The court-appointed receiver who’s been overseeing Jay Peak since the resort was seized by the SEC nearly three years ago has put Jay up for sale, with the help of financial services firm, Houlihan Lokey.
No sale price has been set, but recent news reports speculate it could be anywhere from $60 million to a whopping $250 million—a number 25 times the resort’s reported $10 million profit in 2017. Ski resorts currently sell for around 6 to 10 times profits.
Why the huge high-side number? According to published reports, both the receiver, Michael Goldberg, and a representative from Houlihan Lokey think the resort’s many physical assets—hotels, hockey rink, golf course, soccer fields, etc.—mean they can value it differently than a typical ski resort.
However, many ski resorts that have sold in recent years also had a variety of physical assets in addition to the on-mountain product, and their sale prices have fit within the range 6 to 10 times EBITDA.
Jay Peak GM Steve Wright credits the human assets for getting the resort to the point it is now—an attractive property, on the market for the highest bidder. “Really, the untold story here has been the team’s performance across the last three years, which has brought us to this point,” Wright told SAM. “A tripling of EBITDA and NOI doesn’t happen because the government has stepped in. It’s happened because the employees care about this place in a deeper capacity than that of a typical employee/employer relationship. That says a lot about both the people and the place.”
Houlihan Lokey has significant incentive to sell Jay Peak at the highest price possible. According to published reports, Houlihan Lokey will earn a 1.5 percent fee of a transaction valued up to $100 million, or $1 million, whichever is greater. For a transaction valued at more than $100 million, Houlihan Lokey will collect $1.5 million for the first $100 million, plus 3 percent of the transaction value above $100 million.
The resort’s previous owner, and the person who was at the center of the SEC’s fraud investigation and the subsequent receivership, Ariel Quiros, paid $23.5 million for Jay Peak in 2008. He also invested many millions more, raised via the EB-5 program, before the resort was seized by the SEC, and Goldberg has approved millions more to complete various projects.
The SEC charged Quiros with misusing more than $200 million in EB-5 investor funds, about $50 million of which was allegedly used for personal enrichment. He reached a settlement with the U.S. government in February 2018 for more than $80 million, and settled with the state of Vermont in July for $2 million. Stenger settled with the feds for $75,000, and with the state of Vermont for $100,000 paid over four years.
About Jay Peak
Jay Peak is a four season resort in Northern Vermont, close to Canada and Burlington, and far from anything resembling ordinary. Featuring a year-round indoor waterpark, ice arena, brand new rec center, championship golf course, easygoing disc golf course and, of course, the East’s best skiing and snowboarding, Jay offers a mountain getaway for everyone. Bring the kids for summer camp, yourself for live music in the amphitheatre, or the entire staff for a corporate retreat that goes beyond the boardroom. A wide range of accommodation, restaurants and pubs is here to welcome you and yours. It’s a place where you’ll feel comfortable, well, feeling comfortable, and we believe there’s no such thing as doing it wrong, just doing it your own way. After all, what sets Jay apart is what brings us together.