Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FILING: TRUMP businesses saw slide in 2020.

Virus took toll on hotels, golf clubs; company’s losses put at nearly 38%

- BEN PROTESS, STEVE EDER AND MICHAEL H. KELLER

Trump hotels and golf courses closed, and even after reopening, some faced restrictio­ns on indoor dining and gatherings.

Over the past year, former President Donald Trump’s family business saw steep declines in revenue as the pandemic upended the nation’s hospitalit­y industry, according to a financial disclosure report released hours after Trump left office Wednesday.

The report detailed a revenue drop of more than 40% at Trump’s Doral golf club outside Miami, and a 63% decline at his signature hotel in Washington, just blocks from the White House. All told, the Trump Organizati­on declared revenue of at least $278 million in 2020 and the early days of this year, a nearly 38% decline from the company’s reported 2019 results.

The disclosure, which represents the final public snapshot of Trump’s finances, documents the toll the pandemic has taken on his luxury hospitalit­y business, which essentiall­y ground to a halt last spring when the coronaviru­s started sweeping through the country.

Trump hotels and golf courses closed, and even after reopening, some faced restrictio­ns on indoor dining and gatherings.

“There were places that due to government mandates we were not able to operate,” Eric Trump, the former president’s son who helps run the business, said Wednesday. “Those are places you are going to lose the season because of it.”

The Trump Organizati­on, he said, remained stable and had steady cash flow and relatively low debt compared with other real estate businesses — although as Donald Trump left office, the company had more than $300 million in debt coming due in the next few years that the former president has personally guaranteed.

The disclosure portends greater tumult for the business, which has faced widespread shunning of its brand since the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. The violent rioting by Trump’s supporters led to his second impeachmen­t and prompted many of the company’s corporate partners — in banking, insurance, golf and real estate — to abandon it.

Morgan Lewis, the law firm that handles the business’s taxes, became the latest to distance itself from the Trumps on Wednesday by indicating that it would not take on new business with Donald Trump or the company.

The biggest blow came when the PGA of America announced that it would strip Trump’s New Jersey golf club of a major tournament, setting off a wave of other ruptures, including a decision by New

York City to cancel contracts with the Trump Organizati­on for two ice rinks, the Central Park Carousel and the Trump Golf Links in the Bronx.

Even before the pandemic and the riot, the Trump presidency had complicate­d business for the Trump brand.

For much of his term, the company was stuck in neutral as the family name was removed from several properties and potential new deals never emerged. Trump’s politics also appeared to create a red-blue divide, leaving his hotels in Democratic bastions like New York and Chicago struggling, while his golf club in North Carolina boomed.

One bright spot in 2020 was Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private club in Florida and his intended new residence. Revenue at Mar-a-Lago rose from $21.4 million to $24.2 million, an increase of 13%. The company’s retail business also grew, more than doubling its revenue to nearly $2 million.

The Trump golf business saw mixed results. While many of the courses had losses of 10% or more, revenue rose at clubs in West Palm Beach, Fla., and another near Charlotte, N.C., as golf became a popular outdoor escape from the dangers of covid-19.

But at Doral, Trump’s biggest revenue generator, revenue fell from $77.2 million in 2019 to $44.2 million, down nearly 43%.

Trump Turnberry, a golf club in Scotland, had a significan­t downturn last year. Revenue fell from $25.7 million to $9.8 million, about 62%, as Scottish authoritie­s closed it because of the virus.

Some of the Trump Organizati­on’s biggest declines came in its hotel business, as the virus halted travel and the company cut back on staff to stem its losses.

The hotel in Washington, which the Trumps had considered selling before the pandemic, was particular­ly hard hit. The restaurant and the famed hotel lobby — long a gathering place for lobbyists, White House aides and other Trump supporters — have been closed for extended periods over the past year, and hotel occupancy is down significan­tly.

Donald Trump reported assets worth at least $1.3 billion, down slightly from 2019.

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