Pakistan Airlines (PIA) Puts Roosevelt Hotel for Sale: Asking Price = $1 Billion

Posted on July 11, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Economy & Development
14 Comments
Total Views: 32113

Adil Najam

Old Logo of Pakistan International Airlines PIAPakistan International Airlines’ (PIA‘s) earlier failure to sell Roosevelt Hotel, the prestigious New York property that it owns, because of political in-fights and charges of corruption may yet turn into a windfall for the beleaguered airline.

The story of PIA and the Roosevel Hotel is a long and complicated one; it reads likea roller coaster with financial ups and downs, failed attempts to sell, political intrigue, Saudi princes, court cases, and more.

Roosevelt Hotel, New York, owned by Pakistan AirlinesRoosevelt Hotel, New York, owned by Pakistan Airlines

But, first, the news at hand as reported in the New York Post (12 July, 2007):

NO sooner did we whis per the Roosevelt Hotel as being a potential development site last Friday then we were tipped that it was actually coming to market – and could sell for, gulp, $1 billion as an office development site. Just over a year ago, the Pakistani government, which owns the 1,013 room hotel as PIA Investments, bought out its 50/50 Saudi partner, Prince Faisal bin Khalid of Saudi Arabia.

Infighting and Pakistani political factionalism stopped an earlier sales effort in 2003 that would have brought in around $225 million slated to be used to purchase new jets for its airline. Sources said Cushman & Wakefield will be marking the hotel through its Fab Foursome: Richard Baxter, Ron Cohen, Scott Latham and Jon Caplan. The company declined comment. At a breakfast meeting at Michael’s yesterday morning, C&W executives were bullish on the ongoing sales and leasing markets, as vacancy rates have dropped to 5.3 percent and asking rents are up to $75.79 a foot in Midtown, a 35 percent jump since this time last year.

The hotel occupies nearly a full-acre block just north of Grand Central Terminal bounded by 45th and 46th Streets, Vanderbilt and Madison avenues. Its 43,000 foot site can be built to 800,000 feet as-of-right, but attorneys say that special district air rights can be piled on to create a skyscraper that could leap to 1.5 million feet. Potential bidders are being advised to compare the hotel to the site next to the Museum of Modern Art which sold for $775 a buildable foot, but is mid-block near Sixth Avenue. Over a number of years making strategic land and air rights purchases, Macklowe Properties paid around $950 a foot for the Swisshotel Drake New York at Park Avenue and 56th Street, which they have changed from a residential hotel to offices. Office rents have since climbed markedly in the city with 18 deals completed at over $125 a foot this year alone versus 16 in all of last year.

Roosevelt Hotel, New York, owned by Pakistan AirlinesThe article suggests that a USD 1 billion price may be achievable. If so, it will come as a welcome relief to the airline that was once a ‘high flying’ operation (here and here) but has been going down, down, down with a recent spate of crashes, barred from EU airports, technical troubles, financial troubles, management troubles, and more (here, here, and here). The Roosevelt Hotel and PIA’s relationship has itself been a rocky one. Most recently it was in the news when the Saudi Foreign Minister sued the Pakistan airlines for blocking him from selling his shares in the holding company through which the hotel is owned by PIA, and therefore by the Pakistan government (since PIA is the state airlines).

The cash strapped airline has been trying to off-load this and other properties to get some much needed cash for a while. Back in August 2003 it had an offer of US$ 225 million (at which time it also had liabilities worth US$ 70 million). By February of 2005, it was being reported that the government would hold off the divestment of its PIA investments including the Roosevelt Hotel. Dawn newspaper reported then:

The action is reported to have been taken at the request of Saudi Arabia’s Prince Faisal bin Khalid who holds 50 per cent shares in The Roosevelt. The documents reveal that the PIAIL wanted to sell the hotel on a “priority basis to repay the loans obtained by the PIA”. In order to raise the much needed cash for the PIA the management has now decided to sell another prime property, Hotel Scribe in Paris, an official said [ATP Comment: This did not, in fact, happen]. According to the documents, the decision to auction The Roosevelt was approved after an amount of $65 million was spent on renovation of its “1040 classically furnished rooms.”

According to the sales documents, The Roosevelt had a net operating income of a little more than $12 million in 2002. The net income had come down immediately after the 9/11 incident; the hotel earned a profit of $29 million in 2000 with an 84 per cent occupancy rate. According to the PIA, the renovation at a cost of $65 million not only recaptured the original inspired interiors but also restored The Roosevelt to its 1920s splendour and “status as one of Madison Avenue’s finest hotels”.

Last year, however, things changed yet again when a new managing Director for PIA’s investment arm was appointed and (a) it was decided that PIA would seek a sale of Roosevelt Hotel and (b) the shares earlier owned by a Saudi Prince were acquired by PIA. According to The News (18 March, 2006):

The PIAIL, a subsidiary of PIA, owns four hotels including Roosevelt Hotel in New York and Scribe Hotel in Paris. The PIA management was the partner of 50 per cent shares in all these four hotels. However, recently the PIA has acquired the remaining 49 per cent shares of its Saudi partner in the Roosevelt Hotel by paying $67m to dispose of the hotel. Now, the PIA owns 99pc shares of Roosevelt and only one per cent share remains with the Saudi partner for taxation purposes.

Given that this was PIA and Pakistan all sorts of rumors and speculations have been floating all the time. It seems now that the Roosevelt Hotel is, in fact, up for sale. It also seems that teh US$ 1 Billion price is a realistic one. But as anyone who has ever flown PIA would attest, there can still be many ‘slips’ between the ‘cup and the lip’.

14 responses to “Pakistan Airlines (PIA) Puts Roosevelt Hotel for Sale: Asking Price = $1 Billion”

  1. Babar says:

    Got this hilarious piece about PIA in my email:
    Good morning, Ladies and Gentlemen. This is your captain Welcoming both seated and standing passengers on board of PIA. We apologize for the four-day delay in taking off, it was due to bad weather and some overtime I had to put in at the bakery.

    This is flight 717 to Lahore. Landing there is not guaranteed, but we will end up somewhere in Pakistan. And, if luck is in our favour, we may even be landing on your village!

    We regret to inform you, that today’s in-flight movie will not be shown as we forgot to record it from the television. However, for our movie buffs, we will be flying right next to Emirates Airline, where their movie will be visible from the right side of the cabin window.

    There is no smoking allowed in this airplane. Any smoke you see in the cabin is only the early warning system on the engines telling us to slow down!

    Kindly be seated, keep your seat in an upright position for take-off and fasten your seat-belt. For those of you who can’t find a seat- belt, kindly fasten your own belt to the arm of your seat. …..

  2. veteran says:

    What will they do with the 1 billion dollars. How do we know it wont just disappear. How do we know it wont be squandered away on frivolous and short sighted investments ? After all, so many billions have been lost by the PIA. Is it rational to think that their problems are only monetary ?

  3. auk says:

    Pakistan government has no business running a hotel in NewYork, and it is about time they realize that. With the high prices of oil and their collective mismanagement, PIA itself is losing 3-4 Billion ruppees (50+ Million dollars) a quarter. This is operational loss only, and does not include Billions of dollars that the government is spending buying new planes for PIA.
    Also the hotel’s annual profit of $12 million for a given year is nothing, and it can very easily convert to a substantial annual loss. Moreover, the government spent a huge amount renovating the hotel a few years ago. Government should divest the hotel as soon as possible taking advantage of the current high prices, and use the money to pay for the planes, rather than borrowing money for the planes to reduce the debt burden on it’s citizens.

  4. I wonder how much they bought it for intially??? And hopefully the profit from this goes into fixing PIA and not into somebody’s pockets!!

    Perhaps the govt is trying to improve the cash situation of PIA and then selling it off!! then that money is definatly going into someone’s pockets!!

  5. libertarian says:

    Akif Nizam: Obviously if the building is worth $1 billion, then a return of 1-2% ($12 million income) is not acceptable.

    You’re mixing issues up. The _property_ is worth $1B. The _business_ may be worth considerably less. $12M is not a bad return if the business was worth only $100M. The party buying the business may lease the property – though that does not seem to be the case here. Most of the $1B valuation is the property.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*