The Trump name doesn’t mean what it once did. But when hotels dropped the brand, the former president got hefty payouts anyway. Forbes money in politics reporter Kyle Khan-Mullins joins "Forbes Talks" to discuss.
Read the full story on Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/kylemullins/2024/09/30/how-trump-made-millions-as-partners-ditched-his-brand/
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LifestyleTranscript
00:00Hi, everybody. I'm Brittany Lewis, a reporter here at Forbes. Joining me now is my Forbes
00:07colleague, money and politics reporter, Kyle Kahn Mullins. Kyle, thanks so much for joining
00:11me. Always great to be here, Brittany. Thanks for having me. You have some interesting reporting
00:17on former President Donald Trump and his finances. You're reporting how Trump made millions as
00:23partners ditched his brand. So you set the scene at the start of your Forbes piece the
00:28summer of 2017 out front of a Trump Manhattan property. Take us there.
00:35Yep. So summer 2017, you might be thinking this is one of Trump's properties in Midtown
00:42Manhattan, his famous Trump Tower, one of his big hotels. This is another one of his
00:46hotels. He used to own a hotel called Trump Soho down in down in the Soho neighborhood
00:50of Manhattan. And at this hotel, a group of protesters dressed up in Russian army uniforms
00:57played the Russian national anthem, flew a Russian national flag and projected an image
01:02of Vladimir Putin on the side of the hotel, giving a thumbs up and saying, happy to help,
01:07bro. This was a reference to the alleged help that the Russian government gave Donald Trump
01:13in getting elected in 2016. This was a kind of a poke, trying to poke him, trying to make
01:22him mad about these Russian connections. Regardless, you know, the rejection came down.
01:29But Trump's name came off the hotel pretty soon afterwards. And I think that this anecdote
01:33is a kind of an illustration of some of the stressors that his hotel empire was facing
01:38right after he became president.
01:41Let's talk about some of those stressors, because in the Forbes piece, you pose this
01:45question. How did Trump make money by taking his name off a building? And why were the
01:50buildings taking his name off? You point out some of the disadvantage of the Trump
01:54brand. What were they specifically when he was in the White House?
01:58Yeah, so the Trump brand before he was in the White House was this sort of epitome of
02:04luxury. That's the classic association. After he went to the White House, it still had that
02:08association, but it also had all of the controversies that were tied up with, I think we could probably
02:13safely say the most controversy laden president in recent memory.
02:17And so as Trump continued to make these very controversial comments, say things about
02:23certain groups of Americans and other people in other countries, and was constantly attracting
02:28sort of negative media attention, his brand started to suffer. We see this in his condos.
02:33You see this in his hotels. You know, the value of the brand seemed to go down a little
02:40bit.
02:41So how was he profiting off of these breakups? Take us through the agreements he had with
02:45some of these buildings.
02:48So Trump got this managing and licensing company that basically the way it worked is a hotel
02:53would come to the company and say, we want you to manage the hotel for us, and we want
02:57to put your name on the hotel. Use the, you know, so it's Trump Soho on this hotel. But
03:02Trump didn't actually own this hotel, to be clear, but he managed it and he put his name
03:05on it, at least his brand. Now, that's totally normal. There's plenty of hotel companies
03:10that do that. Hilton, Hyatt, Marriott, a lot of these big hotel chains do the exact same
03:14thing. They own some hotels and then other ones. They're just licensing and managing.
03:19But what Trump when when when you sign these contracts and then if you want to back out
03:24of those contracts, often you have to buy out the rest of the contract. And so what
03:29appears to have to have happened in a couple of cases is that the owners of these hotels
03:33paid Trump, it seems like millions of dollars to get out of the contracts with his with
03:39his company.
03:40Did he get a payout every single time that a building took his name off? Or sometimes
03:45did he lose money? What did that look like?
03:49So we don't see evidence of a payout every single time there was a that someone took
03:56a name off his building. We're actually not even 100 percent sure that these payouts were
04:00in fact from the contract buyouts. But the key thing we see is I think there are five
04:06hotels that we looked at where Trump's name came down, that he was this was a hotel that
04:11he did not own, but that he managed and licensed. Right. And we see in the in his financial
04:16disclosures a big spike in income around the time that the name comes down. That tells
04:24and that's in three of the cases, not all five, but in three of the cases we see that
04:28that tells us that there was probably a contract buyout going on.
04:33Talk about how big of a spike that was. How much is Forbes estimating he received in these
04:38buyouts?
04:40So I'll take you through all three hotels real quickly. So there was the Toronto in
04:432017. That's actually the first hotel to take his name off. And we see a spike from about
04:48five hundred thousand dollars a year in management revenues to two point two million. That's
04:51pretty big jump for just one year. In Soho, that was the next one. We see a jump from
04:57about three million dollars a year to 17 million dollars a year. Again, pretty sizable
05:02jump in those revenues. Again, just in the course of one year. And both both of those
05:08were in 2017 and both of the spikes happened in 2017. The third, Hawaii, a little bit more
05:13complicated. His name actually came off the hotel in 2024 earlier this year. It was announced
05:20that his name was going to come off the building in 2023. But we see the spike in 2022. We're
05:25not really sure what to make of that. But again, we don't have a better explanation
05:29than they bought out the contract and announced it later.
05:32So he's making millions and millions just by other properties getting rid of his name.
05:37So how does this stack up to the other money he's made in the licensing and management
05:41business?
05:43So yeah, we're estimating that this is anywhere from 15 to 25 million dollars that he could
05:47have potentially made from these three hotels taking his name off again. And this is based
05:51on the spikes in revenues that we see immediately following or around the time that his name
05:56is taken off. That's out of total profits from his operating management licensing business
06:02of 110 million dollars between 2017 and 2023. So you can do the math there. That could be
06:08as much of a quarter of his money from his brand company was coming from taking his name
06:14off of buildings, not putting it on.
06:16So post White House stint, how is his licensing and management business doing? Is his name
06:22and is his brand as radioactive now as it was in 2017, 2018, when he was president?
06:30Even shortly thereafter in 2021?
06:35So I wouldn't say that his brand is quite as radioactive. I mean, obviously, he's running
06:38for president again. He's actually significantly more popular than he used to be. And he's
06:43significantly richer than he used to be. My colleague, Dan, just reported that he's
06:48the first person to make a billion dollars off of politics. So clearly something is going
06:51right for him in that regard.
06:54He's also after years of his hotel management empire shrinking, again, taking his name off
06:59of five hotels. He also sold his D.C. hotel and a project in Rio never actually came to
07:05fruition.
07:07He's actually expanding now. And there are two new Trump hotels that are supposed to
07:11open in Oman and in Dubai in the next couple of years. And he's already millions of dollars
07:17from those deals.
07:19The properties that took his name off, essentially, they're thinking must have been based on your
07:23reporting. We can make more money without your name, without this association. This
07:28is dragging down our revenue. After they cut ties with the Trump name for those properties,
07:34making more money.
07:36Again, it's hard to say. The hotels wouldn't give us financial figures to tell us exactly
07:42whether they made more money before and after. There was some reporting from Bloomberg a
07:47couple of years ago that suggested that the Soho hotel did benefit significantly from
07:52being able to take Trump's name off, even as other luxury hotels in New York were actually
07:56seeing a slight decrease in revenue per room. Theirs was going up.
08:01And there's some anecdotal evidence that people who didn't want to stay at Trump hotels
08:05would be totally fine to stay at a hotel that didn't have Trump's name on it. So you can
08:09take that with a kind of a grain of salt.
08:12Kyle Kahn Mullins, per usual, I appreciate your reporting. Thanks for coming back on.
08:18Always great to be here, Brittany. Thanks so much.