Key points
- A third of ultra-rich investment companies have invested in sports, according to a new Family Office survey by BNY Mellon.
- While billionaire sports team buybacks make the headlines, families are increasingly investing in adjacent assets such as live vision and Paris applications.
- Here is how the family offices of the owners of ultra-rich sports teams like David Blitzer and Dan Gilbert broadcast their bets.
A version of this article appeared for the first time in Inside Wealth Newsletter of CNBC with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the investor and consumer with high shuttle. Register to receive future editions, directly in your reception box. 2025 was a record year for sports mergers and acquisitions. In June, Mark Walter, CEO of Billionaire and Guggenheim Partners, bought majority participation in the Los Angeles Lakers in a record assessment of $ 10 billion. The same month, Josh Harris of Apollo and David Blitzer of Blackstone won a new team from Philadelphia WNBA for $ 250 million via their holder sports and entertainment business. Although changes in the sports team get most of the buzz, ultra-rich people and their private investment companies take several bugs to take advantage of the sport industry. BNY Mellon’s recent Family Office survey revealed that 33% of the 282 respondents had invested in sports. BNY Mellon CIO SINEAD Colton Grant told CNBC in June that family offices were increasingly investing in sports assets such as inflation coverage. In addition, while the largest family firms were more likely to have significant team participations, investors are also attracted to sport -related assets such as goods and places of hospitality. “You have media rights in addition to a broader deductible interest. You have real estate, such as the broader stadium complex,” she said. “There are a lot of components that come together to provide this, this almost inflation coverage.” Investing in sports choices and shovels is also delivered with a lower barrier at the entrance. Paris on a strength training application or the purchase of a ski resort cost a fraction of what it takes to buy equity participation in a sports team of several billion dollars. While many family offices are agnostic regarding specific sports, the Chaifetz group has built a pickleball portfolio. Launched by Richard Chaifetz, the founder of the resource giant of Comsych employees, the Chicago -based family office not only has the Pickleball St. Louis Shock team, but also invested in at least four companies focused on pickleball, including Pickletil, a Tickleball and Dupr construction company, which provides live ratings of pickleball matches. Blitzer billionaire, the first person to have equity in the five main American male sports leagues, has invested in a series of sports startups this year, notably Fantasy Life, a media sports and bullet media company, a chain of social clubs for snowshoe sports. Blitzer told CNBC in 2023 that sports teams have their value due to the limited offer, while giving related investment opportunities. “They don’t do it anymore, and they grow up,” he said at the top of the CNBC X conversation room for this year. “They are not content to grow on their existing fans base. They create new fans to create new sources of income.”
