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FONTAINEBLEAU LAS VEGAS: Lender lawsuit relocated

Decision could speed project's emergence from bankruptcy

Fontainebleau Las Vegas' decision to move its federal lawsuit against several banks that backed out of a loan agreement could help the Strip project emerge from bankruptcy sooner, an expert said Wednesday.

Nancy Rapoport, a bankruptcy law professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said the $3.1 billion resort project, which filed for bankruptcy late Tuesday night in Florida, can expect a quicker resolution of its case because a bankruptcy court can bring all the parties together easier than a district or federal court can.


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"Everyone has to go in front of the bankruptcy court and figure out what exactly is going on that dried up the financing," Rapoport said. "What is it exactly that somehow you let this project go so far astray? It pulls everything into one area and the court has the ability to force anyone to answer questions under subpoena."

Fontainebleau Las Vegas and two affiliates filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection late Tuesday night in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Southern District of Florida in Miami.

The project's executives blamed a group of lenders that backed out of an agreement to loan the developer $770 million to complete construction for the bankruptcy.

Fontainebleau Resorts, the project's developer, in April filed a $3 billion federal lawsuit against the lenders, led by Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase, but moved the lawsuit to the Florida bankruptcy court when it filed Tuesday night.

Rapoport said the bankruptcy court should be able to help determine what went wrong with the project and the loan.

The lenders claim they backed out of the loan agreement after Fontainebleau defaulted on a loan. The developer, however, denies that.

"We still don't know if we'll have an empty building or a finished building," Rapoport said. "At least we know (the developer and the banks) we can't keep pushing and pulling in a bunch of different directions."

Bank of America spokeswoman Shirley Norton declined comment Wednesday on Fontainebleau's lawsuit.

Rapoport, however, said Fontainebleau will still need to come up with a good business plan -- and funding -- if it expects to emerge from bankruptcy and complete the project. And that could be difficult in this economy, she said.

Jeremy Aguero, a principal with Las Vegas-based research firm Applied Analysis, believes the Strip project can emerge from bankruptcy with an ownership and financing package that can work, though.

"While the bankruptcy is disconcerting for Southern Nevada and certainly for the folks that have put so much time into the project, it may very well be a better process for the project to actually move forward," he said.

While both Rapoport and Aguero said the project will likely be completed -- construction slowed in late April with 70 percent of the work done -- the ownership structure could be different when it emerges from bankruptcy.

"The idea of going through bankruptcy is to get into the hands of someone who can use the asset as opposed to someone who is so financially burdened that they can't make it work," Aguero said.

Fontainebleau Resorts is controlled by Miami-based developer Jeffrey Soffer. Soffer is a principal of condominium developer Turnberry Associates.

Meanwhile on Wednesday, Fontainebleau Resorts began cutting back on its already slashed workforce.

Approximately 60 people in the corporate offices were laid off, leaving nearly 100 employees at the corporate level, spokesman David Satterfield said.

Also, one of the project's largest investors, Crown Ltd., announced it doesn't intend to "participate in any restructuring under any bankruptcy arrangements" for Fontainebleau Las Vegas. Australian-based Crown paid $250 million for a 19.6 percent stake in Fontainebleau Resorts, which also owns a resort in Miami.

Crown reiterated what it told the Review-Journal in late April that the company "has no current intention to contribute any further equity or debt to Fontainebleau."

The mixed-use development, on the northeast corner of Las Vegas and Riviera boulevards, listed more than $1 billion in assets against more than $1 billion in estimated liabilities in the bankruptcy filing.

The project carries nearly $2.53 billion in debt securities, according to Moody's Investor Services.

The debt includes a $700 million term loan maturing in June 2014 and $675 million in second mortgage notes maturing in June 2015.

Hours before Fontainebleau filed for bankruptcy, a group of lenders tied to $1.05 billion in loans on the project filed a lawsuit in Nevada federal court against the banks.

The lawsuit, which lists a few dozen plaintiffs, said the banks that canceled the $770 million loan jeopardized the other banks' investments by breaching the credit agreement.

Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893.

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SJM wrote on June 12, 2009 12:33 AM: Well said Mike in Vegas - the best post yet....


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willy wrote on June 11, 2009 10:03 PM: Look morons, if the banks didn't give them money in the first place what you see there wouldn't be built. Someone will own the 70% completed building and finish it. Maybe the original owners, maybe someone else. Does it really matter to you all who owns these buildings? Most of the losers who love the RJ won't ever create a thing of value in their lives, yet they sure are quick to throw rocks at those who do.


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Sandra wrote on June 11, 2009 07:32 PM: Maybe they could host a fundraiser. There's a chick who impersonates Toni Braxton. She's big in the islands. She will go anywhere for a gig.


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Dave Fortuck wrote on June 11, 2009 05:39 PM: It appears to me after reading all the articles about Fontainebleau Resorts that all the banks involved in this case should contact that South Carolina company, CCCS International that according to your article on 5/15/09,Fontainebleau Resorts used to help them recover $40 million in subcontractor overpayments. That in itself, speaks that this CCCS International clearly knows what it is doing.


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greg wrote on June 11, 2009 03:22 PM: and so it goes...
does anyone even recall evryone getting laid-off from echelon?
now this?
management and the bankers keep making 7 figures (w/ government help) and the rest of us are left without jobs?


how about we close-down the new BANK OF AMERICA RITZ CARLTON AND SPA IN SKY BUILT WITH TAX PAYER MONEY IN CHARLOTTE?


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bob wrote on June 11, 2009 07:56 AM: "A banker is a fellow who lends you his umbrella when the sun is shining, but wants it back the minute it begins to rain"... Mark Twain.


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Banks! wrote on June 11, 2009 07:29 AM: Banks are the problem, with everything!


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Michael Lemieux wrote on June 11, 2009 07:22 AM: This comment is about the Fountaine Bleau Project. They throw around the words "millions and billions" like they are nothing. What about trying to use the words "UNEMPLOYMENT, BANCKRUPTCY, FORECLOSURE." Those are the words used by all the thousands of men and women who worked on that project. Now they have to try and support their families with unemployment checks. The big banks don't care about the little people. Well in my opinion who do they think will pay back the loans? The little people who work for a living and put their hard earned money right back in the system. I'm sick and tired of hearing about the BIG BANKS we need to start hearing about the LITTLE PEOPLE for a change. Thank you
Mike in Vegas