Ok, you miss the whole point (I assume you can’t name a company where private equity actually improved that company either.) It’s not about what somebody has the right to do with a company they started. That’s fine though, I’ll address your completely unrelated question.
The answer is “it depends on my relationship with your company”.
If I’m your customer and selling the company meant the prices I pay are going to go up or the company is going to discontinue a good or service I use, then yes, I would be against that.
If I’m your supplier and selling the company means your company is going to try to pay me less for goods and services or cancel some contract we have, then yes, I would be against that.
If I’m your employee and you selling the company means I will lose my job, be forced to relocate, or take a pay cut, then yes, I would be against that.
If I’m an investor in your company and my share of the company is diluted or loses value because of you selling the company, then yes, I would be against that.
If I’m the mayor of the town where your company is headquartered and you selling the company means the HQ will be shuttered or moved to another city, then yes, I would be against that.
There are a ton of reasons for a person to be against somebody else selling a business, even if the company’s ownership has a right to do so.
Again, that’s not remotely near the point. You still can’t explain why PE would be good for Mississippi State.
This is all accurate. But the more I think about it, your post kinda made a couple of things register for me for what this is REALLY about, based on simple math.
First off, the B1G is not Toys R Us. It’s currently the most profitable non-professional sports league in the world. It’s not going to fail. Secondly, a 5% stake by an “outside investor” is not going to be anywhere close to the controlling interest that PE firms had in Toys R Us. So, the ultimate question then becomes, for the PE firm, why do this? What’s in it for them?
Lets look at the numbers. A really, really modest or perhaps even low end return for a VC investment would be something like 9.5% over 10 years. That would result in $5 billion in revenue after 10 years just for the PE firm, and each B1G member institution, if the 1/20th stake is to be taken at face value. What does that look like? Well, the VC firm, and each school, would be getting $500,000,000 per year on average. LOL. Not even close to happening. That value isn’t there. The B1G has the highest projected payouts per school of any league, and that number is still only projected to be $75 million per school in 2025. The VC firm would literally have to generate a 667% increase in revenue on a per-school basis almost overnight to support that investment. Not possible.
Now lets look at another more plausible scenario. The $2 billion seed money is evenly distributed. Result is about $105 million per school gets doled out initially. VC firm demands that it gets recouped this initial investment as part of future revenue share payouts. So they get a cut of a little over $190 million per year that would otherwise get distributed to the schools and league. But the schools and league aren’t allowing this without increase to their bottom line to make the juice worth the squeeze. So they are still getting their $75 million. And PE then has to get about $3 billion to get back on average beyond that to make their 9.5%, lets call it $300 million per year. Lets say the schools agree to allow a 3/1 return rate for the VC firm vs their own payout, a ridiculous concession for them, but lets play it out. Schools and the league are then getting $175 million per year each. PE gets $300 million per year as standard payout, plus the $190 million per year total as recouped investment. $490 million per year total for the PE for first 10 years.
Add it all up, annual revenue for the schools, league office, and revenue has to be around $3.8 BILLION per year in order for the investment to make sense for PE. Expected 2025 revenue for the league is $1.2 billlion. So, now we’re down to PE “only” having to triple the revenue overnight….sure. Again, not happening. All the Nascar patches and Roger Dorn outfield walls on planet earth aren’t going to pull in $2.6 billion per year. Its a pipe dream.
So, its now well established that there is literally no viable investment here by PE that will pass the smell test and be approved by the schools. So, what’s it really about, then?
Hmmm…..
