05_never_again
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UC is getting a 10% stake in something calling Big Ten Enterprises, which is a new entity the Big Ten has created to house their media rights. In exchange for big upfront payments to the member schools, UC gets a cut of the Big Ten's media rights deals. It sounds like it is structured like an annuity, which makes sense, because UC has a bunch of pension obligations to pay out over time. They are not a traditional private equity firm like the Blackstones, KKRs, Carlyles, etc. of the world, and this isn't really best described as a "private equity deal."UC Investments IS looking for long-term returns. That's accomplished by due diligence to insure the businesses they invest in aren't continuing to support losing units, right? Feel free to correct me.
If they see something in a business they invest in that looks inefficient and perhaps correctable, they have a duty to their account holders to suggest correction, right? Again, feel free to correct me.
Your suggestion is that you think UC Investments is investing in the B1G to merely sit on it as a stable, reasonably profitable investment, right?
You see college athletics and the financial structure of college athletics as stable? Yes or no.
You don't foresee potential issues like employment status for athletes and further conference realignment disrupting the current business? Yes or no.
I'm just curious why you think UC Investments wants in the business AND would want to be passive as an investor.
This deal gives them no control whatsover over the Big Ten. They could own 100% of Big Ten Enterprises and they'd still have no control over the decision-making authority of the conference itself.
