Selling buildings won’t be easy for the billionaire ex-president, but these golf courses and other trophy properties could provide fast cash.
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NewsTranscript
00:00 Hi everybody. I'm Brittany Lewis with Forbes breaking news. Joining me now is my Forbes colleague money and politics reporter Kyle
00:07 Mullins. Kyle thank you so much for joining me. Always great to be here. Brittany. It has been a conversation we have now been
00:15 having for weeks. You and I have discussed before that former President Donald Trump owes over half a billion dollars in legal
00:21 penalties. Before we dive into the conversation here can you walk us through how the former president got here.
00:28 Absolutely. So as we've discussed before this is really the story of two different legal cases. The first legal case is one
00:35 brought by Eugene Carroll. She's a writer. She sued Trump for sexual abuse and defamation and won two verdicts against him in
00:42 the state of New York. And those verdicts totaled 88 over 88 million dollars in damages to him.
00:47 And those cases he was able to post a ninety one million dollar bond in that case. So while he is appealing those verdicts and
00:56 we will see where that goes. The second one is the much bigger one. That's the New York attorney general's case that was
01:02 brought against him for him and his companies and some of his family members for allegedly repeatedly lying about his assets
01:10 and generally puffing up his business expertise and his own net worth in order to obtain better terms on loans for example.
01:20 And that in that case the judge handed down a judgment earlier this year that said that he owed about over three hundred
01:27 fifty million dollars in damages plus one hundred million dollars in interest. That number is going up every single day until
01:34 he pays and he needs to post a bond in that case or pay up. He hasn't yet. His lawyers say that he doesn't have the cash in
01:41 court. He claims that he might. We'll see what happens on that case as well. But he needs to do so before he ends up appealing
01:47 the case. New York Attorney General Letitia James said she was prepared to see some of his assets if he couldn't come up with
01:55 the cash. Has she made good on her word yet. So she hasn't made good on her word yet. There seems to be they seem to be
02:02 respecting a sort of 30 day deadline allowing him giving him that amount of time to come up with the cash he needs in that
02:09 case. That 30 day deadline is this upcoming Monday March 25th. Pretty pretty soon. So because of that she has actually
02:19 started taking some preliminary steps that would be necessary in the event that she did choose to see some assets. We do
02:24 think that it would be easier for her to seize assets in the state of New York because that's where she has jurisdiction. She
02:29 could theoretically seize assets elsewhere but it would again just be easier in the state of New York. She filed the judgment
02:35 in the with the county clerk in Westchester County New York which is just north of New York City. Trump has two properties in
02:42 that county. And so filing the judgment there is the first step that could potentially be taken toward eventually
02:47 potentially seizing either his golf course there or his Seven Springs estate. If you live in New York you know that Trump has
02:55 quite a few properties here. But can you bring us up to speed here. Give us a general overview of his real estate portfolio.
03:03 Sure. Out of his roughly two point six billion dollar fortune real estate makes up just under two billion dollars of that
03:09 about one point nine billion. Most of it is concentrated or a large chunk of it is concentrated in New York. But we're talking
03:15 there's really three categories that we're talking about here. So the first is his commercial properties. That includes
03:20 office retail hotels all that kind of stuff. And that spans. He has properties in New York properties in San Francisco
03:27 properties in Chicago properties in Las Vegas. The second category is residential real estate. He's got homes in Florida
03:34 again homes in Las Vegas. He's got homes in California homes in New York of course including his is his penthouse and
03:41 Trump Tower. And then the third one is sort of resort and real estate resort and golf properties. He's got 10 golf courses
03:49 across the United States. He's got three more in Scotland and Ireland. And then he's got resorts like Mar-a-Lago resorts like
03:57 Doral in Miami. So all of these there's this wide range of different types of properties in this in this about two point
04:05 two billion dollar real estate portfolio. Leticia James New York's AG did say that she was like I said prepared to seize his
04:14 assets even said something to the effect of I look at 40 Wall Street each day. What do you think he could do to ensure that
04:20 his assets aren't seized. So he's really coming down to the wire here. And it's hard to say what he's going to be able to do
04:28 to ensure that his assets aren't seized. I will vote on the 40 Wall Street thing that my colleague Zach Everson had some
04:33 reporting out just earlier this week noting that 40 Wall Street is actually probably financially his weakest property. He might
04:40 actually be somewhat happy to get rid of it or at least declare bankruptcy on it.
04:45 Regardless what could he do to seize to ensure that his properties are not seized. Potentially he could try to sell them
04:51 himself. And that's that was what my coverage focused on this week was what would a fire sale of Trump's properties actually
04:57 look like. Let's talk about that because his attorney said that a fire sale of assets you're reporting would result in quote
05:05 massive irrecoverable losses. What would a fire sale look like and what is that.
05:13 Yeah. So I mean the basic idea behind a fire sale is you're trying to get rid of things as quickly as possible to get cash as
05:19 quickly as possible. And his attorneys refer to this as irrecoverable losses because if he were to sell something at a fire sale
05:29 rate typically what you're doing is you're trading speed for money. So you're getting speed in terms of selling the property
05:36 very quickly. But you might be losing. You might not be able to sell it for as much as you want to be able to otherwise. And
05:42 what they're the argument that they're making in those legal documents is essentially that if he's forced to sell his
05:48 properties extremely quickly in order to meet this appellate deadline say he sells a 50 million dollar property for 30 million
05:55 dollars. He uses the 30 million dollars cash uses that to meet his necessary legal deadlines. And then he later wins on
06:03 appeal. There's no way he can get his property back because he had to sell it in order to meet that meet that deadline. So
06:11 that's the basic argument that they're making in those in those court documents. And you found for Forbes that his best assets
06:17 to offload would either be his golf resorts or his homes not in New York. Talk about why. Yeah. So you know I talked about
06:26 these categories of different types of assets that he has earlier. Golf courses have a couple of different benefits. The
06:32 first thing is that they're not usually. First of all none of his U.S. golf courses have any mortgages on them and mortgages
06:37 could potentially slow down any sale. The second thing is that these types of purchases are not usually heavily
06:44 leveraged. So theoretically so people who buy golf courses are used to doing so basically with cash or mostly with cash.
06:51 And you know if they have to go find a loan for it that could also slow down the transaction. And remember what matters
06:56 right now is speed. The third thing is that you know another thing that could potentially slow down these transactions is
07:03 people when they buy an asset. Typically they want to do due diligence on it. If you're buying a home you're going to
07:08 want to have it inspected to make sure there's no mold in the walls. If you're buying a business you're going to want to
07:12 see all the numbers and you're going to want to make sure that the golf courses for example well maintained and the
07:17 cards all work and that kind of thing. So in that situation that's that's another thing that can slow down these these
07:25 purchases. But if golf courses are sometimes bought by their members golf clubs are often sometimes bought by their
07:32 members. And so members know the property well. They might be willing to forego some of that paperwork that an outside
07:38 buyer might be willing to go for. With all of that said I talked to one expert in golf courses who told me that sort of
07:47 the minimum for a golf course purchase is still something like 30 days which is just not enough time. He would he would
07:53 really have to speed up that timeline in order to dump something before. You said that his homes not in New York would be
07:58 the best to dump. Why not his home in the Empire State then.
08:02 So New York just has a little bit more of a we'll say a lengthy legal process when it comes to selling properties. You
08:12 could still turn around a sale in New York you know but it's likely going to take you know even a super fast sale is
08:19 probably going to take weeks instead of days. There are just yeah there are more legal barriers involved. There's also not
08:25 a standard contract that is used in New York for property sales. Each one has to be drawn up individually whereas in a
08:31 lot of other states you have sort of standard sale contracts that are able to able to quickly be reproduced and replicated.
08:37 So that that that is something that would take more time in the state of New York. He also has some commercial properties
08:43 including office spaces. Can you talk to us a little bit about the difficulties he would have selling those.
08:50 Absolutely. The commercial properties are really really difficult for him to unload especially those office properties.
08:56 The office market is just horrendous right now. I had one source tell me that lenders are running for the hills when it
09:03 comes to office properties. They just do not want to touch these. So you know already we're looking at things that maybe
09:09 had he sold them 10 years ago would be worth X amount and they're worth 30 or 40 percent below that. And that's a fair
09:16 market rate. That's not even counting the fire sale rate right because we're going to be talking about discounting things
09:21 in order to exchange that for speed. And then the other issue with with with office spaces is that they are much more
09:28 complex properties. I you know I mentioned that people want to see the paperwork. These these two types of transactions
09:34 especially in code of complex ones tend to take months if not years. You're going to want people to be able to come into
09:40 the office space see it understand what they're buying you know get comfortable with it you know build a relationship
09:48 with them. That's how you sell an office space for a good price. Trump doesn't have time to do any of that. So selling off
09:55 some of his office assets in New York just does not seem like a very good idea unless again we're talking about somebody
09:59 who knows the property really well and will be willing to bail him out which is just highly highly unlikely in that in the
10:05 event of office space. When you think about Donald Trump as a person most Americans have very strong feelings towards
10:11 him. Either way he is a very polarizing figure. Does that do politics come into play here.
10:17 Well it's do come into play a little bit. I talked to one real estate broker in New York who told me that he pointed to a
10:27 recent article in New York Times that showed that condo prices in New York in buildings with the Trump name on them.
10:34 They're selling for a discount compared to buildings without the Trump name on them. And that didn't used to be true.
10:40 Before he was president condos in Trump branded buildings actually sold for more than the average condo in New York City.
10:47 So you know New York City is a deep blue city. It's full of people who you know did not vote for Donald Trump in the last
10:55 election. The vast majority of them. And so you know there's some speculation that you know if you're seen as the person
11:03 who's bailing out Donald Trump that could be socially disadvantageous for you. On the other hand you know I talked to some
11:09 folks in Florida who told me that would not be an issue there. Florida is a you know it's a former swing state now trending
11:15 red. You know he won it by three points in 2020 which in Florida I'm speaking as a native Floridian. That's a veritable
11:25 landslide in the state of Florida. You know he would have less problems probably finding politically friendly folks to
11:34 potentially look at his properties especially because what he's selling there is residences. And so you might there might be a
11:40 little bit less politics tied up in that. I want to read a sentence from your Forbes piece and then get you to elaborate on it.
11:46 You wrote this quote ultimately conversation after conversation returns back to the strangeness of the whole situation. Why is
11:54 that. Yeah I talked to half a dozen real estate experts about you know in reporting out this piece in various different types
12:02 of real estate. And every single one of my conversations just kept coming back to the fact that this is a super weird
12:08 hypothetical situation. They have no idea how Donald Trump is going to figure out a financial way out of this. Turning around
12:18 a fire sale on even a home in in mere days is is something that is really really difficult to do. Let alone a golf course. Let
12:27 alone an office building. These are very very difficult assets to try to turn around in days. It's difficult to sell anything in
12:33 days. You can't sell a car in days. So they just kept coming back to this over and over saying like look we're trying to give
12:41 you the best advice we can based on our expertise in these in these sectors. But this is a really weird situation. And on top of
12:47 everything else we're talking about a former president currently running for president. I just add a whole other layer of
12:53 complications on top of everything else. This is the word is overused but this is an unprecedented situation. It's an
13:01 unprecedented situation. The experts say they don't know how Donald Trump is going to do it but he has to do it. Which brings
13:07 me to my final question. What is the next deadline. When does he need to have this cash.
13:13 Donald Trump needs the money by Monday March 25th. That's this upcoming Monday. We don't know what he's going to be able to do
13:20 to turn these to turn these kinds of things around. He his lawyers again have said in legal filings that they have not been
13:26 able to find insurance companies willing to work with him to post a bond either partial or full bonds because they're skeptical
13:32 of his real estate assets as collateral for those bonds. And he can't put up the cash. He doesn't. As far as we can tell he
13:38 doesn't have the cash. He claimed on True Social the other day that he does have the cash. That seems unlikely. But you know
13:46 theoretically he could have come across something somewhere at some point.
13:49 We're not sure where this is going to go next. The only way to find out is to wait and watch or you know he could be granted
13:57 relief by the appellate court. I think that might be the most likely way he gets out of this at this point.
14:02 Kyle a lot remains to be seen but I know one thing's for certain as this situation develops you will come back on hopefully
14:09 and break it down with me. Kyle Mullins thank you so much for joining me. Always happy to be here. Brittany.
14:14 Thank you.
14:15 Thank you.
14:15 Thank you.
14:16 Thank you.
14:16 Thank you.
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14:17 Thank you.
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14:18 Thank you.
14:19 Thank you.
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14:20 Thank you.
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