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- <text id=90TT1589>
- <link 93HT0668>
- <link 90TT1807>
- <link 90TT1171>
- <title>
- June 18, 1990: Trouble With A Big T
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 18, 1990 Child Warriors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 60
- Trouble with a Big T
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Running short on cash, an '80s icon struggles to save his
- overleveraged empire
- </p>
- <p>By Christine Gorman--Reported by Mary Cronin/New York and
- William McWhirter/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> Before making his fateful decision to sink $1 billion into
- the bejeweled Taj Mahal Casino in Atlantic City, Donald Trump
- should have done his homework on the ill fortune that befell
- the builder of the original Taj. The cost of constructing the
- 17th century Indian marvel, which took 20,000 laborers 22 years
- to complete, eventually exhausted the royal treasury of the
- Shahjahan and triggered the decline of the Mogul Empire. Nearly
- 350 years later, the Taj's modern namesake may have unleashed
- the grandiose downfall of Manhattan's self-styled King of the
- Deal.
- </p>
- <p> His empire lay under siege last week, staggering beneath the
- burden of debt Trump has accumulated in his insatiable buying
- spree of the past few years. The Grand Acquisitor never seemed
- to notice that the Roaring Eighties had ended until suddenly
- his cash started running out. So far, Trump has not missed any
- payments on his estimated $3 billion in loans and junk bonds.
- But his lenders and suppliers have begun to fear that Trump's
- domain is an overleveraged structure built on swagger and
- bluff. His creditors have suddenly demanded proof of his
- financial prowess, and he is coming up short. "He's a desperate
- man. Everywhere Trump is walking, there's a fire under his
- feet," observes Irwin Jacobs, the Minneapolis financier and
- sometime raider. "It shows how quickly things can go bad."
- </p>
- <p> The prospect of his downfall set off a fresh round of
- amazement among Trump watchers, who only four months ago had
- savored the melodrama of his separation from his wife Ivana and
- his affair with the model Marla Maples. The distress of Donald,
- the biggest self-promoter of the past decade, was too poetic
- to resist. TRUMP IN A SLUMP declared the New York Daily News.
- UH-OWE! said the city's Post, which dubbed Trump's new casino
- "the eighth blunder of the world."
- </p>
- <p> On the 26th floor of the gilded Trump Tower in Manhattan,
- the brash developer and his lieutenants barricaded themselves
- behind closed doors last week to meet with a phalanx of worried
- lenders. Officials from four major banks, who have extended an
- estimated $2 billion to the developer, are negotiating with
- Trump to reduce his debt load by stripping down his empire.
- Investors who hold more than $1 billion in junk bonds that
- Trump issued to finance his three casinos have seen the market
- value of their securities plunge by as much as 50%. Bondholders
- of two Atlantic City properties, the Trump Castle and Trump
- Plaza Hotel and Casino, filed a lawsuit last week charging that
- the tycoon had diverted clientele from his older casinos--contrary to his assurances--to his new Taj Mahal.
- </p>
- <p> Trump's search for cash is proving painful because the
- economic conditions that fueled his juggernaut have changed
- sharply. The slumping Northeast economy has undermined
- real-estate values, so that many of Trump's properties are
- worth far less than he estimated when he borrowed against them
- to make other purchases. Real-estate experts believe that if
- Trump were to sell the Plaza Hotel, which he bought in 1988 for
- $400 million and spent at least $25 million refurbishing, he
- could lose millions on the investment.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Trump knows he must part with some of his crown jewels.
- He is trying to sell the Trump Shuttle airline, but his timing
- is unlucky. Reason: the rival Pan Am shuttle is up for sale as
- well. Because the Trump Shuttle has failed to dominate the
- market as he had hoped, Trump is unlikely to sell it at a
- profit. And real-estate agents in Palm Beach say Trump has been
- offering Mar-a-Lago, his 118-room Palm Beach estate, for an
- asking price of $30 million.
- </p>
- <p> For the most part, Trump has steadfastly denied his
- difficulties, perhaps observing a lesson from his own book.
- "The worst thing you can possibly do in a deal is seem
- desperate to make it," Trump wrote in his 1987 best seller, The
- Art of the Deal. "That makes the other guy smell blood, and
- then you're dead." But Trump's arrogant business style is
- haunting him now that he needs understanding. "Trump's
- personality works against him," says a top investment banker.
- "His own behavior created a level of scrutiny about his
- judgment, his ability to pay and his `high moral standing,'
- which are the criteria in lending money."
- </p>
- <p> Trump built his empire on rising land values. New York City
- was flirting with bankruptcy in 1976, when, at 30, Trump and
- hotel magnate Jay Pritzker bought the run-down Commodore Hotel
- at Grand Central Terminal for $10 million. The partners tore
- down the Commodore and built the Grand Hyatt luxury hotel in
- its place. The city recovered, and the hotel's value (current
- estimate: $70 million) soared with it. Borrowing against his
- stake in the Hyatt, Trump parlayed his first success into more
- and more prime real estate.
- </p>
- <p> The seed of his current trouble was planted in 1987, when
- Trump got tangled in a bruising takeover battle with another
- tycoon, Merv Griffin, for control of Resorts International. In
- a deal they both claimed as a victory, the two split up the
- company, with Griffin taking most of Resorts and Trump getting
- the uncompleted Taj Mahal. Griffin's older, debt-laden
- properties went into bankruptcy only two years later. Trump had
- to borrow an estimated $1 billion to finish the monstrous Taj.
- Ominously, the city's casino business, which had grown
- pell-mell during the '80s, abruptly stagnated.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, Trump began to suffer from management
- problems. Last October his casino operations suffered a tragic
- loss, when three of Trump's top-notch casino executives died
- in a helicopter crash. Among them was Stephen Hyde, 43, chief
- executive of Trump's gaming operations. "Steve knew how to
- force Donald to listen," says Jack O'Donnell, who headed the
- Plaza Hotel and Casino until he resigned in April. "Once Steve
- was gone, Donald had to get more involved in the business. He
- started operating the budget based on his ego, not on reality."
- As the opening of the Taj came under repeated delays, Trump
- grew increasingly abusive toward employees.
- </p>
- <p> A month before the Taj Mahal's opening, industry analyst
- Marvin Roffman predicted the casino would have trouble bringing
- in the cash flow--$1 million to $1.3 million a day--necessary to make loan payments. When an enraged Trump
- threatened to sue Roffman's employer, the Philadelphia
- brokerage Janney Montgomery Scott fired Roffman instead. So far,
- Trump officials contend the Taj's total revenue averaged $1.6
- million during May, but industry analysts believe the cash flow
- could fall perilously low during the slow fall season. The
- casino-hotel has already laid off 350 of its 7,200 original
- employees, which Trump executives describe as a routine
- streamlining.
- </p>
- <p> Another wild card in Trump's finances is his estranged
- wife's claim on Trump properties. While Ivana signed a
- prenuptial contract limiting her settlement to $25 million in
- case of divorce, her lawyers have argued that she helped build
- Trump's holdings and have filed claims to half his estate. Yet
- Ivana refused to take advantage of her husband's financial
- distress last week. While dedicating a new public plaza outside
- the Plaza Hotel, which she runs, Ivana tossed a couple of
- pennies into the fountain. "Hopefully it will bring us good
- luck," she said. "It can't get much worse."
- </p>
- <p> Trump is by no means finished, but he will need help to get
- him through his liquidity crisis. "Long term he has some good
- deals here," says one investment banker. "If he has the cash
- flow to pay the debt, in five years he really would be a
- billionaire." Trump's creditors may decide that it is in their
- own best interests to save him. "The banks may not want to shut
- him down because they may then have a whole lot of potential
- real-estate problems on their hands," says one Wall Street
- source.
- </p>
- <p> Trump seems ill prepared for hard times, but he must have
- seen them coming. "The '80s have been a time of great
- opportunity," he said last December. "I think the '90s are
- going to be much trickier than the '80s. There will be many
- more traps." Ironically, one person in a position to rescue
- Trump is his father, Fred Trump Sr., a real-estate developer
- in Brooklyn and Queens. According to one financier, Trump pere
- owns enough debt-free property and other assets that he could
- easily loan his son a few hundred million dollars. Evidently
- Donald didn't pick up his debt habit at home.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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