There is another little tidbit hiding in the current breakdown of Kings ownership that might come into play. According to our research, the Maloofs own 43 percent of the Kings and another 10-percent is controlled by their friend Bob Hernreich. They have a 53-percent voting block, which is strong enough to block any attempt by minority owners to seize control.
But the minority owners that make up the other 47 percent are locals, some of which have owned a stake in the club since the beginning. So does Kevin Johnson need to come up with $500 million or more to match/beat the Seattle offer? Or can the majority interest in the Kings be bought by itself?
The team carries a ton of debt. $77 million is still owed to bond holders for the 1997 loan that saved the Kings from leaving for Nashville. There are also loans with the NBA that have to be accounted for and the numbers on them vary from between $100 million and $150 million. So the Maloofs take of this prize really isn’t $500 million. It is 43-percent of the remaining money once the bills have been paid.
That makes the figure to purchase the Maloofs portion of the Kings somewhere between $117-$139 million upfront and another $75-$100 million in long-term, but low-interest debt. Add in another $50 million for Hernreich’s portion or even less for Bob Cook’s 7 percent sitting in bankruptcy and you own yourself controlling interest in the Sacramento Kings. Now I don’t have that kind of cash hiding under my pillow, but for a billionaire trying to get into the high-stakes game of the NBA, it’s not a huge pull.
Per Article at:
http://www.cowbellkingdom.com/2013/...ings-relocation-rumors-weve-been-here-before/
Maybe my figures were not so far off at all?
So maybe the right path is to cut out the "Poisoned owners" and get back to business!!!
But the minority owners that make up the other 47 percent are locals, some of which have owned a stake in the club since the beginning. So does Kevin Johnson need to come up with $500 million or more to match/beat the Seattle offer? Or can the majority interest in the Kings be bought by itself?
The team carries a ton of debt. $77 million is still owed to bond holders for the 1997 loan that saved the Kings from leaving for Nashville. There are also loans with the NBA that have to be accounted for and the numbers on them vary from between $100 million and $150 million. So the Maloofs take of this prize really isn’t $500 million. It is 43-percent of the remaining money once the bills have been paid.
That makes the figure to purchase the Maloofs portion of the Kings somewhere between $117-$139 million upfront and another $75-$100 million in long-term, but low-interest debt. Add in another $50 million for Hernreich’s portion or even less for Bob Cook’s 7 percent sitting in bankruptcy and you own yourself controlling interest in the Sacramento Kings. Now I don’t have that kind of cash hiding under my pillow, but for a billionaire trying to get into the high-stakes game of the NBA, it’s not a huge pull.
Per Article at:
http://www.cowbellkingdom.com/2013/...ings-relocation-rumors-weve-been-here-before/
Maybe my figures were not so far off at all?
So maybe the right path is to cut out the "Poisoned owners" and get back to business!!!
At any rate, the analysis from CowbellKingdom is bizarre.
Here's the way I see it. We should look at this in terms of total cost to purchase the franchise, and let's say for sake of argument that the Maloofs want to clear $300M (before paying off Hernreich).
The costs for Hansen are: $300M (Maloofs) + ~$150M (NBA debt) + $77M (pay off Sac loan) + ~$30M (relocation fee) + ~$300M (arena construction). Total "sale": ~$527M, Total cost: ~$857M
The costs for a local group are: $300M (Maloofs) + ~$150M (NBA debt) + $70M (arena construction). Total "sale": ~$450M, Total cost: ~$520M, NOT including re-finance of city loan, but that can presumably be paid off over time whereas Hansen/Maloof would have to pay it off up front.
Feel free to adjust up and down accordingly depending on how much the Maloofs are willing to walk away with.