If Pebble carries lots of debt, couldn't they face big problems?
you bet they could, but it's very difficult to know exactly how their financing is structured these days.
I looked around a bit and came across this article from June of '00 that gives as much detail on the financing as I have ever seen. the good news for Pebble is that the financing structure looks quite granular and sticky, at least that's the way it was in late 1999 when the deal was struck.
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0HFI/is_2000_June/ai_63026328/pg_1?tag=artBody;col1quick breakdown of $820mm sale price:
$100mm (Clint, Arnie, Ferris, Ueberroth)
$300mm (spread among 132 limited partners)
$345mm (GE pension fund)
$75mm (other)
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$820mm total
but that's just the equity side of it and there's no mention about investment redemption terms or dividends or anything like that. the article also mentions another "outstanding loan of $400mm" that appears to be separate, and this could have grown or shrunk over the years...hard to tell.
to me it appears that Pebble has large and diverse base of wealthy investors such that the resort will be insulated from any sort of forced sale or restructuring (I guess in a worst case scenario GE could join with the bank, if there is one, to force the issue) but to think that they won't feel the pain of this economy would be foolish.
SM
(Sea Island is an example of the other end of the spectrum, tons of lumpy bank debt concentrated on a few hands)