It boasts a gym, pool, gallery, beauty salon and helipad – not to mention space for sleeping 22 guests – and it’s up for sale at around half its purchase price.
Yet finding a buyer for the 300ft superyacht Equanimity, one of the most striking assets at the heart of the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) scandal, is not proving to be an easy task.
The boat stands out among possessions being sold by Malaysian authorities keen to recoup funds allegedly lost through the massive fraud that sparked investigations worldwide and engulfed Goldman Sachs Group Inc along with former Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.
The yacht’s former owner, fugitive businessman Low Taek Jho (aka Jho Low), has been described as a central figure in the multibillion-dollar scandal.
Jho Low and others are accused by authorities of siphoning 1MDB funds for personal use – including buying the Equanimity, which was completed in 2014 and is thought to have cost US$250mil (RM1bil).
With a guide price of US$130mil (RM531mil), yacht specialist Burgess, the sole broker for the sale, said there were few boats equal in size currently on the market.
Yet an initial effort to sell the vessel in a November 2018 auction, after the Malaysian Admiralty Court ruled that the Malaysian government and 1MDB were the rightful owners of the vessel, failed to secure a buyer.
Would-be buyers submitted sealed bids to the Sheriff of the High Court of Malaya. Only after the bids were submitted was the appraisal value of US$130mil revealed.
“Some bidders were opportunistic in their pricing,” said Sitpah Selvaratnam, a consultant with law firm Tommy Thomas and adviser on the transaction.
“As it stands now the mandate is we are not really negotiating for anything below US$100mil (RM409mil),” Sitpah said. “It’s clearly not a fire sale. You’re going to get what she’s worth.”
Some potential buyers accustomed to sizing up superyachts along Europe’s southern coastlines have been unwilling to travel to the naval base near Kuala Lumpur that hosts Equanimity.
But Burgess is still talking to as many as 20 interested buyers for the vessel, according to lead broker for the sale Rupert Nelson, with interest coming from the Middle East, Russia and other parts of Asia.
“Some of them are big household names in yachting terms,” he said. “Some will be household names elsewhere as well.”
The sale won’t come soon enough for the Malaysian government, which is currently spending as much as US$500,000 (more than RM2mil) a month maintaining the vessel.
The Equanimity is part of a treasure trove of glitzy possessions once owned by Low and now the subject of legal wrangling and asset seizures around the world.
The United States has filed forfeiture lawsuits against US$1.7bil (RM7bil) of assets that were allegedly acquired with money embezzled from 1MDB, including a US$1.29mil (RM5.27mil) heart-shaped diamond and a US$3.8mil (RM15.5mil) diamond pendant that Low gave to Australian model Miranda Kerr, as well as a US$3.2mil (RM13.1mil) Picasso painting that Low gifted to actor Leonardo DiCaprio. Both celebrities have since handed the gifts over to US authorities.
Low has repeatedly maintained his innocence and faces charges including money laundering in Malaysia. He was charged in absentia as his whereabouts are unknown.