Developer Michael Shvo has sold The Setai Miami Beach to an undisclosed buyer for approximately $275 million, according to multiple reports, marking a forced exit from one of South Beach's most recognized luxury hotels. The transaction represents a narrow margin over his $250 million acquisition in 2017 and removes a significant liability from Shvo's balance sheet ahead of loan maturity.
Shvo acquired the 130-key Art Deco property through his SHVO partnership with Deutsche Finance America, planning a repositioning that never materialized. The sale follows mounting pressure from lenders and comes after Shvo defaulted on a separate $135 million construction loan tied to his 125 Greenwich Street condo tower in Manhattan. The Setai exit clears one distressed position but leaves Shvo exposed on multiple other projects, including the stalled redevelopment of San Francisco's Transamerica Pyramid, where partners have privately questioned capital calls.
The forced divestiture matters because it confirms what allocators have suspected for eighteen months: high-profile lifestyle developers who leveraged aggressively into luxury hospitality between 2015 and 2020 are now facing simultaneous refinancing walls and operational underperformance. The Setai generated approximately $18 million in trailing EBITDA, per industry estimates, implying a sale multiple near 15x—reasonable for stabilized luxury assets but insufficient to cover Shvo's all-in basis after seven years of holding costs. Miami Beach's luxury-hotel RevPAR grew only 11 percent from 2017 to 2024, badly lagging initial underwriting assumptions that assumed 18-20 percent compounded growth.
What family offices and hospitality development groups should note: this is the third major forced sale in Miami's luxury segment since October 2024, following the $485 million distressed recap of the Ritz-Carlton Residences in Sunny Isles and the quiet placement of the Faena Hotel's debt with a vulture credit fund at a 40 percent discount. Operators holding properties acquired between 2016 and 2019 with floating-rate exposure above SOFR + 400 are now underwater if they haven't locked in rate caps. The next eighteen months will see further pressure as $2.7 billion in luxury-hospitality debt matures across South Florida, much of it originated when the 10-year Treasury sat below 2 percent.
The buyer's identity remains undisclosed, but market participants expect either a Middle Eastern sovereign wealth vehicle or a Singapore-based family office, both of which have targeted distressed luxury hospitality in gateway U.S. markets since mid-2024. Shvo's exit leaves him with fewer liquid assets to stabilize his New York and San Francisco positions, where construction debt now exceeds $600 million combined. The Setai transaction is expected to close within 90 days.