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The Newsroom - 2008 |
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DEVELOPMENT: Project on Strip suffers setback

Cosmopolitan gets default notice, seeks investors

January 17, 2008 - The tightening lending market is jeopardizing the
ownership of a multibillion-dollar hotel-condominium development under
construction on the Strip.

The owner of the $3 billion Cosmopolitan confirmed Wednesday that he received a
notice of default from Deutsche Bank after payments on a $760 million
construction loan came due.

"This action by our lender comes as no surprise to the senior management," Bruce
Eichner, the New York-based owner and developer of the south Strip development,
said in a statement. "With the current challenges within the real estate and
debt capital markets, which are out of control, being felt across the country,
we both anticipated and planned for this."

The project's senior management team is continuing to work with financial
institutions Deutsche Bank and Merrill Lynch to find new investors, Eichner
said.

The 2,998-room Cosmopolitan is still scheduled to open late 2009, a company
spokesman said.

Wednesday's announcement comes less than two weeks after former Cosmopolitan
Chief Operating Officer Audrey Oswell departed for the under-construction
Fontainebleau project after 18 months with the company.

Eichner and his management team have been traveling the country in recent weeks
seeking an equity partner so banks would extend another loan.

Prospective lenders said Eichner's company, 3700 Associates LLC, needed to
increase its equity to at least 10 percent of the project's cost before they
would provide new funding for the project.

So far, 3700 Associates has contributed the 8.5-acre site, purchased for $90
million in 2004, and $50 million from Grand Hyatt Corp.

Cosmopolitan Chief Operating Officer Scott Butera said Eichner's management team
is "working on an equity offering which is expected to raise $400 million."

A call to Hyatt's corporate offices in Chicago was not returned by press time.

MGM Mirage President Jim Murren said he wasn't surprised by news of the default.

Murren said the project was a challenge from the start because it is wedged in
between MGM Mirage's Bellagio and its $7.8 billion CityCenter development. He
said the amount of site work plus the challenge of selling high-rise residential
condominiums in the hotel and casino project may have doomed the Cosmopolitan.

Murren also suggested that the Cosmopolitan's owner may have been having trouble
getting commitments for its five-level retail section.

Although Deutsche Bank and Merrill Lynch have approached MGM Mirage officials
about the site, Murren said gaming company isn't interested in the Cosmopolitan
project -- at least for now.

"It's not something we're looking at," Murren said. "We hope somebody can find a
way of fixing this because it doesn't help the Strip, Las Vegas or us to have a
half-finished project sitting there."

Still, Murren did not dismiss the possibility that the company might consider
taking over the project if it made financial sense.

The Cosmopolitan isn't the first local hotel-casino project to run into problems
because of the current economic climate.

"We have seen selected projects fail to move forward that had previously
announced plans with the current credit crunch and the tightened lending
requirements," Las Vegas-based Applied Analysis principal Brian Gordon said.
"Certainly, that has impacted many projects throughout the Las Vegas Valley,
including resort and nonresort projects."

Tight credit markets have been cited as the reason for postponing planned resort
developments at the Tropicana, the Silverton and Southern Highlands Resort.

However, unlike the Cosmopolitan, which broke ground in October 2005, none of
those projects had begun construction.

The most famous example of a stalled Strip project was the Stratosphere, which
was conceived by casino operator Bob Stupak in the early 1990s. |

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The Cosmopolitan is seen from the Strip on Wednesday. A
default notice has been issued for a loan on the property, but
the owner and developer said the notice was expected, and a
search for new investors is under way. Photo by Jeremy Lyverse/Review-Journal
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Grand Casinos stepped in and finished the 1,149-foot tower hotel-casino project
after Stupak ran into financial trouble that had stopped construction.
Construction work was halted again in the mid-1990s, this time on a hotel room
section, when the company went bankrupt. The development was eventually bought
and completed by billionaire Carl Icahn.

Construction stopped on the Landmark in 1962 for four years before an influx of
cash from the pension fund of the Teamsters Union restarted the project.

Billionaire Howard Hughes bought the property in 1969 when the owner ran afoul
of creditors. Hughes finished construction and opened the property later that
year.

"We've had a few of those," said Michael Green, a history professor at College
of Southern Nevada. "Happily, not too many where they've started running into
trouble. In the end it seems to work out, it just takes a few years."

The Cosmopolitan is designed to have 2,184 condominium units. The developer
holds contracts on 84 percent of the units, which includes two deposits, with
some additional units not yet on the market.

Laurence Hallier, developer of Panorama Towers, said he was surprised to hear of
the default notice issued by Deutsche Bank. Unlike Miami, where 50,000 condo
units are being built, Las Vegas only has five or six "legitimate" condo
projects with about 7,000 units, he said.

"I believe they were doing well in presales," Hallier said. "I don't know all
the details of the project and why it didn't work. No doubt, the market has
changed drastically in the last year or year and a half, but we're finding more
foreign buyers and California buyers, not a lot of investors."

Hallier said Panorama has closed escrow on 98 percent of the 320 units in the
second tower and the 420-unit third tower is scheduled for completion in
September. A Japanese buyer paid more than $10 million for a penthouse unit at
Panorama's second tower, he said.

"From our perspective, we've got 2 million people in Las Vegas and at the end of
the day, there's a percentage of those people who want the high-rise lifestyle,"
Hallier said.

Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or (702)
477-3893. Review-Journal reporters Howard Stutz and Hubble Smith contributed to
this report.

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Author: A. Knightly, Las Vegas Review-Journal
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