monsterpile wrote:FNG wrote:kekgeek1 wrote:An important detail that probably needs to be spelled out very simply is this:
Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore do not *currently* have anywhere near enough money to buy the Minnesota Timberwolves.
They might in two years. And then they can be the owners. This is THE hold up.
Per Dane Moore
That's an interesting detail, kek, but also quite odd. I wonder what Dane means by this. Specifically:
1) What is his source?
2) Lore and ARod have a combined net worth of almost $5 billion. Is Dane saying they can't find a bank willing to finance this deal when they can put up collateral worth more than 3 times the price?
3) How does Dane know what is going to happen financially to Lore/ARod in the next two years where they will suddenly have the wherewithal to buy the team?
Can anyone here with a finance background explain how this makes any sense?
I don't have a finance background but I stayed in a Ramada Inn once.
Do you know who in a way made it possible for Jerry Buss to buy the Lakers? Donald Sterling. Why? He bought some real estate to get Buss the actual cash money to buy the Lakers.
So my guess is that ARod and Lore have assets worth enough to buy the team but they need to cash them out in some way over time and in addition possibly earn more money to fully buy the team. I'd guess most people worth that kind of money have it invested in something not just hanging out in a bank somewhere.
Pretty spot on, Monster. Dane Moore's comment that Lore and Rodriquez don't have enough money is misleading and a overly dramatic. If there's an issue, it's a cash issue, not an asset issue. In other words, it's pretty much a nonissue. They clearly have the "money" to buy the franchise. It's a matter of how they want to finance and structure the purchase. They might want to line up some additional minority investors. They'll probably want to figure out how much debt they might want to use to finance the deal. The League will do a thorough review of the buyers' financial ability to purchase the team and maintain a financially healthy franchise. That's mainly what the League focuses on in their review. One of the issues with the New Orleans group that attempted to buy the team back in 1994 was that the League had doubts about the group's financial capacity to buy and run the team successfully.