"Tom,
2 days ago you told me he doubled HDC's capitalization, thereby taking a half stake...didn't you?
With a half stake (not majority stake, but I already admitted to fudging what everyone says...), HDC, how did he not have an ownership position in that land?"
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Sully:
But from the little I can tell about HDC it seems it was just a land and land development company and probably only involved in that Haverford development.
We know from what MCC said about it that the partners in that company cobbled together 338 acres that had an average per acre cost basis to them of $1,650. If that was their only asset that would basically capitalize them at $557,700. Once they actually had an agreement and sale to Lloyd with MCC for 117 acres for $726.50 that would've taken it down to $449, 650. Then in that MCC "circular" Lloyd says there was a capitalization of an additional $300,000 in stock subscription offering of which half was subscribed to by people not from MCC (I would assume that may've been the same people who were the partners in HDC and even the Philadelphia and Ardmore Land Co. that was the actual owner of the Johnson Farm in 1910 and whose partners seem to be pretty much the same people as HDC's) and the remaining half of the subscriptions were offered by Lloyd to MCC people some of whom had already subscribed from MCC (apparently Lloyd and those so-called "Guarnators").
Lloyd also said in that "circular" that if the offering was over subscribed the late comers would be treated pro-rata with the original subscribers so as not to unequitably treat late susbscribers. I have no idea if that stock offering was under-subscibed, right on the target or over-subscibed but it has always been my understand that with stock underwriters if their offering is under-subscribed they pretty much have to make up the difference to bring it up to the advertized subscription amount.
Then of course the HDC residential real estate land was marketed at $2,500 an acre so if it was sold out over time that would bring the HDC capitalization eventually up to $637,500 but then one needs to consider the cost of what Lloyd said the additional $300,000 subscription amount was going to be used for.
So you do the math or just look at it and you tell me how much control you think Lloyd had over HDC in the summer and fall of 1910.
I don't really know what Lloyd's actual stake in HDC's stock capitalization was at any time but it was probably never more than 10-20% totally but then you also have to remember that Lloyd's most useful roll for HDC was that he was delivering to them a real ready-made market---eg the real estate buyers of the HDC residential development and if one looks carefully at who actually bought those lots over time it is just amazing how many of them were MCC members and some of Lloyd's powerful friends such as E.J. Stotesbury, the managing partner of Drexel and Company, who appears to have bought 10-12 of those lots under the name of his personal secretary.
Still today there're an awful lot of Merion members who live in that residential neighborhood. Back in the early 1920s one of those lots was listed as owned by Hugh I. Wilson, right across from the 14th green, but I don't believe the poor guy lived long enough to move in.
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Tom,
Here's your post on the capitalization of HDC...I think you've got it wrong.
At a very basic level, I think you should consider what you just said HDC would have paid in total for all 338 acres versus what they were going to get back for 221 acres at $2,500 per and another 117 for $85,000.
Not much profit in that bet for HDC...why would they think about it?
Where did the $1,650 come from? Merion's comments about getting their deal for half price?