Keith:
My guess is the price bid was the price necessary to remove the property from the deed of trust it was being held under until all of the existing debt was paid. Clear title is worth a lot in the RE world.
What is interesting to me is that the original note was quoted as being $4mil, yet the auction value was significantly lower. At some point folks (Rupert, the original lender, etc.) thought the property had a value equal to or more than the amount of the original loan. Even with the improvements that have taken place, no one was willing to make a bid for an amount over the existing debt level. It seems like the fair market value of BN, like a lot of other development properties (not necessarily implying housing) around the country, took a severe hit over the last couple of years.
I know just enough of the story to surmise that this story might have had a different ending if someone else was driving the model. But then again, we wouldn't even be discussing Ballyneal at all if Jim and Rupert hadn't undertaken this project.
We can take this discussion down a series of roads, such as:
1. Timing is everything;
2. What models work;
3. Why the best land for golf may not always be in the best spot to start a golf club; and
4. Without deep pockets its a crapshoot.
There are a bunch of valid lessons to learn from what has happened at Ballyneal. The real lesson to me is that golf club ownership is a business. No matter how wonderful the dream, it needs to make sense from a dollars perspective. You can build a world class course, hire top notch folks to run the place and recruit a group of members that are second to none and willing to invest their own golf $$ into the place, but there's no guarantee things will work out.