The Denver Post

Investing like a pro (athlete) could be profitable, and risky

- By Paul Sullivan

Dr. Greg Ribakove, chief of cardiothor­acic surgery at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, likes to source his own investment­s. As part of a group of doctors, he invests in medical companies where the club has firsthand knowledge.

Investment clubs such as that one — in which members pool their money and wisdom in hopes of making solid profits — are fairly common. But last year, Ribakove, a passionate hockey fan who has had New York Rangers season tickets for 30 years, joined a different type of investment club. Called the PCO Club, it includes athletes who use their personal brands and social media clout to get members into hard-toaccess investment deals.

“I think there’s some reality to companies being interested in famous athletes investing in them and also potentiall­y representi­ng them,” Ribakove said.

Using profession­al athletes to open the door to carefully managed private investment deals relies on a swirl of American obsessions — with celebrity, social media and a desire for opportunit­ies and commoditie­s that are off limits to others. For investors in these deals, there is also the hope for a huge return.

At its core, the PCO Club carries multiple risks. First, there is the risk inherent in every club deal — that a single, concentrat­ed investment could go to zero. There is also the special risk that the access created by profession­al athletes could cloud the selection of deals, or that pools of wealthy individual­s might not see the best deals to begin with.

Wale Ogunleye, head of the sports and entertainm­ent practice at UBS Global Wealth Management and a former defensive end for the Chicago Bears, questioned the value of athletes investing in or promoting companies, even those aligned with health and fitness.

“In this day and age of social media and quick results, we’ve got to understand there’s a difference between endorsing and investing,” he said. “If you want to make a quick buck, go ahead, endorse that product, but don’t pretend you’re an expert when someone is using you for a marketing ploy.”

Ogunleye speaks from experience.

“People told me: ‘Hey, you’re a Chicago Bears star. Why don’t you open a gym?’ ” he said. “What I should have thought was, ‘Hey, Michael Jordan had a restaurant in Chicago, and if the most famous athlete of all time couldn’t make it work, why would I think I

could open a gym?’ The truth was I knew nothing.”

He advises anyone teaming up with athletes and anyone in a club deal to be extremely careful. They need to understand whether the person promoting something is doing it for quick financial gain or has a deep expertise in the investment.

At the same time, Ogunleye advises athletes to be cautious. A club increases the pool of money and may give the athletes access to future opportunit­ies. But they are still putting their own money at risk.

Still, despite the evident risks, for some people investment consortia that include celebritie­s are alluring.

“There’s cachet in a club deal if it’s a high-profile family, a royal family, Jeff Bezos,” said Thorne Perkin, president of Papamarkou Wellner Asset Management.

He is not part of a venture involving athletes, but his firm has been arranging club deals for well-heeled clients since the 1980s.

“Some high-profile investors think, ‘Oh, wow, Bill Gates is in this deal, and he’s a smart guy who’s made a lot of money, so I’m excited to be in this deal with someone like him.’ It can have tremendous marketing power,” Perkin said.

The PCO Club is the creation of Mark Patricof, a former investment banker who specialize­d in media and entertainm­ent before selling his firm to Houlihan Lokey. His current firm, Patricof Co, vets private investment deals for profession­al athletes, including tennis great Venus Williams; Dwyane Wade, the three-time National Basketball Associatio­n champion; and Mariano Rivera, Hall of Fame pitcher for the New York Yankees. The PCO Club, which has financial backing from J.P. Morgan’s private equity group, is aimed at leveraging those relationsh­ips.

Patricof said companies were looking not just to raise capital but also to use athletes to enhance their brand.

“You’re not looking for the athlete to predict the deals,” he said. “You’re buying into the fact that these athletes unlock opportunit­ies into deals.”

The athletes helped others in the club receive an allocation to invest in a recent deal involving rocket company Space X, Patricof said. Likewise, he said, early investment­s in Cholula Hot Sauce, which McCormick & Co. acquired in November for $800 million, and TopGolf, the chain of entertainm­ent facilities now fully owned by Callaway Golf, were aided by the social media push of athlete investors.

But how nonathlete­s should approach such opportunit­ies is complicate­d. Reducing risk by controllin­g the size of their stake, if they decide to make one, is paramount. Many investors hope for returns that range from two to four times the amount of their initial outlay, while being prepared for it to go to zero.

Ribakove said he invested between $25,000 and $100,000 in each deal. His first holding, in Cholula, was a big winner, returning four times the initial investment, Patricof said.

Andy Nathan, a managing principal at MCRE Partners, which owns commercial real estate, said he had invested in five deals. For him, the real lure is the other club members, with whom he meets on Zoom.

“Understand­ing how smart people see the future, where they see growth, what economic trends are going to be — that is invaluable to me,” he said.

Patricof said he invested in all of the firm’s deals that all involve athletes.

“We have 85 athletes, and a third of them come into every deal,” he said.

Patricof said his athletes could do only so much, particular­ly in high-profile deals.

“The flaw is our allocation­s are still relatively small,” he said. “I had $25 million worth of demand in Space X, but I got a third of that, so I have leverage up to a point.”

Ribakove said his eyes were wide open. The club structure allows him to decide whether to participat­e in specific ventures, unlike a private equity fund, which would put some portion of his money into every deal the fund selected.

“I like to be able to make choices on my own and educate myself and be educated by others before I make a decision,” Ribakove said.

 ?? Todd Heisler, © The New York Times Co. ?? Dr. Greg Ribakove, pictured in New York in December, joined an investment club that includes profession­al athletes.
Todd Heisler, © The New York Times Co. Dr. Greg Ribakove, pictured in New York in December, joined an investment club that includes profession­al athletes.

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