Friday, October 14, 2016
By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor
nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
A prominent QC yesterday dismissed Sarkis Izmirlian’s latest bid to reacquire the $3.5 billion Baha Mar project, saying: “He’s too late to the party.”
Wayne Munroe QC, who represents the Gaming Board and other government agency creditors of Baha Mar, told Tribune Business that the original developer’s latest highly-publicised offer “should not be taken seriously”.
Questioning why Mr Izmirlian had not made such a bid through the formal Baha Mar sales process run by the resort’s Deloitte & Touche receivers, Mr Munroe suggested the latest offer was too late to affect the resolution agreed by the Government and China for the stalled development.
“He was invited to the party and came after it was over,” the QC told Tribune Business. “I don’t think anyone is really taking him seriously. Talk is cheap; money buys land.”
Pointing out that the Supreme Court had approved the sales process run by the China Export-Import Bank’s receiver agents, Mr Munroe said the time for Mr Izmirlian to submit the ‘knock out’ offer he unveiled this week was then.
“He had an opportunity to it do it then; to submit an offer that was higher than anyone else’s, and he didn’t,” Mr Munroe said of Mr Izmirlian, implying that his fresh bid was too little, too late by several months.
“I don’t get how he’s coming so late to a party that he was invited to.... I don’t regard this as a bona fide, serious offer. I regard it as more talk.”
Tribune Business, though, previously reported Mr Izmirlian’s complaints that the terms and conditions set for the sales process seemed designed to discourage, and even prevent, a bid by himself.
There were restrictions on speaking to former Baha Mar executives and others intimately involved with the project that he felt it was impossible for him to comply with, while the sales process may also have compromised the $192 million claim against the project’s general contractor.
And Mr Izmirlian’s October 10, 2016, letter to the China Export-Import Bank’s vice-chairman implied that he felt he had been subject to ‘double standards’ treatment in the sales process.
At the heart of his complaint is the contents of a recent judgment by Justice Ian Winder, which disclosed that Baha Mar’s proposed purchaser - believed to be a Chinese group or consortium - came from ‘outside’ the formal sales process.
This, Mr Izmirlian hinted, was contrary to the rejections his previous ‘outside the process’ bids received, and the insistence by the Deloitte & Touche receivers that he had to participate in the court-approved structure to be considered a player.
Mr Munroe, though, said the receivers, especially Raymond Winder, Deloitte & Touche (Bahamas) managing partner, had publicly encouraged Mr Izmirlian to participate, saying he was “welcome to bid”.
And Prime Minister Perry Christie also encouraged Mr Izmirlian to bid, and the receivers to accommodate him. Mr Munroe said yesterday that he disagreed with these comments from the Prime Minister, as he “had no ability to tell the receivers to do such a thing”.
The QC added: “He [Mr Izmirlian] was entitled to participate, and if he was serious he would have bid then.”
“No one was keeping him from any party. In the very beginning the bank was willing to lend him $600 million, and all he had to do was give a personal guarantee for $150-$175 million. He said the Bahamian government should do that. He can’t be taken seriously.”
Baha Mar’s original developer, in his October 10 letter to the secured creditor, promised that his offer would beat the price submitted by any rival bidder, including the proposed purchaser.
Apart from pledging to defeat all-comers in terms of price, Mr Izmirlian promised to make ‘bona fide’ Bahamian creditors ‘whole’, and pay all former Bahamian and expatriate Baha Mar staff ‘whole’.
Mr Izmirlian said the necessary financing for his offer was already in place, although he did not specify the source(s), and promised to drop all legal actions over Baha Mar in the Bahamian courts if a deal could be struck.
However, Mr Munroe argued that Mr Izmirlian’s latest gambit would have little to no impact, as the China Export-Import Bank and its receivers, together with the Government, were too far down the road with their Baha Mar solution.
“The receivers have, pursuant to the sales process, agreed to sell to a buyer,” he said. “The receiver/managers got the sale, and had the sale approved by the court. There’s a sale.”
The Government and China Export-Import Bank have also agreed to a ‘Heads of Terms’ for Baha Mar’s construction completion, something that is required before any buyer will consummate a purchase.
“The Government agreement has to do with its approval of the buyer, and the condition that Bahamian creditors be paid for it to be approved,” Mr Munroe added.
Suggesting that Mr Izmirlian would make further announcements in the run-up to Baha Mar’s completion and opening, Mr Munroe said the developer was playing to Bahamian public opinion.
He even suggested Mr Izmirlian was “trying to affect the political fortunes” of the Government in the upcoming election, adding: “Rich men do things like that.”
However, with the former Baha Mar companies now placed into full liquidation, Mr Izmirlian and his family now face the loss of their $800-$900 million equity investment in a project they have been involved with for 13 years.
“I understand it clearly, having been involved in it [Baha Mar] for a while, why he has taken this position,” Mr Munroe told Tribune Business of Mr Izmirlian.
“He overplayed his hand, and got into a position he couldn’t recover from. I suspect a lot of it now is spite.”
Comments
John says...
Now he does sound desperate. They juice you aye? Like they do Bahamians every day
Posted 14 October 2016, 10:13 p.m. Suggest removal
MonkeeDoo says...
Wayne may be a brilliant lawyer but like most lawyers they haven't a clue of how business works. Hence where we are today .
Posted 15 October 2016, 11:47 p.m. Suggest removal
banker says...
Not brilliant. Wayne & ethics are complete strangers.
Posted 16 October 2016, 12:35 p.m. Suggest removal
ThisIsOurs says...
"*Wayne Munroe QC, who represents the Gaming Board and other government agency creditors of Baha Mar*"
They really need to start introducing him as "*Wayne Munroe QC, who represents the Gambling Houses **and** the Gaming Board, the organization that regulates the Gambling Houses*"
Posted 16 October 2016, 5:29 a.m. Suggest removal
MonkeeDoo says...
There has been a pox on this country ever since the government sided with the Chinese to disembowel this significant foreign investor. We will never recover from this villainey in my view.
Posted 16 October 2016, 8:40 p.m. Suggest removal
John says...
Not making light of the situation but Sarkis should realize by now The Chinese are resolved on what they are doing with Bah Mar, himself and this country. They drew the government in on the conspiracy unwittingly and now the government is no longer saving face. They have pledged their loyalty and support to the Chinese. What is obvious is the Chinese want Izmirilian out. They want control of Bah Mar and unless Sarkis gets a strong and powerful legal team together and persues his interest in a non-Bahamian court, he will lose every penny he invested in the project. The Chinese are working to have him declared an enemy of the state, if only for trying to reclaim his interest in Bah Mar. They see him as a stumbling block and the only obstacle to having full control of Bah Mar. Should the government plead (not bow) to the Chinese on his behalf and try them to return at least a half billion of his money?
Posted 17 October 2016, 7:25 a.m. Suggest removal
GrassRoot says...
I would think that the offer by Sarkis was made out of pure courtesy. if anyone believes an investor anywhere on the planet (and even close to UK or US courts) would let 600 M USD be taken by thieves without noise, they should go to la-la-land (or move to the Bahamas). The Battle 4 BahaMar is far from over.
Posted 17 October 2016, 9:39 a.m. Suggest removal
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