more vegas gloom and doom
commercial RE bust here we come
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Aug. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Deutsche Bank AG will foreclose on the $3.5 billion Cosmopolitan Resort & Casino in Las Vegas after developer Ian Bruce Eichner defaulted on a $760 million loan, two people briefed on the situation said.
Germany's biggest bank weighed selling the complex after Eichner's January default, said the people, who asked not to be named because the discussions are private. Deutsche Bank will take over the Cosmopolitan and is talking with companies including MGM Mirage and Hilton Hotels Corp. to help run its 80,000-square-foot casino, the people said.
Sagging commercial real estate prices, weighed down by record subprime defaults, forced banks to hold projects until prices rise or sell at a loss. The Frankfurt-based bank would oversee an 8.5-acre development with two high-rise towers, three wedding chapels, a sandy beach overlooking the Las Vegas Strip and a deck featuring ''European-style bathing.''
''Deutsche Bank wants to be engaged in banking, not running a casino,'' said Matthew Clark, a London-based analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. ''They've had to decide between selling the Cosmopolitan into a bad market or holding on for better times.''
Deutsche Bank spokesman Scott Helfman declined to comment, as did Yvette Monet, a spokeswoman for MGM Mirage, who cited company policy. Hilton's Robert Allegrini also couldn't comment.
Casino Revenue Slides
Las Vegas, the heart of the U.S. gaming industry, is reeling from sluggish economic growth and soaring food and fuel costs. The city's casino revenue slid 16 percent in May, the fifth straight monthly decline, according to the Nevada Gaming Commission.
A partnership with another company may allow Deutsche Bank to avoid the ''extremely thorough'' process of obtaining a Nevada gaming license, said Anthony Cabot, who heads gaming law at Lewis and Roca LLP in Las Vegas. Such a move could also erode Deutsche Bank's revenue from the casino.
''One option is to bring in a licensed operator to effectively lease the entire casino area,'' he said.
MGM owns the Bellagio casino and is building the $11.2 billion CityCenter, which surround the Cosmopolitan on the Strip, making MGM a potential candidate to operate the Cosmopolitan, said Stamford, Connecticut-based Robert LaFleur, who covers gaming companies at Susquehanna Financial Group in.
Full Plate
Even so, ''MGM has its plate full building CityCenter and I'm not sure about their appetite for new projects,'' LaFleur said. MGM, the world's second-largest casino company behind privately held Harrah's Entertainment Inc., said this week that banks agreed to lend half of the $3 billion it's seeking to build CityCenter.
Hilton, the second-biggest U.S. hotel chain after Marriott International Inc., was bought last year for $20 billion by Blackstone Group LP, the world's largest private-equity firm.
Blackstone, based in New York, told investors on an Aug. 6 conference call to discuss its second-quarter results that Hilton was performing ahead of projections.
Deutsche Bank had 14.7 billion euros, currently valued at $22.6 billion, of commercial real estate loans at the end of June, company reports show. That amount was 10.7 billion euros after taking into account risk reduction measures including hedges, the bank said. It wrote down the investments by 543 million euros in the second quarter, or 309 million euros when hedges are included.
Earlier this year, Deutsche Bank took control of seven New York office towers after developer Harry Macklowe defaulted on about $7 billion in loans that the bank helped arrange to enable him to buy the buildings from Blackstone last year. Deutsche Bank, whose shares fell 30 percent in the year through yesterday, is selling those properties.
''No doubt the banks will take on more homes, casinos and even ski resorts before this is over,'' said KBW's Clark.