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Judge Rules American Dream Mall Debtor Must Repay $390 Million

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

The American Dream mall must pay its lenders nearly $390 million, a judge ruled, The Real Deal reported. The lenders, Western Asset Management and Nonghyup Bank of South Korea, sued in New York Supreme Court in February, claiming an entity affiliated with Triple Five Group‘s giant retail property defaulted when it didn’t repay its $389 million loan in May 2021. In a court decision filed on Tuesday, the judge in the case ruled the entity is on the hook for the loan, plus interest. The ruling came relatively quickly after the suit was filed, as no one contested the case. “It is undisputed that payments due under five promissory notes dated August 2, 2019 … have not been paid when due,” Commercial Division Judge Andrew Borrok wrote. Triple Five, run by the Ghermezian family, has struggled with the New Jersey megamall for years. Building it took far longer than anticipated and cost about $6 billion, and just as it was finally gaining popularity with New Jerseyans, the pandemic hit. The mall owner has faced regular pressure from bondholders as well as from surrounding towns, who have sued for money they say they are owed under development agreements. The East Rutherford retail and amusement complex reportedly lost $60 million in 2021.