YES. It's pretty much always been the case with sports franchises. Values are absurd relative to any other industry based on profit metrics. It's about ego. For example, when Ballmer bought the Clippers for a couple of billion back in the day, the Clippers probably weren't making jack shit playing in someone else's barn. But he didn't give a shit.AbeVigodaLive wrote:vcsgrizzfan wrote:Dude. I've made my living analyzing companies, industries and balance sheets for over 35 years. I'm not the naïve one here. I can do mathematics.Kevin wrote: Oh okay. Sure thing. Call it fantasy when you’ve been proven blatantly wrong. Tampa spends almost nothing on payroll and receives a good chunk of revenue sharing, in fact it’s pretty easy to see why they’re profitable. But I guess according to you, all owners are benevolent beings and aren’t in the game to make tons of money. Could you be any more naive?
So, as in the Twins case I referenced earlier... is the family's payday only when they finally sell the team for $1.29B more than they paid for it?
The Forbes article I referenced above had EBITDA of around 30mm per team. An older, slow growth business might trade at an enterprise value to EBITDA ratio of 6-7 times. That means that business' total value would have a value of 180-210mm. That value is split between the debt and the equity in the business. If debt is $50mm, then the equity value would be $130mm to $160mm.
In a sexy business like software as a service with fast growing revenues and almost all recurring revenues, a successful business in that industry might trade at an Enterprise Value to EBITDA multiple of 20x or even higher these days as tech values have gotten ridiculous, especially for big bellweather stocks. Even then, that would imply a total value of only $600mm a 20x.
The values ascribed to sports franchises have always been more a function of ego and the greater fool theory. Someone will be willing to pay more than I paid in the future, and it's always worked. I used to question how sustainable that model was, but I don't any more.
To be fair, I think the NBA, NHL and NFL with the collective bargaining agreements they have with the players, they are basically protected from themselves so they can't be stupid and they know they will be profitable. Even the Grizzlies, if they aren't dumb, should be able to not have red ink, or at least very little. In baseball, an owner can still be a moron and choose to lose a lot of money if he wants to because the mechanisms aren't there to protect them from themselves.