| Equity return issue holds up sale of The Reserve; Oldfield, Palmetto Bluff in trouble? |
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More than 90% of the members at Myrtle Beach area private golf club, The Reserve at Litchfield Beach, voted recently to sell to a North Carolina entrepreneur. Now, four former members are holding up the sale. Getting back your equity "deposit" can sometimes take years. The Reserve is a fine Greg Norman layout less than a couple of miles from the ocean. Homes in the community sell in the mid-six figures range and up. The McConnell Group has pledged to keep the club private for at least 10 years and intends to close the course for three months, if the deal goes through, and redo all the greens. However, if the current members and their former fellows cannot resolve their dispute, McConnell may look elsewhere for an addition to its growing portfolio of golf courses in the Carolinas. There are plenty of nice but financially strapped clubs to choose among.
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The digital ink is hardly dry on my review of the Oldfield community in Okatie, SC, near Hilton Head. Yet, apparently, the community could go bankrupt along with its higher-end sister community nearby, Palmetto Bluff, and its parent company, the developer Crescent Resources. Crescent's roster of communities includes some nice golf layouts, including one of the best Arnold Palmer courses I have played, North Hampton near Jacksonville, FL. The Hilton Head area newspaper the Island Packet reports that Crescent is $1.4 billion in debt, and a Crescent spokesperson is quoted as saying the company is contemplating bankruptcy as one alternative.I'll follow developments here, pardon the pun but, in the meantime, you can read the Island Packet article by clicking here.
The Greg Norman layout at Oldfield features plenty of waste bunkers and pine trees, as well as an uncertain future.
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| Monday, 08 June 2009 08:37 | |||
| Last Updated on Monday, 08 June 2009 09:07 |
