Some highlights:miz.jordan17 wrote:The article's for subscribers only. Can anyone give a summary?
http://www.bizjournals.com/kansascity/n ... elays.html
Instead, he said, the new goal for the project's multiple-piece financial closing is "the end of this year or early next year." That means the new Hyatt's opening "will probably be late spring or early summer (2019)," Burke told the Kansas City Business Journal.
Closing on the multiple financial pieces can't take place until the developers receive a guaranteed maximum construction price from general contractor JE Dunn Construction.
After recent conversations with experts at Stifel Nicolaus & Co., the bond underwriter for the project, "our confidence in being able to sell the bonds is high," Burke said.
"The good news is interest rates have, if anything, decreased over time," he added, "So we're trying to take advantage of that."
If interest rates appear poised to rise by the time the hotel bonds are issues, however, they could be a tough sell. That's because the value of bonds declines as interest rates rise.
Another challenge lies in the fact that the bonds will be unrated — meaning they won't be assessed by a credit rating agency such as Moody's or Standard & Poor's — largely because their repayment will not be guaranteed by the city or other public entity.
They also will be nonrecourse bonds, meaning the hotel's owners won't be on the hook for repayment, either. Repayment is "predicated on the success of the hotel," Burke said recently.
For that reason, nonrecourse bonds can be difficult to sell. But Burke said "you cover that in a number of ways: You have reserves; some get paid off earlier than others; and you pay a little more in interest rate."
Asked what was delaying the bond sale and other facets of the hotel project, Burke said there was no one particular snag — "just a lot of moving parts."
For instance, the hotel developers have yet to finalize a required joint development agreement with two local agencies that granted incentives for the project: the Land Clearance Development Authority and the Tax increment Financing Commission of Kansas City.
Meetings with those agencies aimed at finalizing the agreement are expected to begin in a couple of weeks.
In addition, Burke said, he has been working with city officials who have asked the developers to "tweak the wording" of other agreements due to "some arcane tax issues."
"Whenever there are issues, you take them one at a time and you resolve them," Burke said. "But this is doable deal, and we'll get it done."
Among those hoping he's correct are the multiple developers who invested in their own downtown hotel projects believing that the new Hyatt would create a rising convention and tourism tide that would float all boats.