- Jun 17, 2001
- 55,420
- 1,600
- 126
Well, yeah. But it wasn't an 'academic' question. My point was that you lose control over who your partners are. They may turn out to be adversarial. You want the lawyer of some angry ex-wife who got shares in a divorce harassing you to jack the rent on the NP so she can get some cash flow? (Rhetorical question).
The point of the investors owning a max of 49% is so that the NP can be insulated from all of that and just have the land-owning corporation send the investors their pro-rata share of profits every year.
in other words, ISO: Passive investors looking to support a non-profit
Why "immediately'? Why not make the notes for ten or twenty years? If the investors accept, make it interest only for 10 or 20 yrs. You may be able to pay out those investors after some years. Take out a bank loan and pay them off.
A good point, although wouldn't this be an even less enticing investment opportunity vs the equity model, from an investor standpoint?
That said, if you look at the verbiage in the OP, I am inferring that the NP may have to get loans to buy the 51%, and what you propose is in line with what I was thinking to make that side of the equation happen.
