CNBC says Brooklyn Nets and associated businesses worth $6 billion (above Forbes' number, below Sportico's)
The Brooklyn Nets and associated businesses are "only" worth $6 billion (link), according to CNBC's new list of NBA valuations, "only" a 7.1% increase over last year's $5.6 billion.
That mean's they're ranked tenth in the league, rather than eighth last year. Still, they're only a notch behind the Philadelphia 76ers, worth an estimated $6.1 billion, and the Miami Heat, valued at $6.05 billion.
For the Nets, he cited revenue of $409 million, EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) of $80 million, and 13% debt as a percentage of value.
The calculation, as always, is a bit of an art, relying on both revenues, including if the team owner controls the economics of the arena (as does Brooklyn Sports & Entertainment, with the Barclays Center), and valuations set by prices for sales or investment slices.
Some contrasts
Sportico last October valued the Nets and associated businesses at $6.22 billion, up from $5.7 billion, sixth in the league.
It's worth noting that the rise in value was already accomplished when the Joe and Clara Wu Tsai's BSE Global sold a 15% slice to the Koch family, for an estimated $5.8 billion (or more). BSE is now Brooklyn Sports & Entertainment.
Forbes last October valued the Nets and associated businesses at $5.6 billion, up 17% and ninth in the league.
Forbes noted that NBA teams were valued at 12.8 times revenues, a figure significantly more than even football (10.7x) and double that of Major League Baseball, "a disparity that signals investors’ appetite to break into basketball."
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