Kerzner International Holdings, the company that built Atlantis resorts in the Bahamas and Dubai, handed ownership of its flagship property to Brookfield Asset Management as part of a debt restructuring.


Brookfield will forgive $175m of junior debt for ownership of the Bahamas-based Atlantis and the Bahamas One&Only Ocean Club, as well as a half interest in the One&Only Palmilla in Mexico, according to a statement obtained by Bloomberg News.


Kerzner, which also reached a deal with lenders to restructure its operating debt, will continue to run Atlantis Paradise Island and the One&Only resorts, according to the statement.

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Atlantis the Palm, in Dubai, jointly owned with Dubai World, isn’t affected. Kerzner in August was reported to be in talks to sell its 50 percent stake in the resort to Istithmar World, Dubai's investment arm.

 

Famous for Atlantis’s Mayan-themed water slides and up- close encounters with dolphins, sharks and rays, Kerzner has struggled with debt since the 2008 financial crisis cut hotel values and room rates. The company has negotiated to extend maturities on mortgages due earlier this year, people familiar with the talks said in August.


The properties being taken over by Brookfield had about $2.6bn in debt when negotiations began a year ago. That shrinks to about $2.3bn, with Brookfield’s forgiveness and an earlier $100m payment that was part of a maturity extension.


Kerzner is working with Brookfield to extend maturities of the remaining debt, according to two people familiar with the negotiations who declined to be identified because the arrangement isn’t public.


“This transaction will permit Kerzner to move forward as a management company,” chairman and chief executive officer Sol Kerzner said in the statement. The deal allows “us to get back to doing what we do best - designing and managing world-class destination and luxury resorts under the Atlantis and One&Only brands,” he said.


Kerzner was taken private in 2006 for $3.6bn by a group led by the namesake founder Sol Kerzner. Owners include Dubai World’s Istithmar, Goldman Sachs Group’s Whitehall Funds and Colony Capital.


Holders of Kerzner’s debt included Centerbridge Capital Partners, TPG Capital, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank and Fidelity Investments, people familiar with the talks said earlier this year.


Kerzner, 76, built what his company website calls the “mythical city of Atlantis” on Paradise Island property he bought from Merv Griffin, the late talk show host and game show creator. The resort is surrounded by an artificial open-air marine habitat featuring 50,000 sea creatures and a marina to “attract the sleek international mega-yacht set,” according to the site.


A $1bn expansion begun in 2007 added hotels, a new dolphin habitat and expanded the Aquaventure water park.


In September 2008, as the financial crisis deepened, Kerzner opened a second Atlantis in the Gulf on the outer frond of Palm Jumeirah, Dubai’s man-made, tree-shaped island.


Kerzner also runs seven One&Only resorts, with different levels of property ownership. Today’s deal doesn’t impact the other five.


Brookfield Asset Management is a Toronto-based investment firm that manages about $150bn and focuses on property, infrastructure, renewable power and private-equity investments.