Here's AA comments on article:
https://awfulannouncing.com/nba/gerry-c ... nable.html
Starting with GC quote..
>> “I keep hearing the facile notion that it always goes up,” he said. “You guys are students of history. That’s not sustainable. That’s never been the case. … This is fascinating to me because this thing is exploding and there’s no foundation for doing it the right way. And now it’s the Wild West with all this money piling in, so I think all sports is overvalued.”
It’s certainly interesting to see this kind of skepticism from a prominent investor. Notable RedBird investments include Fenway Sports Group (parent of the Boston Red Sox, Liverpool FC, the Pittsburgh Penguins, NESN, the new SportsNet Pittsburgh, and more), AC Milan, the XFL (so now, the merged XFL-USFL), YES, the EverPass Media venture with the NFL for Sunday Ticket commercial distribution, and Front Office Sports (through RedBird IMI, with Jeff Zucker’s UAE-backed International Media Investments).
So this is coming from someone who has investments in teams, leagues, RSNs, and more. And it’s unusual to see this kind of criticism of the permanent-growth assumption from inside the house. But there is some precedent for it; it’s notable to see Cardinale mentioning Cuban, who expressed his own TV-growth skepticism before selling his majority share. <<
How does this square with GC/RBC investments and his further interest in XFL? Is he just trying to lower his investors expectations or will he make strategic changes or exits - like XFL/USFL merger. And when did he come to this revelation? I'd love to hear him explain his position within the scope of RBC.
I think its that streaming can't pay for sports like traditional TV can, and he's hedging a bit. Sure Amazon and Apple can but they are using money from other sources. Disney, Fox, Paramount, WB-D, NBC, etc... need the rights fees to make sense on their own.