I've got some background here, maybe I can answer a few questions:
Is this a land play? For me, Concert, and a few others, no. This is a pure business turnaround. As Jim points out, land sale or development is probably a backup plan, but it's not the reason you'd do the deal. There are certainly developers who are doing that, but they are usually pretty upfront about it.
Is this like the 90's REITs? Not really, but the business plan is totally different. Back then, investors thought the entire asset class was appreciating for a variety of reasons, so they wanted to be invested and make minor tweaks. The sheer volume of people with that plan drove up prices for courses, combined with a flat/declining market made the late 90's deals (purchase and new development) end up mostly bad. The deals these days are about turning around underperforming and poorly performing properties at low prices.
Do they own the entire club/Can they flip? Yes, they own the entire club. They could flip if they wanted to, but there are so few buyers, particularly for big and improved properties, good luck finding the next buyer. Based on ClubCorp's stock price, going public isn't an option any more. All the people that have been mentioned are, to my knowledge, long term investors.
How do their investors make money? Let's say there's a club with $6M in debt that's having trouble. If their loan has a 10 year amort and a 5% rate, they are spending $800K a year on debt service. Let's say cash flow before debt service and assessments is $400,000, meaning they are assessing $400,000 a year, which is driving members away. Someone like me comes in, pays off the debt and invests $2M, so I have $8M invested. But the club is still making $400,000 a year, so my investors are making 5% - not great, but better than 0%. My $2M goes into stuff that actually helps the club as opposed to the useless garbage that most clubs waste money on. Plus, believe it or not, there are a decent number of potential members that prefer to have someone like me running the club as opposed to a board, particularly when I eliminate assessments and fix problems. So let's say I add 100 new members at $5,000 net per member, that's $500,000 to the bottom line. I can run a club with the same level of quality for less than the members due to purchasing power, investing in efficiency, and quite frankly, the fact that I know what I'm doing. Let's say that's $300,000. So now the investors are making 15%, and it's unleveraged, so it's lower risk than a typical real estate investment. Not terrible in a 0% interest rate environment. These are obviously all made up numbers. It's also worth noting that a lot of clubs can't be saved at any price, particularly if the club is insolvent.
Why are clubs failing? It's different for every club. 1) Overall there are probably too many clubs, but each market and submarket is different, and it's not really fair to compare northwest Philly with Atlanta or even Wilmington for that matter. Local markets matter. 2) Most of the clubs that I see failing are not well run (*duck head*). I find that they spend money where they should not, and they do not spend money where they should. Part of the problem is the board system, and not because the board is filled with idiots. Quite the opposite, they are very smart people but this business is hard right now, and a board full of volunteer customers is not the way to run a tough business. If any single one of the board members ran the club full time, they'd probably do much better than a board. Probably not a popular opinion here. 3) Capital investment problems happen often. Problems include: not investing at all, not investing regularly, investing too much at once, investing in stupid things, and spending too much for what you get. These, combined with poor financial decisions to pay for said capital improvements (debt, assessments, etc.) are usually the final straw. 4) It is usually lots and lots of little problems.
Why wouldn't the members hold out for top dollar? 1) Most people didn't join the club as an investment, but because they liked the club. Now that they're members, they probably REALLY like the club and want to see it saved. 2) Let's say the club gets an extra $2M from a home developer. Split that 200 ways, and each person gets $10K, $6K after taxes. Many members ponied up many times that to join the club, and some are paying that much (or more) each year in assessments.