Atlantic City Casinos: Six Bankruptcies, Bondholders Wiped Out, Workers Unpaid
Last updated
Trump's Atlantic City casinos were overleveraged from the beginning: the Taj Mahal alone carried $675 million in junk bonds at 14% interest when it opened in 1990. When revenue fell short of the debt service requirements, bankruptcy followed. Through six rounds of bankruptcy, Trump negotiated deals that preserved his equity stake or management role while bondholders received cents on the dollar. He personally profited $82 million in salary and fees from the casinos between 1995 and 2009 while publicly traded Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts lost $1.4 billion. Trump repeatedly characterized the bankruptcies as strategic use of 'the laws of this country' and claimed he had made 'a lot of money' on Atlantic City.
Overview
Six bankruptcies in eighteen years. Each time, bondholders and investors took losses while Trump extracted management fees and salary. By the time the casinos finally closed, outside investors had collectively lost hundreds of millions. Trump had personally made $82 million from the same operations during a period they lost $1.4 billion.
His description of this: "I used the law four times and made a tremendous thing."
The Taj Mahal
The Taj Mahal was overleveraged from the opening day. $675 million in junk bonds at 14% interest required $93 million in annual interest payments before the casino had earned a dollar. Trump's own financial advisors knew this when the bonds were issued. The casino opened April 2, 1990. It filed for bankruptcy July 17, 1991.
Fifteen months.
The Pattern
The pattern through six bankruptcies was consistent: Trump would negotiate restructurings that preserved his equity stake or management role while cutting bondholders' returns. In the first bankruptcy, he gave up 50% equity but retained control and his management fees. In later restructurings, he took the company public, sold shares at peak valuations, and extracted compensation while shareholders bore the losses.
When Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts went public in 1995 at $14 per share, investors who held through the 2004 bankruptcy lost 89% of their investment. Trump had been paid throughout.
The Argument
Trump argued consistently that using bankruptcy law is financially sophisticated, not failure. "I used the law four times and made a tremendous thing." This argument is coherent only if you define success from the perspective of the person extracting money rather than the people investing it.
The bondholders who financed the Taj Mahal at 14% interest and received cents on the dollar after the 1991 bankruptcy had a different view of what "making a tremendous thing" looked like.
Timeline
Sequence of events
April 2, 1990
Taj Mahal opens — $675M in junk bonds
Trump Taj Mahal opens as the world's largest casino. It carries $675 million in junk bonds at 14% interest. Financial analysts note the debt service exceeds projected revenue.
July 17, 1991
Taj Mahal files Chapter 11
15 months after opening, the Taj Mahal files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Trump gives up 50% equity to bondholders in exchange for debt restructuring. It is Trump's first major bankruptcy.
January 1, 1992
Trump Plaza and Trump Castle file for bankruptcy
Two additional Atlantic City Trump properties file for bankruptcy protection within months of the Taj filing. Multiple creditors take losses.
June 1, 1995
Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts IPO — $14/share
Trump takes the casino operation public at $14/share, raising $140 million. The stock will decline 89% before the company's 2004 bankruptcy. Trump extracts management fees and salary throughout.
November 21, 2004
Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts — fourth bankruptcy
The publicly traded Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts files for Chapter 11 for the fourth time. Bondholders take further losses. Trump retains a reduced equity stake.
February 17, 2009
Trump Entertainment Resorts — sixth bankruptcy
The restructured entity files for bankruptcy again during the financial crisis — the sixth bankruptcy of the Atlantic City operations. Trump eventually loses his remaining stake.
October 10, 2016
Taj Mahal closes permanently
The Trump Taj Mahal closes permanently, ending Trump's Atlantic City presence. Thousands of workers lose jobs. Atlantic City's downtown has multiple empty casino properties.
Sources
- ↑ Donald Trump's Business Plan Left a Trail of Unpaid Bills — The New York Times
- ↑ Trump's Atlantic City legacy: Shuttered casinos, empty lots — The Washington Post
- ↑ A history of Trump's casino bankruptcies — The Associated Press
Verification