New York Post

DRAWING A BLANK

Sports team owners raising funds via SPACs

- By JOSH KOSMAN jkosman@nypost.com

The coronaviru­s crisis is fueling a craze for blankcheck companies, and the billionair­e owners of pro sports teams are cashing in.

On Monday, Buffalo Bills owner Terry Pegula said in a securities filing he’s looking to raise $300 million by selling shares in East Resources Acquisitio­n Co., a blankcheck company that’s looking to scoop up bargains in the energy space.

A few days earlier, on Friday, Ron Burkle, co-owner of the Pittsburgh Penguins NHL franchise, said he was launching a $300 million blankcheck company that’s looking to acquire a “business that is proprietar­y-sourced, has strong or promising franchises, and has attractive risk/ return prospects.”

Burkle admitted he isn’t targeting any particular industry. But when it comes to blank-check companies, the specifics of the investment may be less important than the person who’s making the pitch, say people familiar with the matter.

On Wednesday, hedgefund luminary Bill Ackman was expected to raise upwards of $4 billion for a new blank-check company — despite the fact he hasn’t revealed what he’s looking to buy with the cash. Likewise, blank-check companies are a natural fit for sports team owners, who are typically seen as smart, well-connected and skilled business people, according to investors familiar with the deals.

“It’s a no-brainer that star power matters,” said one investor who focuses on blankcheck companies, also known as special-purpose acquisitio­n companies, or SPACs.

“It’s all the rage,” a banker for sports teams told The Post, adding that the cachet of owning a profession­al sports team can help convince investors to give their money for a mystery acquisitio­n.

Ahead of Ackman’s splashy launch, sports team owners raised $2.5 billion for SPACs, according to SPACInside­r, which tracks the industry.

That’s 18 percent of the total $14 billion raised this year, SPACInside­r’s data show.

Golden State Warriors minority owner Chamath Palihapiti­ya appears to have kicked the craze off last year with a $674 million SPAC that helped take Richard Branson’s space-tourism venture Virgin Galactic Holdings public. Palihapiti­ya, a former Facebook executive, has raised money for two SPACs this year, totaling $1.1 billion.

Vegas Golden Knights owner Bill Foley has raised $1.4 billion, also through two SPACs. Houston Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta, who owns the Golden Nugget casino chain, used the $275 million he raised with a SPAC last year to cash out of Golden Nugget Online Gaming, which he had owned personally.

Also last year, Jon Ledecky, a majority owner of the NHL‘s New York Islanders, raised $200 million through a SPAC to buy software services company KLDiscover­y.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has helped stir interest in SPACs, thanks to growing sentiment that now’s the time to buy good companies on the cheap. As of Tuesday, before Ackman’s big launch, the total raised by SPACs this year has already surpassed last year’s total of $13.5 billion

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, known for his role on ABC’s “Shark Tank,” said he’s not interested in jumping on the SPAC bandwagon. Still, he says he expects to benefit, because a company in which he owns a minority stake is in talks to be sold to a SPAC.

“If this were 20 years ago, I’d be chasing it hard,” said Cuban, who’s worth an estimated $4.3 billion, according to Forbes. But now, he said, “I’m not chasing my next dollar.”

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