A Yountville spa and resort owner hopes Congress will help stop the ''vulture tactics' of lenders during the pandemic.
A Yountville spa and resort owner hopes Congress will help stop the ''vulture tactics' of lenders during the pandemic.
A Yountville resort and spa general manager recently appealed to his congressman to stop lenders who are using "vulture tactics" to prey on borrowers hard struck by the COVID-19 pandemic's economic impact.
Lenders circling over the pandemic-distressed properties "are well within their legal rights to do," Bardessono Resort and Spa general manager Alain Negueloua said in his April 2 letter to U.S. House Rep. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.).
In the copy of the two-page letter obtained by the Wine Country Times, Negueloua told Thompson that the lenders' scheme is "unconscionable from a moral perspective and stand starkly against the principles that we share here in the United States."
"Frankly, to take advantage of this crisis for the sake of better returns for some New York hedge fund strikes me as un-American," Negueloua continued in his letter. "The negative impact to hotel owners and their employees of these vulture tactics will be long lasting."
Negueloua urged Thompson to join with other members of Congress, the Federal Reserve and other regulatory agencies "to address this situation before hotels across this country are mercilessly foreclosed on due to no fault of their own." Negueloua called for an 18-month moratorium on foreclosure proceedings to allow hotel owners "time they will need to come up with reasonable solutions and strategies."
Bardessono Resort and Spa has 68 rooms and is on Yount Street.
Thompson maintains a coronavirus updates and resources page on his House website.
The $2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act passed by Congress along bipartisan lines late last month provides some foreclosure relief, mostly for family-owned properties.
In addition, some states have set up foreclosure moratoriums and stays, often covering small and large properties from actions by lenders to seize assets when payments aren't made during the pandemic.
California is one of those states, thanks to a March 16 executive order issued by Gov. Gavin Newsom. However, the order, which went into effect on March 30, largely covered family dwellings and excluded larger properties.
Larger properties received some protection in an interagency statement issued March 22 by the Federal Reserve, FDIC and other regulatory agencies that encouraged the nation's banks to work proactively with borrowers hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic.
"The agencies encourage financial institutions to work prudently with borrowers who are or may be unable to meet their contractual payment obligations because of the effects of COVID-19," the statement said. "The agencies view loan modification programs as positive actions that can mitigate adverse effects on borrowers due to COVID-19. The agencies will not criticize institutions for working with borrowers and will not direct supervised institutions to automatically categorize all COVID-19 related loan modifications as troubled debt restructurings (TDRs)."
Negueloua called the interagency statement "undoubtedly a step in the right direction" but said not all borrowers have loans from FDIC-insured banks.
"However, billions of dollars of hotel loans in our country come from unregulated non-banks such as hedge funds and other investment funds," Negueloua's letter said. "Since the Federal Reserve and the FDIC have no direct oversight of these firms, they are unlikely to follow the previously mentioned guidance. They are more likely to take a different approach: the use of vulture tactics to extract as much "value" out of the hotel as possible without any regard for the current crisis or the hotel employees or hotel owners involved."
Those "vulture tactics" include accelerating the foreclosure process to gather in as many COVID-19-distressed properties as possible, using "small technical ways" to rush loan defaults, denying borrowers existing escrowed funds and slowing reimbursements on collateral, Negueloua's letter said.
"Mr. Thompson, I urge you, Congress, the Federal Reserve and other governmental agencies to move quickly to address this situation before hotels across this country are mercilessly foreclosed on due to no fault of their own," Negueloua's letter said. "To the extent additional legislation related to COVID-19 is proposed, I would recommend adding language that introduces an 18-month moratorium on all foreclosure proceedings for all lenders to hotels. This should give hotels the time they will need to come up with reasonable solutions and strategies with their lenders to ensure that they have their loans paid off and avoid unnecessarily enriching hedge fund vultures."