This arena and the mega-monopoly scheme of which it is a part harms the community. The panoply of lawsuits brought by many groups representing the community and their elected local representatives are one testament to that. The list of other proofs is long indeed. If once it was possible to persuade people to buy municipal bonds in the name of a public good, certainly in this case the argument is reversed. Those who consider the public good will have one more good reason not to buy these strangely concocted bonds.
(Above, the ESDC Board meeting room on September 17, 2009, the day of its last "approval" of Atlantic Yards, right before the mega-project changed again substantially. )
Oh, by the way: We think we know whereof we speak. We used to oversee the legal aspects of bond issuances for six agencies that were the state’s largest issuers of municipal bonds. This is NOT the kind of show we ran. Far from it.
ESDC Board Didn’t Approve the Smaller Redesigned 675,000 Square Foot Arena
We have been unable to get out of our mind the startling information that the Empire State Development Corporation did not actually approve the issuance of bonds for the proposed new Forest City Ratner Atlantic Yards Nets basketball arena. (See: Saturday, October 03, 2009, Did the ESDC board members know they were approving a 675,000 sf arena? And should there have been opportunity to comment?- Image of document below from that article)
Sure, when the ESDC board met and voted on September 17, 2009, they approved the financing of an arena in Brooklyn but what they approved was the financing of a 850,000 square foot arena, not the 20% smaller 675,000 square foot arena that developer Forest City Ratner currently plans to build. Building the smaller arena based on the board’s approval of a larger one for the same price would be a classic example of shortchanging the approving public agency, no different from sending Jack to the store with the price of a ten-slice pizza pie and having him come back with only eight slices of that pie plus no change. (In a less classic way, the public is also being shortchanged in that the arena is projected to be a $220 million net loss to the public.)
And PACB Approval for Substantially Restructured Financing Is Missing
The fact that the current arena plan has NOT been approved by the ESDC board seems to match up perfectly with the fact that the issuance of the bonds for the arena has also NOT been approved by the New York State Public Authorities Control Board. (See: Friday, June 20, 2008, Given 50% arena cost increase, DDDB asks PACB to reconsider AY approval.) In December 2006 the PACB approved the issuance of bonds for the arena in the amount of $637.2 million (to finance an arena costing $528.9 million exclusive of financing costs), but the cost of the arena has shot way up so that even the much smaller arena is now projected to cost 45% more, an amount stated to come to $772 million (without financing costs) which will likely be $930 million when financing costs are included. (See: Wednesday, September 09, 2009, FAQ: the reason for a new architect; curiously unchanged arena costs; why Gehry was dropped; and "vaportecture".)
(PACB approval figures from 2006 above- click to enlarge- from Atlantic Yards Report article: Wednesday, June 06, 2007, Privately financed? Court documents finally specify the housing bonds behind Atlantic Yards funding.)
New Unapproved Principals in the Transaction
The list of approvals that haven’t been obtained to finance the arena is rather long. We wrote recently about how ESDC hasn’t approved, but ought to, the recently arrived on the scene Russian oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov:
as an integral part of the Atlantic Yards deal, including as the proposed owner of the Nets basketball team and arena. Mr. Prokhorov was proposed as part of the Atlantic Yards deal shortly after the board’s meeting in a seemingly orchestrated fashion.(See: Tuesday, October 20, 2009, This Thursday’s ESDC Board Meeting (October 22, 2009): Atlantic Yards Is Not on the Agenda Though it Should Be.)
We were noting how that the Prokhorov approval was not on the agenda for the ESDC board’s meeting last week (October 22, 2009) and how ESDC may try to sidestep this approval (which approval it certainly should be doing) irrespective of whether it is actually a legal requirement. (Sidestepping reviews and approvals wherever possible is a tradition with the Atlantic Yards. Central to getting the megadevelopment approved was the use of an ESDC override of the city zoning process to avoid the community’s review and comment through ULURP.)
Litigation Highlighting Absence of Environmental Review for Revamped Transaction
Meanwhile, the mega-project is the subject of litigation for a number of other approvals and reviews that were not done. One new lawsuit challenges the fact that when the project changed substantially ESDC tried to sidestep a supplemental environmental impact statement to address all its significant changes. (See: Monday, October 19, 2009, AY doomed? New lawsuit targets ESDC over unrealistic project timetable, failure to issue SEIS, and failure to address renegotiated MTA deal.) That lawsuit was brought by twenty community groups, led by Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn and the Council of Brooklyn Neighborhoods. There will also be a second lawsuit about the lack of an environmental review for the substantially revised transaction brought by a separate set of plaintiffs, 13 community and public interest groups comprising the Brooklyn Speaks coalition. That lawsuit with its complementary theme of a necessary review and approval work being circumvented is expected to focus on the mega-monopoly’s effect on traffic. (See: Saturday, October 17, 2009, DDDB: new lawsuit challenging Atlantic Yards environmental review will be filed on Monday.)
Litigation Highlighting Sidestepping of Compliance With Public Authorities Accountability Act
There is a lawsuit against the MTA that seeks to annul any attempted transfer by the MTA of half the land the developer is going to need if it is ever to build the arena. (See: Tuesday, October 13, 2009, MTA lawsuit, which might affect arena financing, charges that Public Authorities Accountability Act was violated.) That lawsuit was filed on the eve of oral arguments on the eminent domain case (brought in its original form in January 2006) that could (and should) result in the developer being unable to procure (through eminent domain abuse) the other half of the site it will need to build the arena. The lawsuit against the MTA points out that when the MTA approved numerous new concessions for the developer (worth hundreds of millions of dollars) last June, including a revised deal with the MTA taking less money for its land, the MTA essentially ignored the Public Authorities Accountability Act enacted in 2005 which has procedures requiring bidding and appraisals when authorities like the MTA dispose of authority land. Those procedures are specifically to prohibit sweetheart deals like the one put through.
Litigation Continuing From 2007 Highlighting Many More Steps That Were Skipped
We also should not forget to mention that there is another a case on appeal that has been awaiting a decision since oral argument on September 17, 2008. That case was originally brought in the spring of 2007 and cites, among a long list of other actions government officials failed to take, inadequacies of the original environmental review. This was before the project changed substantially. It also challenges as defective an agency determination of blight (in order to take the land required for the arena) that artificially shaped the boundaries of the “blight” around the prime real estate the developer coveted for his mega-monopoly.
Litigation You Need a Scorecard to Keep Track of (And You Need to Add More)
There are now so many lawsuits lined up against the Atlantic Yards mega-project for the things that were not done by government officials sidestepping requirements as they rushed the project forward that the Brooklyn Paper decided that it was necessary to publish a docket scorecard. (See below.) The problem is that the published scorecard isn’t even complete. It leaves out the upcoming lawsuit being brought by the Brooklyn Speaks coalition and it leaves out the legal actions that have been repeatedly won by Henry Weinstein, a developer and owner of property within the megadevelopment footprint who sued his tenant (developer Shaya Boymelgreen) and the Atlantic Yards developer for collusive behavior to deprive him of control over his property. Interestingly, ESDC itself has been implicated in the defendant developers’ collusion which was all tilted toward the goal of the megadevelopment’s site acquisition. (See: Wednesday, October 21, 2009, More maneuvering at the corner of Carlton and Pacific with Boymelgreen firms pushed toward bankruptcy by (alleged) tenant.)
The scorecard chart also doesn’t include a lawsuit that has so far been lost even though it was refiled once. That lawsuit was brought by tenants within the footprint of the project who asserted that they will be improperly removed especially in light of recently evolved and disclosed facts about how much longer the project will take than originally asserted by the public agencies promoting it. (See: Wednesday, May 07, 2008, Another win for Ratner; state appellate court denies appeal on relocation case.)
Wall Street Journal Dubious That Loose-end Deal Can Be Pulled Together
It is not surprising that even before all these lawsuits were filed pointing out the multiple deficiencies the Wall Street Journal was running an article assessing that issuance of the arena bonds is going to be really “tough” to pull off. We wonder if they even know the half of it. For the Wall Street Journal article and other commentary on it see: Sale of Nets' Arena Debt Is Tough Shot, by Serena Ng and Matthew Futterman, October 15, 2009, Sale of Nets' Arena Debt Is Tough Shot (on No Land Grab), The Wall Street Journal, by Serena Ng and Matthew Futterman, October 15, 2009, Wall Street Journal calls arena debt "a toss-up," given market for sports and apparent tension between bankers and bond insurers (Atlantic yards Report- Friday, October 16, 2009), Wall Street Journal: Atlantic Yards Arena Bond a Tough Sale, (DDDB- 10.16.09), WSJ: Atlantic Yards bond sale a "toss-up" (Field of Schemes- October 16, 2009).
One of the major reasons the Wall Street Journal is reporting that the deal is very iffy is that the bonds must be issued by the end of December to satisfy an IRS deadline in connection with using a loophole to get around the (Senator) Moynihan amendment that prohibits the financing of sports stadiums and arenas with tax-exempt bonds. This deadline is one reason public officials were taking so many shortcuts to rush problematic revisions through at the last minute. To be fair, much of the last-minute rush was also fully attributable to the developer’s last minute brinkmanship as a tactic to wrest additional concession from public agencies that might not have been granted without this ploy. The proposed arena design was not revealed until day before the ESDC board meeting (after public hearings) and the orchestrated disclosure of the Russian oligarch’s involvement as owner and development partner was held back until a few days after that board meeting.
Riskiness Identified
It is not absolutely clear from reading the Wall Street Journal article what ALL the problems with the deal are but the riskiness of a deal full of holes is apparently a big part of what is going on. Problematic negotiations reportedly involve the rating agencies (who are supposed to assess risk) and the bond insurer (who gets paid to assume risk once they have done their own assessment of the risk they are taking on). The Journal notes that:
Goldman Sachs Group and Barclays bankers have spent weeks in discussions with three credit-rating services and bond insurer Assured Guaranty Ltd. over ratings and terms on the bonds. The developers are hoping for an investment-grade credit rating on the bonds and to issue them at annual interest rates of roughly 6.5%. Whether the debt will be insured -- which could be key to selling the bonds -- remains uncertain, as debates continue about the arena's revenue-earning potential.The Risk of Insufficient Arena Revenue
* * * *
Not all the parties looking at the bonds are on the same page. Bankers recently balked at some of the terms that bond insurer Assured Guaranty wants before it will guarantee interest and principal payments on the bonds, according to a person familiar with the matter. Assured is effectively the only bond insurer still actively writing new guarantees after its rivals ran into financial trouble.
Lack of projected revenue is also reportedly an issue. The Journal puts it this way:
. . . the bond sale is coming at a time when consumers and corporations are cutting back on sports spending and competition in the arena business in the metropolitan New York region is as fierce as it has ever been.Of course the risk of insufficient revenue could absolutely be a deal killer in itself, even if the deal was not so sloppily put together. The much higher admission prices at new sports arenas and stadiums together with the recession are resulting in price resistence by dissatisfied customers and lower attendance. (See: New Stadiums: Prices, and Outrage, Escalate, by Richard Sandomir,
August 25, 2008, Is This Seat Taken? In Front Rows of New Ballparks, No, by Ken Belson, April 21, 2009, Will $900 Baseball Tickets Sell? March 30, 2009, Sports Business: Help Wanted: Must Sit in Fancy Stadium Seats, by Richard Sandomir, April 22, 2009.)
It may be that fans, driven away by high prices, are changing their habits, for instance substituting visits to minor league teams instead of major league franchises. (See: Teams Get Their Day in Downturn, by Corey Kilgannon, June 12, 2009.)
Attendance is down for basketball in general. (See: In Some N.B.A. Arenas, the Crowds Are Thin, by Howard Beck, December 18, 2008.) And revenue for the Nets si down in particular. (See: Friday, July 10, 2009, While Nets' attendance went down 3% last year, ticket revenue went down 29%.)
Beyond the Economic Risk, Shortcuts as Red Flags for Real Risks
But the economic risk of poor attendance is not really what we are focusing on here. We will let bond buyers further assess that risk on their own. We are more concerned with the other risks being introduced by public officials intent on taking shortcuts to please a developer. Each shortcut should be considered a red flag for what is going on overall and it looks to us like some serious incompetence.
We note that at the very same meeting where ESDC negligently overlooked having its board approve the reduction in the arena’s size ESDC’s staff, attentive to apparently higher priorities, executed a slick maneuver that quietly slipped a last-minute authorization to advance another $25 million to the developer into the package of other concessions.
It will be interesting to see if ESDC ever decides to start clearing up at least a few of the many loose ends that exist and, if so, exactly which loose ends it winds up admitting through subsequent corrective action. For instance, one thing that could sink ESDC’s legal boat is that it hasn’t done any cost benefit analysis of Atlantic Yards or other related benefits analysis. Might ESDC one day come out with a cost benefit analysis? Or is ESDC likely to stonewall across the board, thinking that even some cleanup actions could involve a slippery slope of admitting defects?
We pointed out in an earlier post that Warner Johnston told us that the ESDC board “has pretty much finished with Atlantic Yards.” As such, the ESDC board did not approve Russian oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov’s involvement in the megadevelopment at the board meeting last week and perhaps just won’t. Being “pretty much finished with Atlantic Yards” could also mean that the board won’t be asked to actually approve the arena although the board has another meeting scheduled for November 19, 2009. (See: Thursday, October 22, 2009, Mark your calendars: next ESDC board meeting is November 19.)
No Pro Hockey
The size reduction of the planned (vs. “approved”) arena is not just quantitative, not just a 20% comparative reduction of 850,000 “apples” (of square feet) to 675,000 “apples” (of square feet), it also qualitatively affects function. The reduced 675,000 square foot arena that is now planned will still function as a basketball arena (the “apple” of the developer’s eye) but it will not function as an arena for a hockey team as the originally proposed 850,000 square foot arena would have. Simultaneous denoting the significance of this and of how sloppily irresponsible our public officials’ discussions of the arena has become, is the way that Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz laughably issued an invitation early this month to the Long Islanders hockey team to play in Brooklyn despite the fact that the arena will now be too small and narrow to accommodate that sport. (See: Thursday, October 08, 2009, From hoops to hockey? Markowitz, contemplating Islanders' move to Brooklyn, disregards the planned arena's limitations.)
The inability to use the arena for hockey as previously proposed also undermines the already enfeebled economic viability of the arena. To wit, from a New York Post article covering Markowitz’s gaffe:
“To build an arena today without a second major tenant is really shortsighted,” said Robert Boland, a sports business professor at NYU. “If I were Bruce Ratner, I’d be on the phone with the architects to change the design because the finances work a lot easier with a second tenant.”(See: Islanders are Brooklyn's Goal, by Rich Calder, October 8, 2009.)
Blowing Off PACB Approval
In addition to NOT having the board approve the smaller arena, ESDC officials have said that they don’t plan to get a new PACB approval for the changes that have occurred even though the arena (and the rest of the megadevelopment) has changed so substantially. (See: Thursday, July 23, 2009, ESDC, FCR face, answer, evade tough questions (subsidies, cost-benefit analysis, etc.); meeting marred by heckling and chaos.) When asked, ESDC Senior Counsel, Steve Matlin simply suggested that it wasn’t needed.
Our previous comment on his answer that approval was not needed was:
We do not believe that the answer is correct because the mega-project and its financing have changed dramatically from what received PACB approval in 2006, tilting ever more strongly towards a very substantial likelihood that the financing will fail and an increasing need for it to be propped up with more subsidy just as it in fact was by the most recent actions of ESDC and the MTA. To say that the PACB does not need to approve substantial revisions of projects careening off toward failure is to deny the PACB its purpose and veer away from past precedent. To suggest that there is an effort underway to have the PACB not approve the substantial rewrite of the project’s financing that has occurred since 2006 says something about the fear that politicians have of taking responsibility for this project. Politicians would rather set precedent in giving up this control and gate-keeping function than take responsibility for the project? Really now!(See: Thursday, July 23, 2009, The Hit and Miss of Last Night’s Public “Information” Meeting on Atlantic Yards.)
PACB Was Set Up to Deal With a World Defaulting NYS Issuers Including ESDC (Before It Adopted a New Name)
The PACB was set up to approve financings during the financial crisis of the mid-1970's when defaulting state agency and city bonds had to be rescued. Defaults by one state issuer can affect the broader market for other state issuers. The PACB was set up to ensure financial stability and order and promote economic sobriety to counter the kind of activity that had led to defaults. ESDC, then known by its official statutory name of New York State Urban Development Corporation (“UDC” - It now uses a “d.b.a.”) was one of the main agencies that had to be rescued. A big part of why it had to be rescued was that it had pushed forward pell-mell, driven by politics. It exercised bad judgment doing deals that were not wise though they were politically desired. We know this quite well because we worked at the agency that was called upon to financially rescue them. Our agency was able to come to the rescue because it had avoided similar trouble by virtue of the fact that it was more conservatively managed. Our agency was still dealing with the aftermath of the cleanup when we arrived to work there at the beginning of the 80's. That was when UDC/ESDC was still unable to access the financial markets.
PACB Grabs The Public Policy Reins
Although the PACB was set up to ensure financial responsibility on the part of state finance agencies, its gate-keeping approval function has been taken advantage by political leaders so that projects that make poor public policy sense aren’t allowed to proceed. A case in point was Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver’s blocking of Mayor Bloomberg’s West Side stadium in Manhattan. (See: Remarks by Speaker Sheldon Silver, PACB Decision Press Conference, State Capitol, Albany, NY, Monday, June 6, 2005 and Stadium opponents do sack dance over Silver vote, by Albert Amateau, June10 -16, 2005.)
PACB, The Legislative Branch’s De Factor Check On the Power of Governor-Dominated Authorities
Whether or not the PACB’s policy oversight was part of what was originally intended when the PACB was created, it has allowed representatives from the state’s legislative branch, the Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate Majority leader, to have a de facto check on authorities that are otherwise under the political control of the governor. For projects to be approved, votes of the PACB must be unanimous. The PACB, frequently referred to as “three men in a room,” consists of three voting members: the governor and the aforementioned two legislative body leaders. (Minority senate and assembly leaders are on the PACB but have no vote.)
PACB Statute Including Its Duties
The statute governing the PACB (Article 1-A of the Public Authorities Law, sections 50 and 51) calls for the PACB to approve financings by the state’s public authorities including specifically UDC/ESDC (and its subsidiaries). ESDC, as noted, led the state into the financial difficulties the PACB was constituted to address. The statute actually states that those approvals “shall be” the PACB’s “duty.” (emphasis supplied):
§ 51. Powers, functions and duties of the New York state public authorities control board; limitations. 1. The New York state public authorities control board shall have the power and it shall be its duty to receive applications for approval of the financing and construction of any project proposed by any of the following state public benefit corporations:PACB, Not Just Bonds: Any “Commitment,” “Agreement” or “Financing”
* * * *
e. New York state urban development corporation
* * * *
Any application made concerning a project shall include the terms, conditions and dates of the repayment of state appropriations authorized by law pursuant to a repayment agreement.
* * * *
No public benefit corporation subject to the provisions of this section shall make any commitment, enter into any agreement or incur any indebtedness for the purpose of acquiring, constructing, or financing any project unless prior approval has been received from the board by such public benefit corporation as provided herein.
2. The board may require as part of such application such information as it deems necessary and shall act upon such application within a reasonable time. The board shall furnish the state comptroller with a copy of each such application within three days following receipt thereof by the board. The board shall not approve any such application prior to the earlier of (a) seven days following the receipt by the state comptroller of such application or (b) the receipt by the board of the state comptroller's comments on the application or his consent to an earlier determination by the board. Reference to the state comptroller in this subdivision shall include any authorized representative of the state comptroller.
3. The board may approve applications only upon its determination that, with relation to any proposed project, there are commitments of funds sufficient to finance the acquisition and construction of such project. In determining the sufficiency of commitments of funds, the board may consider commitments of funds, projections of fees or other revenues and security, which may, in the discretion of the board, include collateral security sufficient to retire a proposed indebtedness or protect or indemnify against potential liabilities proposed to be undertaken. A copy of such determination shall be submitted to the chief executive officer of the appropriate public benefit corporation and the state comptroller.
Bottom line, ESDC through its subsidy is proposing to issue bonds requiring PACB approval. Further, the approval required from the PACB is not just with respect to issuance of the authority’s bonds. It applies to any state authority financing of a project, “any commitment. . . any agreement . . . indebtedness for the purpose of acquiring, constructing, or financing any project.” The required PACB approval therefore applies to the ESDC administration of the hundred million dollars the state is making available to the project and the ancillary financing agreements, probably even including the state’s allowing the developer to use naming rights to finance the mega-development.
PACB Approval Required (Like Board Approvals)
How do we know that the 20% reduction in the size of the arena, its functionally diminished and changed potential use coupled with its 45% increase in cost (and its shift to being a clearly identified net loss for the public) mean that the arena’s financing needs to go back to the PACB for approval? Because we have experience in obtaining billions of dollars of approvals from the PACB and have seen the many other deals that the PACB routinely requires go back to it for approval when there are significant changes in the parameters of what is being financed. One pretty good indicator in itself is that even though ESDC screwed up and didn’t have its board approve the smaller arena, it was felt that the deal had changed so substantially in other aspects that a new ESDC board approval was needed. The two approvals, board and PACB, tend to go hand in hand.
Riskier New Financing Involves Almost Double the Burden
The public is getting a lot less for what it is putting into the deal and the current transaction is much more likely to be headed for a default. In the original transaction that the PACB approved, each square foot of arena (850,000 square feet total) had to generate income to support a cost of $749 p/s/f of construction and financing costs ($637.2 million total). In the new transaction, each square foot of arena (675,000 square feet total) now has the much more onerous burden of supporting the cost of $1,378 p/s/f of construction and financing costs ($930 million total). That’s almost double the burden. Doesn’t that sound like a deal that has become much more financially precarious?
Can Riskier Financing Get Around PACB’s Approval?
Is ESDC thinking that it will be able to avoid going back to the PACB by keeping down the amount of the bonds actually issued? The Wall Street Journal reports that despite the hugely escalated overall and p/s/f costs of the arena that the bonds issued might be only about $700 million:
Right now, the planned sale of as much as $700 million in bonds to finance the project's centerpiece -- a $900 million basketball arena to be called the Barclays Center -- looks like a toss-up. The U.S. municipal-bond market, while in much better shape than six months ago, has been in a rout since the start of October. The Nets arena offering, expected to launch next month, would be the largest bond sale tied to a sports venue in more than a year.$700 million would be almost exactly a 10% increase over the originally authorized $637.2 million in bonds. Keeping the bond amount down so that it doesn’t exceed the originally approved amount by 10% could create an argument that a new PACB approval for the revised deal is not required but that argument would carry only if one ignored (the way the ESDC board did) the decrease in the arena size and all the other aspects of the financing deal whereby the public is getting much less for the funds it is putting into the project. It would carry only if one were willing to be completely blind to the escalating risks the transaction is facing. That’s exactly what the PACB is NOT supposed to do.
Something to Take With Equanimity?
Keeping the total bond amount down to $700 million would substantially increase the equity (or other debt) that would need to be furnished to finance the arena, probably by about $230 million. An increased cushion of equity is often considered to reduce risk but it is far from a panacea when the financing numbers don’t otherwise work. When the numbers don’t work the extra equity can just be part of the set-up for all sorts of litigation against and between the overstretched principals when cash flow runs short. That litigation can itself formidably strain project resources.
One thing to note is that the developer, Forest City Ratner, is not financially strong at this point and, depending on what happens, may actually go under. That, plus the need for equity and cash infusions to close the financial holes in the deal, is the reason that Prokhorov has been introduced to pour in his Russian cash.
Atlantic Yards as Political Poison Ivy: Are Politicians Rashly Sacrificing the Power of Precedent?
We think it is interesting that politicians are so afraid of the political poison ivy that Atlantic Yards represents that they would be willing to let Atlantic Yards set a precedent for the future, a precedent that a project with very substantial revisions potentially “careening off toward failure” does not require PACB approval. That precedent, if it is allowed to be established, could give any governor virtually unfettered latitude to continue unchallenged with degenerated projects substantially altered from their original underwriting and originally assessed public benefits. The senate and assembly leaders and state comptroller would thereby lose all future say.
What if the PACB does not, as it needs to, approve the substantially revised mega-project? The PACB statute does not set forth a remedy although it would put the state and its future administrations at a substantial moral remove from any defaulting bonds. It would also make the project vulnerable to clawback of funds theoretically “committed” by the state. Notably, though many other statutes dictating state procedures have them, the PACB statute does not contain a savings clause that says that actions (like bond issuances) taken without required PACB approval remain valid once taken. Since these kinds of things have never been put to the test there is no litigation to help predict future outcomes. Yet our public officials are so wedded to serving the developer here that they are willing to push the envelope to an extraordinary extent.
Bond Counsel Front and Center: The Tradition of Defaulting Issuers Skipping Away Because of Skipped Approvals
The role of bond counsel in municipal bonds transactions was created in the 1800's when bond issuers across the nation were disavowing and refusing to pay (defaulting) bonds, saying that proper procedures had not been followed and that required approvals for the issuance of bonds had not been obtained. Those claims allowed the issuers to walk away from the bonds, leaving the bond holders without recourse. These days, bond counsel participates in transactions to assure bond buyers that all required procedures have been followed and approvals obtained. The thinking is that the bond counsel law firm can be sued if the firm’s opinion is legally and negligently wrong and the bonds default as a result. No doubt some poor bond counsel will have to opine that arena bonds are being properly issued despite the lack of all the various approvals we have been talking about. For what it’s worth, the bond counsel itself will probably want to rely on an opinion from the agency’s in-house lawyers that all necessary approvals have been obtained, even though the agency staff is pushing the envelope far as possible for political reasons.
Will Tax-exemption Shortcuts Lead To Declaration That Bonds Are Taxable?
There are more hazards that bond buyers will probably want bond counsel’s help in sorting out. One is the issue of whether the Nets arena bonds can be considered safely tax-exempt. Bond counsel normally provides an additional opinion (not a guarantee) with respect to municipal bonds as to whether the interest on the bonds is tax-exempt. For the arena bonds that opinion is going to be especially important because of some of the shenanigans going on in New York involving the New York City Department of Finance and the way it has set real estate tax assessments in anticipation of supporting the tax exemption of municipal bonds. The originally responsible Finance Commissioner, Martha Stark, resigned her post, probably not on good terms, at a time when multiple scandals were going on. (See: Tuesday, April 28, 2009, Finance Commissioner Stark resigns, but the Yankee Stadium issue is ignored.)
One of the scandals with respect to the commissioner and her department was her participation in the apparent manipulation of real property tax assessments documented in e-mails with respect to bonds for Yankee Stadium. (See: Sunday, April 19, 2009, Keeping up with Bloomberg and Friends: Stark New Scandals and Is it True WSJ Readers Don’t Commit Murder?) That raises questions about whether the bonds whose tax exemption is based upon the validity of those figures are truly tax-exempt. (See: Saturday, November 8, 2008, Does Questionable Assertion of Attorney-client Privilege Point to Yankee Stadium Bond Taxability?) The same concerns apply to the Nets arena bonds and many of the same cast of characters were involved. It is not clear where further congressional investigation into the conduct of New York public officials is likely to lead. In time, it could lead to a declaration that the Nets arena bonds are not tax-exempt. Such a declaration would likely be retroactive to the bonds date of issuance.
Dual Purpose Strategy Acknowledging Deal Vulnerabilities?
We noted that the Wall Street Journal reported that the bond issuance may be kept down to $700 million. The decision to restrict the amount of bonds being issued to a lower number such as that may be tactical decision with a two-fold purpose. It can bolster ESDC’s hope not to be summoned back the PACB as noted before. It also throttles back on the chance that the bonds will be deemed taxable because they are being supported by artificially inflated real estate property assessments and tax equivalency payments.
“Public Purpose” vs. “Public Purpose”
Once upon a time a core component of every bond counsel opinion was that the bonds were being issued for a “public purpose.” Theoretically that is still true and it may be turn out to be unusually true in the case of any arena bonds that get issued. Unless public agencies were issuing bonds for a public purpose states and localities didn’t have authority to issue them. Theoretically that could even go to the bonds’ tax exemption since a valid state or local government issuance was at the heart of the original theory of why municipal bonds could be tax-exempt. The tax law has been greatly affected and made much more complex in recent decades by a distracting overlay of federal legislation designed to take away tax exemption where it was once readily recognized.
The concept of “public purpose” for the purpose of issuing valid municipal bonds is separate and distinct from the concept of “public purpose” for the purpose of having a valid taking or condemnation under the laws applicable to eminent domain. Nevertheless the two concepts can have some overlap. The latter eminent domain concept is being litigated right now in one of the project litigations before New York’s highest court. One of the arguments before the court goes to whether ESDC actually has the power to exercise the eminent domain it is exercising given that ESDC’s exercise of its powers is specifically pursuant to the restrictive provisions of Article 18 of the constitution which links eminent domain use to affordable housing. Conceivably, the court will find that Article 18 has not been complied with and that ESDC therefore has not properly exercised its powers. This is one theory under which ESDC’s eminent domain abuse seizure of property would be prevented. Would this also negate ESDC’s power to issue (or have issued) any bonds? We don’t know. We haven’t looked at it but we are sure it is one more thing bond counsel will need to look at as they rack up a bill.
Postponing the Day of Reckoning For Dealing With Loose Ends
How is it possible that arena bonds could be issued with so many loose ends and the uncertainly of the litigation? The developer has been publicizing the fact that he has a plan. Essentially his plan involves postponing the day of reckoning for dealing with the loose ends. He is proposing to divide the transaction into two parts. The bond transaction would be separated from the real estate transaction in order to issue the bonds before the end of the year. The real estate financing which involves the majority of the loose ends that need to tied up would defer having to deal with any loose ends by “closing the transaction in escrow.” Bond proceeds held under the bond resolution would not be advanced to fund the real estate transaction unless and until identified loose ends are cleaned up. More typically big single project financings involve a simultaneous closing of both the bond and real estate side of the transaction. Since the two need to mirror each other that is the best way to minimize risk.
(BTW: We have sometimes heard people refer to the “bonds being issued in escrow.” Do not expect anything like that to be the case. Among other things we doubt it would qualify as meeting any deadlines for IRS purposes.)
Close But No Cigar
If you can’t close the two sides of the transaction simultaneously it is good to close them as close together as possible. There is always the risk that loose ends won’t be cleared up and that bonds will have to be redeemed (`origination risk’- we’ll get back to this in a moment) but if there is a long interregnum between the closings the risks rise that other unidentified problems will crop up during the delay or even because of it.
PR For The Times?
Interestingly, in coverage by the New York Times the developer apparently with some bravado (and bluff?) indicated to the reporter that bonds might be issued much earlier than necessary to meet the tax deadline and therefore probably much further in advance of the possibility of the actual real estate closing that would break the “escrow.” Here is how the Times described the awkward scenario this summer:
The developer’s bankers or underwriters are visiting bond rating agencies and a bond insurer to outline their plans for about $586 million in tax-exempt bonds and another $30 million in conventional financing, they say. The bonds would be issued by the state development corporation, possibly in early October, with the developer responsible for the annual debt payments, which are expected to be about $45 million.(See: Private Equity: Ratner’s Atlantic Yards Project Enters a Crucial Period, June 25, 2009
The bond proceeds would be placed in escrow until the state got court approval for condemnation, notified dozens of tenants on the site to vacate and conveyed the property to the developer.
Although it is nearly impossible to get financing for large real estate projects today, the bankers say a bond sale should go smoothly.
“Should go smoothly”? Do we detect some more bluffing PR? We also note that this article written just three and one half months before the Wall Street Journal article has a very different (lower) figure for the amount of bonds that are supposed to be issued.
Bond Mechanics: Risk of Non-Origination (Enter Mr. Prokhorov?)
Once the bonds were issued interest on the bonds would have to paid to the bond holders. This could be done out of the capitalized interest account under the bond resolution (essentially the bond holder’s own money paid back to them) and earnings from the escrowed bond proceeds. The Times article states something else: That “the developer” would be “responsible for the annual debt payments.” That might be the what is being arranged but we suspect it is a PR slant. The slant might be based on the concept that the developer was “borrowing” money from the resolution to pay the debt service. However, to the extent that the earnings on the short term investment of the bond proceeds (in taxable markets) during the escrow period don't cover the (tax-exempt) interest rate on the (long term) bonds (the possible negative arbitrage) that deficiency is a cost that will ultimately need to be covered if the bonds are redeemed early.
Unless and until the real estate side of the deal closed there would be no assurance that there would be income to pay bond holders long term. If the real estate side of the transaction didn’t close within a reasonable period of time the bonds would have to be redeemed without ever financing the arena. ESDC’s board materials set March 31, 2011 as that outside date.* That means the `origination risk’ would have materialized. Then the only way that the bond holders would be paid in full is if someone came up with the cost of the bond issuance that would have been spent, likely out of bond proceeds, at the time of bond issuance. In other words someone (Mr. Prokhorov?) is likely to have lost their gamble and be out of pocket about $20 million. Mr. Prokhorov, or his equivalent, will also have to pay to cover any negative arbitrage by that time too. What could make that additional amount a comparably very large would be whatever the spread is between the investment and bond rate and the extended length of time occurring since the bond closing. Having someone associated with the borrower face these risks is an important part of minimizing the possibility that the developer might at some point decide to just walk away. (Bankruptcy of the financially weak Forest City Ratner could pose similar problems.)
(* See: Wednesday, October 21, 2009, As AY endgame approaches, would judges stop the MTA/ESDC from proceeding? Or might the pending cases affect bond sale?)
Shifting Around to Cover Risk
We have heard that Mr. Prokhorov is facing restrictions on getting his capital out of Russia for this transaction. If Mr. Prokhorov is the one who shoulders this risk then the non-origination based redemption will be the time when whatever collateral he has put up gets accessed and converted into (probably) U.S. currency. It could be that there is some risk with respect to accessing this collateral in which case the bond insurer will probably be asked to cover it. This could be one of the things the proposed bond insurer is balking at in the negotiations.
Fixed on Redemption Risk
The forfeited cost of issuance is not a loss that rating agencies should let the bond holders be exposed to, but the bondholders will face what is known as redemption risk. One has to ask why a bond buyer would want to get involved in a transaction as ugly and warty as this one. Why not just buy something clean? The answer is that as with “junk bonds” the buyers might see some compensation in a higher interest rate. The Wall Street journal article indicates that the bonds being issued will be issued at a fixed “annual interest rates of roughly 6.5%.” If the real estate side of the transaction never closes, the bond buyer’s investment, including the buyer’s transactional hassle and expense, will be for naught. The bond buyer would have done better by investing in alternative investment opportunities that would have locked in longer term advantages. The “ouch” factor is greatest if interest rates are down and the redeemed bonds were trading at a premium.
Variable Risks
The implications of redemption risk are less significant when variable rate bonds are issued. They always trade at par. But those bonds are harder to issue since the financial meltdown and they don’t reward buyers with a higher interest rate to help buyers overcome a “why bother” reaction when they consider what a bad case of the uglies these bonds will likely have. Another problem with a variable rate structure is that any liquidity provider who stands ready to buy the bonds at par becomes a defacto guarantor who pays off if the bonds are declared taxable (and in other comparably negative situations). These bonds will probably face enough of an concern about taxability that no one will want to deal with that possibility.
What Inconsiderate Shortcuts Signify
That nearly sums up why we think any sensible bond buyer would want to steer clear of this arena bond transaction if it ever issues. The pervasive odor of shortcut and developer accommodation should put buyers on notice that the tip of this iceberg betokens deeper problems that have not yet been duly considered or adequately protected against.
A Sales Pitch: A Duty to Put the Public Interest First When Buying Bonds
One other thought we’ve had is this. We remember the advertisements for municipal bonds by firms like Lebenthal that conveyed the message, rather like World War II savings bonds (which bore very low interest rates), that it is good to buy municipal bonds because bonds also benefit the community. Similarly a lot of people used to be attracted to government and the field of public finance because of the possibility of doing good for the community. The proposed arena bonds are antithetical to that notion. This arena and the mega-monopoly scheme of which it is a part harms the community. The panoply of lawsuits brought by many groups representing the community and their elected local representatives are one testament to that. The list of other proofs is long indeed. If once it was possible to persuade people to buy municipal bonds in the name of a public good, certainly in this case the argument is reversed. Those who consider the public good will have one more good reason not to buy these strangely concocted bonds.
(Above, the ESDC Board meeting room on September 17, 2009, the day of its last "approval" of Atlantic Yards, right before the mega-project changed again substantially. )
Thursday, October 22, 2009
This Is Rich! Looks Like Bloomberg is Making History.
Mayor Bloomberg is the wealthiest citizen of New York. We know that Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s wealth together with the fact that he is also Mayor amounts to something truly extraordinary. Nevertheless, after our remarks at City Hall on Friday concerning Mayor Bloomberg’s wealth and how he used it to overturn term limits we got to wondering whether there was any historical precedent for such a situation.
It turns out that Mr. Bloomberg is apparently making history. Going all the way back to 1665 with Mr. Bloomberg being the city’s 108th mayor (before that there were “Burgomasters”) there has never been a time when the city’s wealthiest citizen was also the mayor. (Of course it didn’t start out that way. Bloomberg became the wealthiest New Yorker while in office.)
Not Naive
We are not naive. We know quite well that there have been rich New York mayors in the past. Our own family tree is intertwined with the Crugers, both named John, two father and son mayors who we know were among the wealthy of the time (John Cruger, the 38th Mayor of the City, 1757-1766 and John Cruger, Jr., the 41st, 1757-1766). Don’t ask how the Crugers made their wealth. Some of the story is not so pretty and not something to be proud of. It didn’t make the Crugers themselves wealthier but one of their relatives, Nicholas Cruger, raised Alexander Hamilton and, as we all know, Hamilton is easy to associate with the idea of money. He was the first United States Secretary of the Treasury, helped found the mint, and established the first national bank, helped found the Bank of New York and has his face is on our ten dollar bills. Finally, by virtue of Hamilton's support of the compromise of moving the nation’s political capital to Washington, the New York Stock Exchange was created May 17, 1792 as part of the new financial system that helped turn New York City into the nation's financial capital.
Consulting a Favorite Historian
Yes there were wealthy mayors, but did we ever before have a situation before where the very wealthiest man in New York was also the mayor?
We contacted one of our favorite New York historians, Francis Morrone who is also a historical walking tour guide par excellence. (We recommend watching the Municipal Art Society’s calendar for when his tours come up.) Mr. Marrone provided us with an erudite and considered answer. Did we ever have a situation before where the very wealthiest man in New York was also the mayor? This is what Marrone was able to tell us:
Mr. Marrone’s caution about the vagaries of how wealth is determined is worth paying heed to. When we say that Mr. Bloomberg is New York’s wealthiest citizen we are going by the Forbes rankings. To be absolutely fair, this year Mr. Bloomberg’s wealth at $17.5 billion is only calculated as exceeding his next nearest rival for the title, David Koch, by a mere $1.5 billion, a close call. However, while $16 billion is relatively close, the next two New Yorkers down the list, Carl Icahn and Ronald Perelman, have significantly lower net worth figures at $10.5 and $10 billion respectively. That leaves room for a lot of calculation error. Thereafter you get down to people whose wealth is well below half of what Bloomberg has (much closer to a to a third): John Paulson at $6.8 billion and Rupert Murdoch at $6 billion. Everyone else is at or below $5 billion. The amounts tail off quickly.
Looking at Escalations of Wealth
There is also something else to be compared when comparing these lists: The extent to which the wealth of these New Yorker has increased over time. In 1997, the first year Bloomberg’s political aspirations, including his specific desire to be mayor were first publicly disclosed, Bloomberg’s wealth was calculated as $1.3 billion, a fraction of his current $17.5 figure (7.4%) and below Donald Trump’s $1.4 billion of the time. But that year Ron Pearlman’s net worth was $6.5 billion, 65% of what it is now. Rupert Murdoch had $3.9 billion, which is also 65% of the current Forbes figure for his wealth. Carl Icahn’s wealth was $2 billion (19%). David Koch’s wealth, $2.2 billion, originally inherited, was a smaller fraction more like Bloomberg’s small fraction (13%). John Paulson, who started his hedge fund company in 1994, was not on the list.
Ever Before?
(William Frederick Havemeyer, Mayor of New York City, Library of Congress photo from Wikipedia.)
This leaves us with some other questions. We presume that history doesn't tell us that Havemeyer's wealth increased significantly while in office. Might there be someone else very wealthy whose wealth increased dramatically while in office?
We recognize that Boss Tweed and quite a number of other (less wealthy) politicians made a lot of money and formed companies (often secretly or in the background) to profit by business that could be done with the city or by virtue of city endeavors that involved major conflicts of interest. But was there ever a truly wealthy mayor with a personal business empire where the nature of that business meant that his empire or set of business enterprises was routinely doing business with most of the companies with which the city had commercial dealings?
Havemeyer's wealth came from sugar. That means that, certainly by the time later Havemeyers established the Sugar Trust, New Yorkers all paid higher prices since everyone uses sugar (a la the new movie "The Informant" about ADM's price fixing of commodities that every American has consumed and paid a higher price for “by the time they have eaten breakfast”). Probably, however, the city was for the most part not doing business directly with Mayor Havemeyer or with Havemeyer's sugar companies though there might have been some issues with things like wharf access. On the other hand, Havemeyer may have benefitted from the overview of city affairs he got as mayor: He invested heavily as a stockholder of the Long Island Rail Road.
Present Day Peculiarities
Back to the peculiarities of the present day. It seems to be inadequately appreciated that Bloomberg’s Bloomberg LP does business with almost every major company in the city. Most of Bloomberg’s wealth comes from the sale of the Bloomberg financial terminals, not from his media company activities. A lot of media companies are not doing well these days. It is Bloomberg’s terminal sales that are likely financing his recently announced acquisition from McGraw Hill of “Business Week,” competing business publication that like a lot of others has not done very well recently. While Bloomberg LP is doing business with every major company in the city, the city is busily granting companies concessions over which Bloomberg’s administration has substantial discretion.
Take one big company as an example, Goldman Sachs. Goldman has a new building in Battery Park City which was allowed to override the Battery Park City master plan, was granted extra density and tax breaks. Meanwhile, despite the fact that the city’s Conflicts of Interest Board said that he should not do so, Mr. Bloomberg calls up his business to check on terminal sales numbers. All that it takes for a big company to send money Bloomberg’s way in what could be the equivalent of a kickback or a political contribution is to order more terminals. Political contributions are not tax deductible, but paying for more terminals than you really need is.
Our Trust is Busted
Mr. Marrone mentions that Teddy Roosevelt ran for mayor. Teddy Roosevelt may have been wealthy (and he didn’t get to be mayor when he ran- he came in third) but we remember Teddy as a reformer. We remember Teddy as the “trustbuster” who didn’t believe in monopolies (including the sugar trust). But whose side is Bloomberg on? One pretty good indication: Bloomberg is a man who fights for monopolies like Atlantic Yards that are disastrously draining our dwindling public coffers.
Suffice it to say, we are concerned. Is this the kind of history we want our city to be making?
It turns out that Mr. Bloomberg is apparently making history. Going all the way back to 1665 with Mr. Bloomberg being the city’s 108th mayor (before that there were “Burgomasters”) there has never been a time when the city’s wealthiest citizen was also the mayor. (Of course it didn’t start out that way. Bloomberg became the wealthiest New Yorker while in office.)
Not Naive
We are not naive. We know quite well that there have been rich New York mayors in the past. Our own family tree is intertwined with the Crugers, both named John, two father and son mayors who we know were among the wealthy of the time (John Cruger, the 38th Mayor of the City, 1757-1766 and John Cruger, Jr., the 41st, 1757-1766). Don’t ask how the Crugers made their wealth. Some of the story is not so pretty and not something to be proud of. It didn’t make the Crugers themselves wealthier but one of their relatives, Nicholas Cruger, raised Alexander Hamilton and, as we all know, Hamilton is easy to associate with the idea of money. He was the first United States Secretary of the Treasury, helped found the mint, and established the first national bank, helped found the Bank of New York and has his face is on our ten dollar bills. Finally, by virtue of Hamilton's support of the compromise of moving the nation’s political capital to Washington, the New York Stock Exchange was created May 17, 1792 as part of the new financial system that helped turn New York City into the nation's financial capital.
Consulting a Favorite Historian
Yes there were wealthy mayors, but did we ever before have a situation before where the very wealthiest man in New York was also the mayor?
We contacted one of our favorite New York historians, Francis Morrone who is also a historical walking tour guide par excellence. (We recommend watching the Municipal Art Society’s calendar for when his tours come up.) Mr. Marrone provided us with an erudite and considered answer. Did we ever have a situation before where the very wealthiest man in New York was also the mayor? This is what Marrone was able to tell us:
The answer is probably not. I say "probably" because comparative information is not available. But eyeballing the list of mayors going back to the 17th Century, we see that many of them, up to the late 19th Century, were extremely wealthy individuals--from Stephanus Van Cortlandt [1677] and Jacobus Van Cortlandt [1719-1720] to DeWitt Clinton [1803-1807 and 1811-1815] to William F. Havemeyer. [1845-1846, 1848-1849 and 1873-1874] But were any of them THE richest? Probably not. That said, there is AMPLE precedent for very rich mayors in the city's history. The tradition of the rich mayor was pretty much ended by the rise of clubhouse politics, with the rich then being cast in the role of "reformers" (such as Theodore Roosevelt, who lost in his only bid to become NYC mayor [in 1886]). One guy I'd look at to see how his net worth compared to the city budget as a whole would be William Havemeyer, who served three non-consecutive terms (two in the 1840s, one in the 1870s). His fortune came from sugar. Members of the family inheriting Havemeyer money continued in the sugar and refining business and were involved in the Sugar Trust. His last term came following the downfall of the Tweed Ring, and he made draconian cuts in the city budget. (By the way, there are a lot of obscurities about the way we rank the rich even today, and I would NEVER say that so and so is the richest, only "among the richest.")Determining the Relative Wealth of the Wealthy These Days (Possibility of Vagaries)
Mr. Marrone’s caution about the vagaries of how wealth is determined is worth paying heed to. When we say that Mr. Bloomberg is New York’s wealthiest citizen we are going by the Forbes rankings. To be absolutely fair, this year Mr. Bloomberg’s wealth at $17.5 billion is only calculated as exceeding his next nearest rival for the title, David Koch, by a mere $1.5 billion, a close call. However, while $16 billion is relatively close, the next two New Yorkers down the list, Carl Icahn and Ronald Perelman, have significantly lower net worth figures at $10.5 and $10 billion respectively. That leaves room for a lot of calculation error. Thereafter you get down to people whose wealth is well below half of what Bloomberg has (much closer to a to a third): John Paulson at $6.8 billion and Rupert Murdoch at $6 billion. Everyone else is at or below $5 billion. The amounts tail off quickly.
Looking at Escalations of Wealth
There is also something else to be compared when comparing these lists: The extent to which the wealth of these New Yorker has increased over time. In 1997, the first year Bloomberg’s political aspirations, including his specific desire to be mayor were first publicly disclosed, Bloomberg’s wealth was calculated as $1.3 billion, a fraction of his current $17.5 figure (7.4%) and below Donald Trump’s $1.4 billion of the time. But that year Ron Pearlman’s net worth was $6.5 billion, 65% of what it is now. Rupert Murdoch had $3.9 billion, which is also 65% of the current Forbes figure for his wealth. Carl Icahn’s wealth was $2 billion (19%). David Koch’s wealth, $2.2 billion, originally inherited, was a smaller fraction more like Bloomberg’s small fraction (13%). John Paulson, who started his hedge fund company in 1994, was not on the list.
Ever Before?
(William Frederick Havemeyer, Mayor of New York City, Library of Congress photo from Wikipedia.)
This leaves us with some other questions. We presume that history doesn't tell us that Havemeyer's wealth increased significantly while in office. Might there be someone else very wealthy whose wealth increased dramatically while in office?
We recognize that Boss Tweed and quite a number of other (less wealthy) politicians made a lot of money and formed companies (often secretly or in the background) to profit by business that could be done with the city or by virtue of city endeavors that involved major conflicts of interest. But was there ever a truly wealthy mayor with a personal business empire where the nature of that business meant that his empire or set of business enterprises was routinely doing business with most of the companies with which the city had commercial dealings?
Havemeyer's wealth came from sugar. That means that, certainly by the time later Havemeyers established the Sugar Trust, New Yorkers all paid higher prices since everyone uses sugar (a la the new movie "The Informant" about ADM's price fixing of commodities that every American has consumed and paid a higher price for “by the time they have eaten breakfast”). Probably, however, the city was for the most part not doing business directly with Mayor Havemeyer or with Havemeyer's sugar companies though there might have been some issues with things like wharf access. On the other hand, Havemeyer may have benefitted from the overview of city affairs he got as mayor: He invested heavily as a stockholder of the Long Island Rail Road.
Present Day Peculiarities
Back to the peculiarities of the present day. It seems to be inadequately appreciated that Bloomberg’s Bloomberg LP does business with almost every major company in the city. Most of Bloomberg’s wealth comes from the sale of the Bloomberg financial terminals, not from his media company activities. A lot of media companies are not doing well these days. It is Bloomberg’s terminal sales that are likely financing his recently announced acquisition from McGraw Hill of “Business Week,” competing business publication that like a lot of others has not done very well recently. While Bloomberg LP is doing business with every major company in the city, the city is busily granting companies concessions over which Bloomberg’s administration has substantial discretion.
Take one big company as an example, Goldman Sachs. Goldman has a new building in Battery Park City which was allowed to override the Battery Park City master plan, was granted extra density and tax breaks. Meanwhile, despite the fact that the city’s Conflicts of Interest Board said that he should not do so, Mr. Bloomberg calls up his business to check on terminal sales numbers. All that it takes for a big company to send money Bloomberg’s way in what could be the equivalent of a kickback or a political contribution is to order more terminals. Political contributions are not tax deductible, but paying for more terminals than you really need is.
Our Trust is Busted
Mr. Marrone mentions that Teddy Roosevelt ran for mayor. Teddy Roosevelt may have been wealthy (and he didn’t get to be mayor when he ran- he came in third) but we remember Teddy as a reformer. We remember Teddy as the “trustbuster” who didn’t believe in monopolies (including the sugar trust). But whose side is Bloomberg on? One pretty good indication: Bloomberg is a man who fights for monopolies like Atlantic Yards that are disastrously draining our dwindling public coffers.
Suffice it to say, we are concerned. Is this the kind of history we want our city to be making?
Comment On What Is Going on With Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries: Two Things We Hope He Remembers
We want to comment on what is going on with respect to Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries and Atlantic Yards to say that we hope he remembers two things. (See: Wednesday, October 21, 2009, An update from Jeffries: "I remain highly critical" of Atlantic Yards.)
There are a lot of bad things to remember about Atlantic Yards, enough to make a very long list. In the comment the assemblyman has issued available on Atlantic Yards Report Mr. Jeffries has already indicated he has not forgotten Atlantic Yards’ abuse of eminent domain.
Two other things we hope Jeffries knows should be remembered:
1.) The housing portion of the community benefit agreement provides substantially no benefit and should be considered a fraud upon the community. One thing that makes this absolutely clear is the missing income band of low-income families for whom no affordable housing will be provided. For more on this see #11 in the list at: Ratner: The Little Boy Trying To Get Too Many Cookies Out of The Cookie Jar and Getting None (Friday, July 31, 2009)
(Above chart shows the units in Atlantic Yards referred to as "affordable." Click to enlarge.)
2.) The mega-monopoly needs to be broken up into parcels that will be distributed by bid to multiple developers replacing Forest City Ratner. In other words, we should be doing something consistent with what mayoral candidate Bill Thomson has said should be done with megadevelopments. (See: Monday, October 19, 2009, Thompson’s Advocated Multiple Parcels (a la Battery Park City) vs. Single-Developer Mega-monopolies Should Boost Developers’ Bids.)
With luck, Mr. Jeffries will have a chance to remember these things at tomorrow's PHNDC meeting.
There are a lot of bad things to remember about Atlantic Yards, enough to make a very long list. In the comment the assemblyman has issued available on Atlantic Yards Report Mr. Jeffries has already indicated he has not forgotten Atlantic Yards’ abuse of eminent domain.
Two other things we hope Jeffries knows should be remembered:
1.) The housing portion of the community benefit agreement provides substantially no benefit and should be considered a fraud upon the community. One thing that makes this absolutely clear is the missing income band of low-income families for whom no affordable housing will be provided. For more on this see #11 in the list at: Ratner: The Little Boy Trying To Get Too Many Cookies Out of The Cookie Jar and Getting None (Friday, July 31, 2009)
(Above chart shows the units in Atlantic Yards referred to as "affordable." Click to enlarge.)
2.) The mega-monopoly needs to be broken up into parcels that will be distributed by bid to multiple developers replacing Forest City Ratner. In other words, we should be doing something consistent with what mayoral candidate Bill Thomson has said should be done with megadevelopments. (See: Monday, October 19, 2009, Thompson’s Advocated Multiple Parcels (a la Battery Park City) vs. Single-Developer Mega-monopolies Should Boost Developers’ Bids.)
With luck, Mr. Jeffries will have a chance to remember these things at tomorrow's PHNDC meeting.
Owning Name Rights to Landmark Public Property. The City Behaves Inconsistently: Tavern on the Green vs. Nets Arena to Be Named Barclays
Crain's just reported that “The city sued the operators of Tavern on the Green Wednesday in U.S. bankruptcy court in an effort to regain control over the name of the famed eatery.” (See: City sues Tavern on the Green operators over name By Lisa Fickenscher, October 21, 2009.)
The restaurant famous for its history and location in Central Park has been operating since 1934 when Robert Moses, perhaps somewhat spitefully, built it to replace another eatery in the park that was one of Mayor Jimmy Walker’s favorite haunts. (Read Robert Caro’s The Power Broker.)
In suing the LeRoy family, the restaurant’s operator that has declared bankruptcy, the city is asserting itself with proprietary vigilance, claiming for itself the precious right to own and control the name of valuable public property, made even more valuable because that property is inherently a landmark. The city is not going to let a private entrepreneur just walk away with the rights to the landmark’s name while its back was turned.
Not so when it comes to Bruce Ratner and the proposed Atlantic Yards Nets arena. In that case the city has been content to see Ratner seize even more valuable rights to control the name of landmark public property with no recompense to the city at all. And to banish all doubt that the city is willing to let Ratner acquire the name rights to public property for virtually nothing irrespective of the actual value of those rights, the MTA (with board members appointed by Mayor Bloomberg) is additionally giving Ratner the right to name two New York City subways stations at only a token charge. (See: Sunday, June 28, 2009, Naming a Problem: The MTA Gives Ratner the Right to Name Brooklyn Subway Stations “Barclays”.) Ratner’s rights will even supersede the need for good city subway map design.
On a present value basis the value of all the name rights the city and MTA (and Empire State Development Corporation) are letting Ratner walk away with are worth about $375 million. According to the city’s complaint against the LeRoy family, the trademark for the Tavern on the Green name (with an “estimated value of $19 million”) was “‘obtained fraudulently and without the city’s `knowledge or permission’ in 1981.”
Without the city’s “knowledge or permission”? Well maybe the best way to rob the city blind is to do it right in front of the city’s face the way Ratner did.
The restaurant famous for its history and location in Central Park has been operating since 1934 when Robert Moses, perhaps somewhat spitefully, built it to replace another eatery in the park that was one of Mayor Jimmy Walker’s favorite haunts. (Read Robert Caro’s The Power Broker.)
In suing the LeRoy family, the restaurant’s operator that has declared bankruptcy, the city is asserting itself with proprietary vigilance, claiming for itself the precious right to own and control the name of valuable public property, made even more valuable because that property is inherently a landmark. The city is not going to let a private entrepreneur just walk away with the rights to the landmark’s name while its back was turned.
Not so when it comes to Bruce Ratner and the proposed Atlantic Yards Nets arena. In that case the city has been content to see Ratner seize even more valuable rights to control the name of landmark public property with no recompense to the city at all. And to banish all doubt that the city is willing to let Ratner acquire the name rights to public property for virtually nothing irrespective of the actual value of those rights, the MTA (with board members appointed by Mayor Bloomberg) is additionally giving Ratner the right to name two New York City subways stations at only a token charge. (See: Sunday, June 28, 2009, Naming a Problem: The MTA Gives Ratner the Right to Name Brooklyn Subway Stations “Barclays”.) Ratner’s rights will even supersede the need for good city subway map design.
On a present value basis the value of all the name rights the city and MTA (and Empire State Development Corporation) are letting Ratner walk away with are worth about $375 million. According to the city’s complaint against the LeRoy family, the trademark for the Tavern on the Green name (with an “estimated value of $19 million”) was “‘obtained fraudulently and without the city’s `knowledge or permission’ in 1981.”
Without the city’s “knowledge or permission”? Well maybe the best way to rob the city blind is to do it right in front of the city’s face the way Ratner did.
Labels:
Atlantic Yards,
MTA,
Public Officials Conduct
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Looping Back to What Is Less Than Healthy for the Community
The New York Times today is reporting that “Regulators plan to require labels to contain less healthful aspects of food alongside upbeat claims” (F.D.A. to Clarify Standards for the Front of Food Labels, By William Neuman, Published: October 20, 20090. What has this got to do with urban design and city development? For that, read our First Monday in October: An Open Letter to Sonia Sotomayor about Noticing an Eminent Reality (Tuesday, October 6, 2009) and consider that the Empire State Development Corporation is refusing to consider in its official assessments the ways in which the Atlantic Yards mega-project will be deleterious to the community or even to weigh the ostensible public benefit of the mega-monopoly against the extraordinary private benefit that will occur to its no-bid developer, Forest City Ratner. (See: Thursday, March 5, 2009, Missing a Leg To Stand On: ESDC Didn’t Consider Developer Profit, the Main Thing Atlantic Yards is About.)
The food industry has been self-certifying the “benefit” or “smart choice” of eating such foods as Foot Loops which, by weight, is 41% sugar. Reading the statement in today’s Times of the food industry spokesman saying that he believed in the food industry’s program, we couldn’t help but think of our government development officials at ESDC:
The Times article ends with this paragraph about what is going on in the food industry:
The food industry has been self-certifying the “benefit” or “smart choice” of eating such foods as Foot Loops which, by weight, is 41% sugar. Reading the statement in today’s Times of the food industry spokesman saying that he believed in the food industry’s program, we couldn’t help but think of our government development officials at ESDC:
“We believe in the science behind the Smart Choices program,” Mike Hughes, the program’s chairman, said in a statement. “We also look forward to the opportunity to participate in F.D.A.’s initiatives on front-of-package labeling.”That sounds just like the ESDC officials putting out their press release last Wednesday after oral arguments before the New York Court of Appeals (the state’s highest court) saying that they believed the pretextual public benefits they have promulgated with respect to Atlantic Yards. To wit:
“We expect that the Court of Appeals will recognize the many substantial public benefits of the Atlantic Yards project, and that the court will affirm . . .”(See: Monday, October 19, 2009, Oral Arguments On the Atlantic Yards Eminent Domain Case Before the Court of Appeals: ESDC Knows Blight and Economic Development are Pretextual.)
The Times article ends with this paragraph about what is going on in the food industry:
Then last week, Attorney General Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut said that he was investigating the program and some of the companies that participate in it, including Kellogg’s and General Mills, to see if they had violated a consumer protection law that bars deceptive marketing claims.We think it would be highly appropriate if our law enforcement officials would similarly investigate the false claims being made with respect to Atlantic Yards. (See: Thursday, February 26, 2009, Dear Eliot, . . . other things kept undercover may bear investigation.)
Labels:
Atlantic Yards,
ESDC,
Public Officials Conduct
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Video of Friday’s Term Limits Hearing Commemoration Event
Video is now available of last Friday’s term limits hearing commemoration event at which we spoke. We and the New York Times both wrote about the event and our remarks. (See: Sunday, October 18, 2009, Challenging Bloomberg Unlimited.)
For the video click here.
For the video click here.
This Thursday’s ESDC Board Meeting (October 22, 2009): Atlantic Yards Is Not on the Agenda Though it Should Be
(Above, the ESDC Board meeting room on September 17, 2009, the date of its last board meeting and its last approval of Atlantic Yards, right before the mega-project changed again substantially. This was pre-publication of Prokhorov information.)
We don't see Atlantic Yards on the agenda for this Thursday's Empire State Development Corporation board meeting (October 22, 2009) though it ought to be. . . for more reasons than one. Just one reason it should be on the agenda is so that, as we have suggested should be the case, the ESDC board can decide whether or not it is going to approve Russian oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov as an integral part of the Atlantic Yards deal, including as the proposed owner of the Nets basketball team and arena. Mr. Prokhorov was proposed as part of the Atlantic Yards deal shortly after the board’s meeting in a seemingly orchestrated fashion. (See: Friday, September 25, 2009, Should Public Agencies Approve Prokhorov as New Nets, Arena and Atlantic Yards Owner?)
We will postpone discussing other reasons Atlantic Yards should reappear on the ESDC board’s agenda for a subsequent post or posts.
ESDC spokesperson, Warner Johnston confirmed to us that Atlantic Yards was not on the agenda and that there were also no plans to put it on. We mentioned Mr. Prokhorov when he asked why it would be. No, he told us, the board has pretty much finished with Atlantic Yards. (He promised to call us if plans change.)
Publicly approving Mr. Prokhorov could be really tough and ESDC would almost certainly like to duck the issue. One sure way to duck the issue is if ESDC waits and the N.B.A. league doesn’t give Mr. Prokhorov league approval to buy the team. That would moot the ESDC’s having to make a decision which would be awkward either way they call it. The New York Times just wrote about the difficulty of the league's approving Mr. Prokhorov and the sort of background review that is necessary. Though it notes that Prokhorov may in the end be viewed as just a “colorful owner” the article takes the time to note more than once in its piece that the information coming out of Russia about Mr. Prokhorov is “all gray.” The billionaire- with a $14 billion net worth at the time- spent five days in jail in connection with importing a planeload of prostitutes, but was released uncharged by the French. The Times asserts that this incident forced Mr. Prokhorov to sell his nickel mine holdings. (See: For Potential Owner, a Background Check Worthy of the K.G.B. By Richard Sandomir, October 18, 2009.)
One paragraph from the Times article:
It is also quite possible that ESDC will try to sidestep the Prokhorov issue entirely by doing nothing, (as if that is appropriate). This is perhaps what Mr. Johnston meant when he said that ESDC’s board was pretty much done dealing with Atlantic Yards.
We don't see Atlantic Yards on the agenda for this Thursday's Empire State Development Corporation board meeting (October 22, 2009) though it ought to be. . . for more reasons than one. Just one reason it should be on the agenda is so that, as we have suggested should be the case, the ESDC board can decide whether or not it is going to approve Russian oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov as an integral part of the Atlantic Yards deal, including as the proposed owner of the Nets basketball team and arena. Mr. Prokhorov was proposed as part of the Atlantic Yards deal shortly after the board’s meeting in a seemingly orchestrated fashion. (See: Friday, September 25, 2009, Should Public Agencies Approve Prokhorov as New Nets, Arena and Atlantic Yards Owner?)
We will postpone discussing other reasons Atlantic Yards should reappear on the ESDC board’s agenda for a subsequent post or posts.
ESDC spokesperson, Warner Johnston confirmed to us that Atlantic Yards was not on the agenda and that there were also no plans to put it on. We mentioned Mr. Prokhorov when he asked why it would be. No, he told us, the board has pretty much finished with Atlantic Yards. (He promised to call us if plans change.)
Publicly approving Mr. Prokhorov could be really tough and ESDC would almost certainly like to duck the issue. One sure way to duck the issue is if ESDC waits and the N.B.A. league doesn’t give Mr. Prokhorov league approval to buy the team. That would moot the ESDC’s having to make a decision which would be awkward either way they call it. The New York Times just wrote about the difficulty of the league's approving Mr. Prokhorov and the sort of background review that is necessary. Though it notes that Prokhorov may in the end be viewed as just a “colorful owner” the article takes the time to note more than once in its piece that the information coming out of Russia about Mr. Prokhorov is “all gray.” The billionaire- with a $14 billion net worth at the time- spent five days in jail in connection with importing a planeload of prostitutes, but was released uncharged by the French. The Times asserts that this incident forced Mr. Prokhorov to sell his nickel mine holdings. (See: For Potential Owner, a Background Check Worthy of the K.G.B. By Richard Sandomir, October 18, 2009.)
One paragraph from the Times article:
David E. Hoffman, the author of “The Oligarchs: Wealth and Power in the New Russia,” said that men like Prokhorov emerged from a business climate that had “no rule of law, a lot of shadiness, a lot of violence and coercion.”If the league does approve Prokhorov then, by virtue of having waited, ESDC can try to minimize its own embarrassment by piggybacking on that approval.
It is also quite possible that ESDC will try to sidestep the Prokhorov issue entirely by doing nothing, (as if that is appropriate). This is perhaps what Mr. Johnston meant when he said that ESDC’s board was pretty much done dealing with Atlantic Yards.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)