Something that Carmichael Dave tweeted a few days ago has been bugging me.
"Hansen deal isn't 65% of 525. It's 525-30 mil relo-77 city loan - 140 NBA debt."
Has this been refuted? Because if it's correct, then the true team value would be $278 million, and the 65% share that is being bidded on would only be $180 million. Yet I keep seeing it reported that the team value is now $525 based on the sales agreement. Forbes even values the team at $525 now. It doesn't make sense to me how a value can be inflated to account for the debt. I mean wasn't that the basis of a lot of mortgage fraud during the real estate bubble-- home values were appraised artificially high to allow for loans that far exceeded the true value of the property. Not a perfect comparison by any stretch, but one of the main reasons the purchase price is so high is because of all the debt associated with it. How the debt is handled by any new ownership group is a huge piece of this puzzle. We know that the Mastrov/Burkle bid doesn't need to include the debt to the city of Sacramento or the relocation fee which is potentially $107 million. But I'm also wondering if each bid assumes the NBA debt or if either attempts to pay some or all of it off.
EDIT: Should have phrased that differently. It's not that the Mastrov/Burkle bid doesn't need to account for the city of Sacramento debt, they just don't need to pay it off in one lump sum up front.
EDIT #2: Chris Daniels just tweeted that the relocation fee would be about $75 million. Bottom line is CD's numbers most likely aren't correct either.
"Hansen deal isn't 65% of 525. It's 525-30 mil relo-77 city loan - 140 NBA debt."
Has this been refuted? Because if it's correct, then the true team value would be $278 million, and the 65% share that is being bidded on would only be $180 million. Yet I keep seeing it reported that the team value is now $525 based on the sales agreement. Forbes even values the team at $525 now. It doesn't make sense to me how a value can be inflated to account for the debt. I mean wasn't that the basis of a lot of mortgage fraud during the real estate bubble-- home values were appraised artificially high to allow for loans that far exceeded the true value of the property. Not a perfect comparison by any stretch, but one of the main reasons the purchase price is so high is because of all the debt associated with it. How the debt is handled by any new ownership group is a huge piece of this puzzle. We know that the Mastrov/Burkle bid doesn't need to include the debt to the city of Sacramento or the relocation fee which is potentially $107 million. But I'm also wondering if each bid assumes the NBA debt or if either attempts to pay some or all of it off.
EDIT: Should have phrased that differently. It's not that the Mastrov/Burkle bid doesn't need to account for the city of Sacramento debt, they just don't need to pay it off in one lump sum up front.
EDIT #2: Chris Daniels just tweeted that the relocation fee would be about $75 million. Bottom line is CD's numbers most likely aren't correct either.