Please don't pass this on to Tom  Lussenhop. I hate to see a grown man cry. 
Or, what's worse, eat a big helping of  crow. 
Al Krigman
  
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Extended Stay in talks with lenders-WSJ
(_http://www.reuters.com/article/mergersNews/idUSN0849245920081208_ 
(http://www.reuters.com/article/mergersNews/idUSN0849245920081208) )
 
Mon Dec 8, 2008 8:26am EST


 
 
 



Dec 8 (Reuters) - The Extended Stay Hotels group is in early talks that could 
 result in turning the hotel chain over to its lenders, The Wall Street 
Journal  reported. 
Extended Stay could not be immediately reached for comment. 
Lightstone Group, a private real estate firm not known for its hotel  
investments, bought Extended Stay Hotels group from Blackstone Group LP last  
year, 
funding the $8 billion deal with $7 billion of debt. 
The highly leveraged deal has hastened Extended Stay's troubles, the Journal  
said. 
Lightstone did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment. The  
newspaper said the investment firm declined comment. 
It is too soon to say if a takeover by lenders would result in layoffs or  
hotel closings, people familiar with the matter told the Journal. 
As hotel market conditions deteriorate, Extended Stay has been forced into  
discussions with its lenders, and a transfer of ownership could come within a  
month or two, people involved in the talks told the paper. 
Extended Stay recently hired Lazard Ltd as financial adviser and New York law 
 firm Weil Gotshal & Manges as bankruptcy counsel, the newspaper  said. 
Extended Stay is still meeting its debt service, but it could default within  
the next 60 days if the economic downturn continues as expected, people 
familiar  with the matter told the paper. 
Revenue per available room, or RevPar, a common hotel-industry measure, will  
be down more than 10 percent this year at Extended Stay, the paper said, 
citing  "someone familiar with the matter." 
Extended Stay is not likely to file for bankruptcy protection because of  
provisions common in commercial mortgage-backed securities deals that would  
expose more properties of its founder, David Lichtenstein, the paper  said. 
A more likely path is for Lichtenstein to turn Extended Stay directly over to 
 lenders or to swap enough equity for debt to give bondholders control of the 
 company, the Journal said. (Reporting by Pratish Narayanan in Bangalore) 
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