A $250k Loan won’t fix anything

On Monday Nov 11 the MCA announced a 1 hour “Workshop” prior to the 2pm Board meeting to allow residents to ask questions about the proposed $250,000 loan to TMCC. Holding this sort of meeting to allow Residents to have an open dialogue with the Board is a very positive step and we commend the Board for making it. We hope there are more of these meetings in the future on important issues the community faces. Announcing the meetings via Constant Contact and allowing participation via Zoom are also important changes. Increased transparency is welcome (albeit long overdue) and even more transparency is required.

If you are planning on attending via Zoom it is important that you register in advance. The same link works for the 2pm Board meeting. If you think you may want to speak at the Board meeting you must register to do so prior to the start of the Board meeting. You can later choose not to speak but you can’t later choose to speak (perhaps wanting to respond to something you heard during the meeting). This is the rule the Board has set and represents their minimum legal requirement. We don’t know how they will operate the workshop.

We’ve drafted this note to help you have a clearer understanding of the situation so you can ask appropriate questions and provide informed advice to the MCA Board. The need for the loan is a clear symptom of a bigger problem.

As we’ve previously noted, it is reasonable believe that TMCC cashflows in Feb/Mar/Apr will likely be sufficient to allow repayment of the loan. But there would be real risk that TMCC could choose to not repay the loan. On Monday the Board announced that the loan to TMCC would be backed by “personal guarantees” of eight TMCC members. In our opinion, this should lower the risk of non-payment by choice.

To protect the interests of MCA Homeowners, it will be important that the MCA draft the loan document in such a way that:
1) TMCC is obligated to make repayments if the cash is available. They can’t choose to not repay it even if there is a 5% penalty (which would be small potatoes if repaying the loan puts them back in financial jeopardy…..which is likely).
2) The personal guarantees of TMCC members are promptly enforceable from a practical perspective. No months or years of court cases.
(Advice to the Board from MCA Homeowners with banking experience would be useful in this area).

But it is clear that any such loan is just a temporary band-aid.
We now know that:
1) TMCC began the year knowing there was a good chance that they would have insufficient cash to operate for the year (per TMCC Treasurer comments in TMCC 2024 Annual Meeting handout). They started 2024 with NEGATIVE NET CURRENT ASSETS OF OVER $1.2 MILLION (their liabilities due within a year exceeded their available assets by that amount).
2) There were revenue shortfalls in TMCC’s key peak season (Jan-Apr 2024) per MCA Treasurer.
3) MCA advanced $46,200 to TMCC on July 30 of this year for 2 months. This was before any hurricanes and indicates the TMCC Treasurer’s predictions had come true BY MID-YEAR.
4) TMCC annual dues pre-payments this fall for 2025 memberships (which is their normal tool to cover their usual annual cash shortfall in the fall) were $100,000 below normal per MCA Treasurer.
5) TMCC now requires $250,000 to keep the business going through the soon upcoming peak of the golf season (apparently immediately to “make payroll”). Although TMCC’s problems were made worse by the 3 hurricanes, their cashflow problems were already very apparent to all who had access to TMCC’s financial details. The hurricanes have only accelerated the long downward spiral.

The only way out of this situation for TMCC is to make an EXTRA $250,000 of profit in 2024 and by mid-year 2025 to fill in the shortfall. Let’s assess the likelihood of that with the information we have:
* They had a $21,000 loss in 2023 which was $112,000 behind their plan (per TMCC 2024 Annual Meeting info).
* All indications are that 2024 will be at a loss, and
* Membership commitments for 2025 are DOWN by $100,000.

TMCC has not been viable for more than a decade. They burned through all their equity to the point of insolvency in 2018 and since have existed solely based on subsidies from MCA Homeowners. And the amount of MCA Homeowner money required to keep their private club lifestyle is GOING TO GROW AND GROW.

Only 5.6% of MCA homes have TMCC golf club members.
About 2.5% of MCA homes have tennis members and 4.3% have Social/Sport members, but we believe TMCC’s perpetual financial problems are predominantly related to use of the golf courses. That totals only 12.4% of MCA Homes.

All indications are that TMCC has hit another tipping point as they did in 2018 (when MCA stepped in to purchase the assets, then leased them back for $10), and in 2019 when they were insolvent again (and MCA invented the $600,000 Renaissance Access subsidy). THERE ARE TWO CLEAR PATHS FORWARD:

1) Continue to be TMCC’s bottomless piggy-bank (MCA’s current path which TMCC members, both residents and non-residents, enjoy.)

2) Get professional golf industry advice to figure out the best way to utilize our sports complex assets, including what to do about the clubhouse (we focus on golf as tennis is a much simpler business and appears to be profitable). There will be LOTS of challenges to choose a path in the next few months and implement a different business model by the end of 2025.

Back to the proposed loan: With the peak season just a couple of months away it makes sense for MCA to keep the golf courses operating rather than become the immediate operator. If that requires a $250,000 loan so be it.

The Board minutes from their Aug 19 special meeting indicate that a Board member actually made a motion to form a strategic planning committee of community members to “investigate various options regarding this property” and report its findings to the entire community. None of the other eight Board members would even second the motion to let it go to a vote. This is the kind of committee MCA needs, but it would also need expert advice to understand the options and their pros/cons. They all have to know this, but only one Board member has been willing to take the first step.


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12 responses to “A $250k Loan won’t fix anything”

  1. erich Avatar
    erich

    As a retired banker, I would like know if the 8 people who guarantee the loan have been vetted to make sure they have the means to do so. For instance if they too were insolvent the guarantee is worthless.

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    1. Website Admin Avatar

      VERY Unlikely. MCA statements that the guarantors are former TMCC Board members is likely intended to make us confident they are good for it.
      Fair question to ask. Perhaps put liens on their MCA homes until loan, interest and penalties (if any) are repaid at TMCC’s expense?

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    2. Harold E Haynes Avatar
      Harold E Haynes

      Like other meetings the board listened to the speakers recommendations and statements (90% plus against the loan). There were even Club Members speaking the praises of the club and the Hurricane Induced losses. When the Board voted to award the loan to the TMCC. As usually unanimously . Totally against the verbal recommendation of the majority of the Property owners who have spoken out in the last 2 meetings. It was very transparent how they were going to vote.

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  2. RJL Avatar
    RJL

    We finally moved out of The Meadows four months ago. We knew this problem had been existing for years and concluded we homeowners were being mislead.
    We sold our live in home 5 years ago and just sold our rental property 4 months ago and we are so relieved. This is the result of horrible leadership and management. Somehow the homeowners are going to become huge victims of this mess. Good luck.

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  3. John Dolcetti Avatar
    John Dolcetti

    We feel it’s time to stop subsidizing the golf members for a private club. They can either pay their full share or have it go semi private like University and Rosedale. Daily revenue is required.

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  4. MR Avatar
    MR

    Why don’t the 8 members pony up the $250k to keep the problem/solution ‘in house’??

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    1. Website Admin Avatar

      Excellent question for the MCA Board if the TMCC members are truly good for the money. MCA wouldn’t even have to approve the loan as those types of member loans are specifically contemplated and allowed in the lease.
      One explanation I heard from a TMCC member (True story) was that by MCA providing the funds, it avoids the inconvenience to the TMCC members of having to liquidate assets and forgoing investment income for the outstanding period. Put another way: it avoids the TMCC members from feeling any pain of their club’s financial problems. Same approach as we’ve seen for a decade.
      That said, LETS KEEP FOCUSED ON WHAT REALLY NEEDS TO BE DONE: FIGURE OUT A BETTER WAY TO USE OUR SPORTS COMPLEX ASSETS.

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  5. David Avatar
    David

    we really appreciate the research you have done and for putting it together in such a manner as to clearly educate the reader as to the history and current status.

    we would be interested in knowing if any of the following candidates that are running for the MCA board are in alignment with the proposed process laid out in your blogs regarding approaches to making the best use of our sports complex?

    Ned Boston

    Phillip Boyle

    Donald Breece

    Amy Chapman

    Gene Mercer

    Stan Miska

    Alex Peake

    Tricia Skelly

    Melvin Sykes

    Like

    1. Website Admin Avatar

      We know some, but not sure about others. We will post information here about our perceptions of the candidates.

      Like

  6. howey1946 Avatar
    howey1946

    I noticed that Jerry Lazar sitting with the MCA board because he is the liaison to Aviva. If I recall, he then gets to deliver their votes to the MCA board so they can use them for their choices for the election of directors. What percentage of the total votes is this amount?

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    1. Website Admin Avatar

      We estimate it at 4.3% of the available votes.
      In 2023 Aviva votes were about 9.4% of the total votes cast.
      Aviva + Shopping Center + votes given to TMCC were 14.3% of total votes cast (WOW)

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  7. […] As they expected, TMCC had a cash shortfall in Oct/Nov, but it was larger than expected due to the hurricanes and TMCC needed a $250,000 loan to continue operations. […]

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