Stock ticker CNAZ?$100 million plus per season being rumored. Private equity would get a share of the profits.
The top 40 donors at LSU have been summoned to the governors mansion for a presentation on “the future of LSU football”
can’t wait to trade LSU football in the stock market!
Publicly traded wouldn’t work the beauty of private equity is private financial records as opposed to publicly traded.$100 million plus per season being rumored. Private equity would get a share of the profits.
The top 40 donors at LSU have been summoned to the governors mansion for a presentation on “the future of LSU football”
can’t wait to trade LSU football in the stock market!
CRNDGStock ticker CNAZ?
PE makes everything they touch worse
Likely to be just the opposite.Another nail in the coffin as far as I am concerned. It’s not college sports anymore.
Not for me.Likely to be just the opposite.
Why is private equity any different than any other money/investment?PE makes everything they touch worse
FTBAWCRNDG
They have the reputation for having a purely short term focus. They load up businesses with debt, liquidate assets, lean things up too far and sacrifice customer service and product development in the process with the goal of finding another PE firm to sell to or to take it public at a ridiculous valuations. Not all do this but not an unearned reputation.Why is private equity any different than any other money/investment?
One of you financial guys, please explain like I'm a 9 year old.
Yep. My employer has been PE-owned three times in my career, including currently. So far, two good, one bad, but the bad one was ethically depressing.They have the reputation for having a purely short term focus. They load up businesses with debt, liquidate assets, lean things up too far and sacrifice customer service and product development in the process with the goal of finding another PE firm to sell to or to take it public at a ridiculous valuations. Not all do this but not an unearned reputation.
PE isn’t in this to make LSU athletics richer. It’s in this to drain as much of LSUs revenues off as it can & then leave them close to bankruptcy.PE makes everything they touch worse
So looking at this and what @ckDOG said, this tells me PE won't stay long in this market. I know everybody crows about ItS mUh BiZnEsS, but like you said, it's not. It's a money loser. These boosters funding it are doing it to WIN.......not make money. Their money instantly disappears, with the only return being sideline visit or something.PE has long been come in and cut the fat, which is essentially non-revenue components of the business they acquire,in college athletics case it’s the Olympic/non-revenue sports. A reminder, college athletics isn’t a business, and certainly not an ideal model.
They certainly would love to just take college football and make it their own, but other sports would die. Therein lies the problem…So looking at this and what @ckDOG said, this tells me PE won't stay long in this market. I know everybody crows about ItS mUh BiZnEsS, but like you said, it's not. It's a money loser. These boosters funding it are doing it to WIN.......not make money.
The only way for PE to do well is to only play football. Maybe they should try the NFL.
That would be a failure too. Every league that has tried to compete with the NFL has failed.They certainly would love to just take college football and make it their own, but other sports would die. Therein lies the problem…
It is not stabilizing. The lawsuits on eligibility are raging and even questioning roster limits, and there is no cap on roster payroll. It is not sustainable as isThat would be a failure too. Every league that has tried to compete with the NFL has failed.
Honestly, I think everything appears to be stabilizing. Law suits are settling down, everybody seems to have accepted the 2 portal windows and 5 year eligibility and max rev share numbers. If schools want to get PE involved, do so at their own peril. Because I don't see the amateur model, Title 9 and all that, going away. Some sports may get cut, sure. Really all about what alumni want to fund.
It’s gonna be harder to cut sports than people think. Arkansas tried to cut men’s & women’s tennis. That didn’t even last a week. You try to do much cutting & Congress and/or the courts are gonna put an end to that real quick.That would be a failure too. Every league that has tried to compete with the NFL has failed.
Honestly, I think everything appears to be stabilizing. Law suits are settling down, everybody seems to have accepted the 2 portal windows and 5 year eligibility and max rev share numbers. If schools want to get PE involved, do so at their own peril. Because I don't see the amateur model, Title 9 and all that, going away. Some sports may get cut, sure. Really all about what alumni want to fund.
Lane Kiffin, Will Waid, & Kim Mulkey will only add to the entertainment value
That stock is killing (it with) children, I hear.OLOTL
Why not? Boosters are willing to pay. And the day they aren't? Well, you drop back to rev share only. And you aren't forced to do rev share........you are simply allowed to do so.It is not sustainable as is
Closer than they are today?PE isn’t in this to make LSU athletics richer. It’s in this to drain as much of LSUs revenues off as it can & then leave them close to bankruptcy.
They aren’t really any different. Some are good and some are bad. Some like to take short term holds in companies and some have long range views. Some like capital intensive businesses and some like more service type companies that don’t require a lot of fixed assets and capex spending. There is certainly not a one size fits all PEG.Why is private equity any different than any other money/investment?
One of you financial guys, please explain like I'm a 9 year old.
I know what you mean. My previous employer was PE owned. They flew us all to Vegas when they bought us (from a bank), told us how great it was going to be, how easier it would be to do our jobs, how much money we were going to make as the "stock" value grew over 5 years. I was all in. Then they sold us 6 months later to our largest competitor. Lying Snakes.Yep. My employer has been PE-owned three times in my career, including currently. So far, two good, one bad, but the bad one was ethically depressing.
We should be going up for sale next year, so I'm more than a little apprehensive.
What happened with employee stock when they sold after 6 months?I know what you mean. My previous employer was PE owned. They flew us all to Vegas when they bought us (from a bank), told us how great it was going to be, how easier it would be to do our jobs, how much money we were going to make as the "stock" value grew over 5 years. I was all in. Then they sold us 6 months later to our largest competitor. Lying Snakes.
They aren't all that way. My current employer is 67% PE owned (33% employee owned). Things have been really good so far, they just want growth. IPO coming within 5 years though so we'll see how it goes.
One thing about PE is always true - The off-ramp is coming. How that off-ramp looks varies, but no matter how it looks, it's going to be disruptive.
Private Equity firms usually care more about profitability than quality.Why is private equity any different than any other money/investment?
One of you financial guys, please explain like I'm a 9 year old.
I can guarantee the donations and ticket pricing structure for non-top tier donors isn’t optimized at almost every university, but you can get some short-term vs long-term incentive conflicts. TV rights is another big area but also has the short-term vs long-term issue.There are probably creative ways for athletic departments to reduce expenses and increase revenue. Seems like an AD should hire people to achieve that rather than sell out to a middle man.
I agree and I don't see how this would work. I just hope some PE group rips LSU a new one.The letter says the financial plan would be "the first of its kind". Utah already announced its PE investment program, and other schools have explored it. I guess it wouldn't take much of a twist to claim the program was the "first of its kind," but Im still curious to hear the details.
I am highly skeptical of PE in college sports. There is a big difference between making a donation to an Athletic Department vs. making an investment. Eventually the bill comes due, and these programs are barely breaking even as it is.
There are probably creative ways for athletic departments to reduce expenses and increase revenue. Seems like an AD should hire people to achieve that rather than sell out to a middle man.
What about the current structure of college athletics screams quality to you other than perhaps the TV deals?Private Equity firms usually care more about profitability than quality.