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    Trump name to be dropped from Toronto hotel, condo tower under new deal

    The Canadian PressJune 27, 2017
    FILE- In this Aug. 31, 2015, file photo, tape cordons off an area around Trump International Hotel and Tower in Toronto after a large swath of Toronto's financial district was closed due to an unstable antenna on top of the luxury hotel and condo. A Canadian judge on Thursday, March 30, 2017, approved the sale of the Donald Trump-branded Toronto hotel and condo tower to its main debt holder after no other bids were submitted for the troubled building. (Joe O'Connal/The Canadian Press via AP, File)

    TORONTO — The new owner of Toronto's Trump International Hotel and Tower has struck a deal that will see the U.S. president's name removed from the property.

    JCF Capital says it has reached an agreement with a unit of the Trump Organization to buy out the management contracts for the property for an undisclosed amount.

    While U.S. President Donald Trump never owned the building, his Trump Organization licensed his name to and operated the property, which has struggled financially and been the focus of a long-running legal battle after opening in 2012.

    Trump-branded properties, including a recently opened tower in Vancouver, have been the target of protesters angry about the U.S. president's policies.

    Representatives of both JCF and the Trump Organization said their relationship has been good and they may work again together in the future. 

    "Collectively, Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump, Eric Danziger and their team have been exceptional partners and we hope to have the pleasure of working with the Trump Organization again in the future," Jay Wolf, JCF Capital's president, said in a statement.

    The 65-storey Toronto tower was built by developer Alex Schnaider, who formed the original business relationship with the Trump Organization. 

    His company, Talon International, later defaulted on a loan from an Austrian bank, which sold the loan to JCF Capital

    JCF, a joint venture between Juniper Capital Partners and Cowie Capital Partners, was the successful bidder for the property's 211 hotel units, 74 residential units and most of its commercial, retail and amenity space. An Ontario judge approved JCF's bid of C$298-million to acquire the property in late March.

    Last October, an Ontario court ruled in favour of investors who had launched a lawsuit alleging they were misled when they bought units in the residential portion of the tower. The investors scored another victory in March when Canada's highest court refused to hear an appeal of the ruling.

     

    The Canadian Press

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