EB-5 financing is one of the few serious financing options available to hotel developers
EB-5 financing has become an important source of financing for hotel
development in the past few years. And hotels have become a favored
class of investment for foreign investors seeking to get their green
card with the required investment of capital. Quite a few projects are
being funded in this way, and some of the big hotel companies - but most
notably Marriott - are encouraging their developers to look into EB-5.
The hotel lawyers at JMBM's Global Hospitality Group® have worked on
(or are now working on) more than 40 such EB-5 hotel financing projects.
We still seem to be at the early part of this wave, investor interest
continues strong, and more people are getting on board. In addition, the
construction and development financing part of hotel financing spectrum
continues to be the most difficult to arrange, so EB-5 financing looks
pretty attractive.
It also looks like these EB-5 deals are accomplishing their intended
purpose well. They attract wealthy foreign investors, who bring fresh
capital into the United States to invest it in building hotels and
creating at least 10 jobs for Americans for each investor.
EB-5 Lawyer with the latest wrinkle in EB-5 financing for hotels -- the Tenant Occupancy Issue
But a new wrinkle has recently been created by the U.S. government
agency charged with monitoring the EB-5 process, the U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services ("USCIS"). The USCIS is starting to question
under what circumstances hotel jobs created by a new hotel development
should be counted for purposes of EB-5 financing - - at least when the
hotel operator hires the new employees under the industry-standard form
of hotel management agreement. In so doing, it appears that the USCIS
may be wondering if jobs with the hotel operator should be treated the
same as jobs with tenants under an office or retail lease.
The article below from my colleagues, Catherine Holmes and Victor
Shum, explains the latest issue and why hotel employees should be
treated as employees of a hotel project, regardless of whether they are
employed by the hotel owner or a hotel manager. We think this analysis
will be of greatest interest to our friends in the EB-5 community who
may not be familiar with the hotel industry.
EB-5 and the Tenant Occupancy Issue
as Applied to Hotel Employees
by
Catherine Holmes and Victor Shum | Hotel Lawyers
Since the release of its "Tenant Occupancy" Notice on February 17, 2012,
the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services ("USCIS") has begun
issuing Requests for Evidence on pending regional center applications
and exemplar I-526 petitions that involve "tenant occupancy models".
These Requests for Evidence articulate a new USCIS policy to reject
"tenant occupancy" job creation models for employment created by tenants
under leases in certain cases. Such Requests for Evidence have also
been issued recently with respect to hotel projects that do not have any
leases or tenants and that are operated under the industry-standard
hotel management agreement. Apparently the USCIS is questioning whether
hotel operators operating a hotel under a hotel management agreement are
similar to tenants operating a business under a lease. The answer is
no, as we explain in this article.
It is possible that there is a general misunderstanding of the roles
of the hotel owner and hotel operator under the industry-standard hotel
management agreement. In fact, the economic substance of a typical hotel
management agreement is far different from a lease of any form of real
property. This article is written for the EB-5 community to explain the
hotel management agreement and the nexus between the EB-5 investment and
the job creation methodology, in the hope that it will shed light on
this crucial issue for EB-5 financing of hotel developments.
A hotel management agreement is not a lease.
As we will discuss further in this article, one key difference between a
hotel management agreement and a lease is that, unlike a lease where
the tenant bears the risk of loss of operating the business enterprise,
under a standard hotel management agreement, all risk of loss and all
expenses of the hotel are born solely by the hotel owner - not the hotel
operator. Another key difference is that, unlike a lease where the
tenant's employees move when the lease terminates, hotel employees tend
to stay with the same hotel, even if the hotel operator changes, or the
owner sells the hotel. The reasons for this are explained further in
this article.
It may be helpful to our non-hotel industry readers to know that our
firm has been active in the hotel industry for more than 25 years, and
that we have negotiated and advised clients on more than a thousand
hotel management agreements in the U.S. and abroad with all of the major
hotel brands as well as the independent "non-branded" hotel operators.
Our description of the typical terms of a hotel management agreement is
based upon our experience in the hospitality industry.
Until the 1980s, hotel operators commonly leased hotels (as the
tenant and operator) to expand their brands while avoiding the greater
capital cost of purchasing the real estate. The problem with this lease
model is that it leaves the hotel company obligated to pay rent and
other operating expenses, and even exposes the hotel company to risk for
operating losses - just like tenants under office or retail leases.
They wanted a means to avoid that risk of loss.
A hotel management agreement is an agreement for services of the hotel manager.
That is why the hotel management agreement has become the dominant
means for brands and operators to expand their presence, and the hotel
management agreement itself has evolved into a specialized form of
services agreement, where the hotel owner retains all of the potential
profits and losses of hotel operations, and the hotel manager acts as
the hotel owner's exclusive agent in managing the hotel, for which the
hotel manager receives a management fee.
A hotel management agreement is essentially an agreement between a
principal, the hotel owner, and an agent, the hotel manager, under which
the hotel manager undertakes to manage the hotel as the agent of the
owner. In recent years, some hotel management companies have tried to
eliminate their fiduciary duties to hotel owners created by this agency
relationship. They have usually deleted pervasive references to the
operator being the agent of the owner, and by expressly disclaiming an
agency relationship with the hotel owner. Instead, these operators have
sought to characterize their relationship as that of an independent
contractor providing management services to the hotel owner.
In any event, whether characterized as an agency or a services
agreement, one thing is clear under a hotel management agreement: the
hotel owner bears total responsibility for all of the costs of operation
of the hotel, and the hotel owner is entitled to all of the net profits
of the hotel. In the case of a branded hotel management agreement, such
as an agreement with Hilton, Hyatt, Marriott, Starwood,
InterContinental or any of the other hotel brands, the hotel manager
agrees to use its own name in the operation of the hotel, whereas in the
case of a non-branded hotel management agreement, the hotel manager
does not use its own name in operation of the hotel.
The standard hotel management agreement provides that the hotel
manager will control and manage all of the operations of the hotel in
return for a fixed management fee, provided that the owner exclusively
bears all obligations to pay all of the costs of operation of the hotel,
and to fund any required capital improvements or repairs.
Hotel employees are always controlled by the hotel manager. Under
the standard hotel management agreement, the hotel manager, as
exclusive operator of the hotel, has the authority to hire, train,
supervise and fire employees of the hotel. The employees of the hotel
are often employees of the hotel manager, but in some cases the hotel
owner is designated as the employer of the hotel employees. Regardless
of who is the employer, however, the hotel manager is always responsible
for all decisions with respect to the employees of the hotel. The hotel
owner, even if it is the direct employer of the hotel employees,
typically has little if any control over the hotel employees, other than
owner approval rights over the executive staff of the hotel.
The hotel owner is always responsible - solely responsible - for all employee salaries and costs.
Although the hotel owner typically does not employ or control the hotel
employees, under the typical hotel management agreement, the hotel
owner is solely responsible for direct and indirect labor and employment
costs and liabilities. These include salaries, wages and benefits, and
any liabilities for employment related claims (harassment,
discrimination, wage and hour violations, and the like). If the revenues
from operation of the hotel are not sufficient to pay all such, the
typical hotel management provides that the hotel owner must pay such
costs and indemnify and hold the operator harmless from such costs and
liabilities. Practically speaking, this means the owner must make
additional cash contributions into the hotel operating account to fund
any shortfalls in the hotel payroll and related expenses of the hotel.
The hotel manager receives management fees and the hotel owner retains the net profits of the hotel operation.
Under the typical hotel management agreement, the hotel manager
receives a management fee, usually consisting of a base fee equal to a
specified percentage of gross revenues of the hotel and an incentive fee
consisting of some percentage of the net profits of the hotel, plus
reimbursement for certain expenses of the hotel manager that are
considered costs of the hotel, such as centralized marketing and
purchasing services. The hotel owner retains all net profits from
operation of the hotel, as well as all of the economic risks of
ownership and operation of the hotel, including operating expenses in
excess of hotel revenues. Because the hotel manager receives only fees
and not profits of the hotel operation, the hotel management agreement
typically provides that the hotel owner is required to indemnify the
hotel manager for any losses it incurs in operation of the hotel, except
in the case of the hotel manager's gross negligence or willful
misconduct. Hotel owners are often surprised to find that even if a loss
is caused by the hotel manager's negligence, the hotel owner is
responsible to pay for the loss, unless it was caused by the hotel
manager's gross negligence or willful misconduct.
The economic risks between a hotel management agreement and a lease are different.
In comparison with a typical commercial lease, the relationship between
a landlord and a tenant is quite different than that between a hotel
owner and hotel manager. In a lease, the tenant pays rent to the
landlord, and the tenant bears the economic risk of the business
enterprise conducted on the premises. In a hotel management agreement,
the hotel owner pays a management fee to the hotel manager, and the
hotel owner bears the economic risk of the hotel enterprise. In a lease,
the tenant employs its own employees and the tenant is responsible for
all of the costs of employment, including salaries, wages and benefits.
In a hotel management agreement, the hotel owner is responsible for all
of the costs of the hotel employees, regardless of whether the hotel
owner or the hotel manager is the employer of the hotel employees.
Hotels do not move from one location to another.
A tenant of an office building or retail center can take a business
enterprise to another location and conduct the same business. A hotel is
a unique business enterprise that is a hybrid of a real estate
investment and an operating business. As such, the building itself is
part of the value of the hotel enterprise. The hotel owner can only
preserve the value of the hotel enterprise by preserving and continuing
to operate the hotel in its existing location. Even if a hotel manager
terminates a hotel management agreement, the hotel owner can only retain
the value of that enterprise by continuing to operate the hotel, if
necessary by finding a new hotel manager. The hotel manager cannot move
the hotel enterprise to a new location, because it is not the owner of
the hotel enterprise, it is only a service provider to the hotel owner.
Hotel employees will often remain at the same hotel, even after a hotel management agreement terminates or the hotel is sold.
Even when a hotel management agreement expires or otherwise terminates,
the vast majority of the hotel employees will continue to work at the
hotel under the next operator. In fact, the hotel management agreement
will often provide that the hotel owner has a right to solicit the
existing hotel employees to remain employed at the hotel. This would
never be the case in a typical office or retail lease, where the
employees would move with the tenant, or lose their employment
altogether. Even if the hotel is sold by the owner, the hotel employees
are usually rehired by the new hotel owner. As this experience
demonstrates, the job opportunities created by a new hotel are long
lasting.
When a new hotel is opened, it does not mean that the old hotel will cease operations or reduce the number of employees.
When a new hotel is opened near an existing hotel, it is typical that
the existing hotel will remain in operation. Even if the existing hotel
changes hotel brands or hotel managers, both hotels will still require a
minimum number of employees to remain in operation. Therefore, a new
hotel in the same area as an existing one will generate new jobs as
opposed to shifting or relocating employees from the already existing
hotel.
Hotel employees have a strong nexus to the hotel enterprise rather than to the hotel manager.
For all of these reasons, the USCIS should view hotel employees as the
employees of the hotel enterprise, regardless of whether their actual
employer is the hotel owner or the hotel manager. The nexus between the
EB-5 investment and job creation in the hotel context is so strong that
it continues to exist regardless of whether the hotel owner or the hotel
manager bears ultimate responsibility for employment.
We represent hotel and other commercial real property owners and
developers who seek to obtain financing from foreign investors -
particularly Chinese investors - using the EB-5 immigrant investor visa
program. We help some of our clients form their own "regional centers"
to sponsor EB-5 offerings for their own new developments. We help other
clients find and negotiate with existing "regional centers" to sponsor
their developments. We know the players in the EB-5 world, including
many of the regional center operators throughout the U.S. and marketing
agents operating in China. We use our expertise and relationships to
make the right choices and guide our clients through the entire EB-5
financing process.
For more information about EB-5 financing
Financing new hotel development today: Finding the right "regional center" and negotiating terms for your EB-5 financing
Chinese investment in U.S. hotels: what the real estate professionals want to know
Hotel Development Lawyers: 10 things you can do to win the "race" for EB-5 capital for your hotel development project
Hotel Investment: Why Asian investors are targeting U.S. hotels for purchase and investment, and what could it mean for you?
Hotel
Developers: Why a "regional center" may be the key to financing your
next hotel development or expansion. And what you need to know . . .
How to use the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Visa Program for financing
This is Jim Butler, author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
and hotel lawyer, signing off. We've done more than $60 billion of
hotel transactions and have developed innovative solutions to unlock
value from hotels. Who's your hotel lawyer?
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Catherine Holmes is a transaction and finance partner with JMBM's
Global Hospitality Group® and Chinese Investment Group™ and specializes
in resort and hotel purchase and sale transactions, resort and urban
mixed-use financing and development, hotel management and franchise
agreements, and hospitality asset workouts. With her background in
securities transactions, she also assists hotel developers with public
and private offerings of securities. For more information, please
contact Catherine Holmes at +1 310.201.3553 or cholmes@jmbm.com.
Victor Shum is a corporate and securities partner in JMBM's Global
Hospitality Group® and Chinese Investment Group™. He has advised
clients on EB-5 matters since 1999 and assists hotel developers on EB-5
financing as well as public and private securities, mergers and
acquisitions, cross-border issues, and other strategic business
transactions, including real estate transactions and intellectual
property and technology licensing matters. For more information, please
contact Victor Shum at +1 415.984.9611 or vshum@jmbm.com.
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