Swiss
Re announced that there are no circumstances
under which World Trade Center leaseholder
Larry Silverstein can ever recover more than
$3.5 billion of insurance proceeds under the
coverage he purchased.
Swiss
Re's experts established the true value of
Silverstein's claim in the range of $2.4
billion, an amount consistent with
Silverstein's internal calculations. Swiss Re
reported that Pearson Partners, an independent
real estate appraiser has estimated the actual
cash value of the WTC complex at $2.156
billion under the Willis Property form (Wilprop)
that Silverstein used to bind the insurance
coverage.
Swiss
Re further reported that, in any event,
Silverstein is not entitled to actual cash
value proceeds at this time, because under the
Wilprop form he must first disclaim any
intention to rebuild. Silverstein's only
course of action then is to seek replacement
cost value proceeds up to the policy limit of
$3.5 billion. Regardless of what is rebuilt,
or by whom it is rebuilt, the WTC will be
rebuilt over eight or nine years. Calculating
rebuilding costs at slightly less than $300
per square foot, the replacement cost value of
the property approaches the policy limit of
$3.5 billion. When discounted to net present
value, the amount is approximately equal to
Silverstein's own pre-litigation estimate of
$2.4 billion. Not all of these proceeds will
be available for rebuilding, given the amounts
of business interruption proceeds that would
be paid from the same policy limit.
Swiss
Re America Holding Company chairman and CEO
Jacques Dubois stated, "Silverstein's
most recent attempt to recreate the coverage
limit he purchased is just more of the same
nonsense and should be dismissed out of hand.
When seeking the insurance coverage in 2001,
Silverstein told us that the value of the
property, including business interruption
insurance, was $5 billion, but he refused to
pay the price for that amount and bought only
$3.5 billion of coverage. Silverstein's arch
over-reaching claims demonstrate that he was
pennywise and pound foolish and is now
attempting to rectify that mistake by
confecting new values."
Dubois
added, "The WTC was destroyed only once
and under the property insurance coverage
purchased, in fact, under any property
insurance coverage, Silverstein is entitled
only to a maximum of the policy limit of $3.5
billion. It bears reminding that Silverstein
himself has already admitted that the
coordinated attack on September 11 was a
single occurrence in his one-occurrence
settlements with insurers Ace and XL."
According
to Swiss Re, Silverstein has routinely
provided "internally inconsistent and
enormously wrong data," and "has now
revved up his relentless attempts to inundate
the public and the media with false and
misleading information. In addition to
announcing grossly exorbitant property value
and business interruption claims, he has now
extended his misinformation campaign in a
desperate attempt to smear Swiss Re's
corporate brand advertising. Curiously,
Silverstein has decided to pick a fight over
advertising while his own media blitz has
bombarded the public almost daily with
propaganda designed to support his reinvention
of history."
Barry
Ostrager, Swiss Re attorney at Simpson Thacher
stated, "This new media initiative has
less to do with advertising itself and more to
do with the shambles in which Silverstein
finds his own case. Perhaps seizing on
irrelevancies that play on emotional aspects
of this dispute is how Silverstein desperately
hopes to resurrect his case at trial.
Silverstein may believe that if you cynically
repeat misinformation long enough people will
believe it."