Forbes Values Toronto Maple Leafs at $1 Billion

by on November 28, 2012 in Leafs News, League News - 69 Comments

Forbes Values Toronto Maple Leafs at $1 Billion
Photo: CBC.ca
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Contents
  1. Mike Ozanian

Forbes released their annual NHL franchise valuations today alongside an article detailing the financials of league’s 30 teams. Unsurprisingly, the Toronto Maple Leafs top the list — by a lot. With the recent sale to Bell/Rogers, the value of the team became more concrete and Forbes has estimated they are worth $250,000,000 more than the next team, The New York Rangers. Simply staggering numbers. The Leafs are the first team to break $1 billion dollars in value.

On the ice, the National Hockey League has never been more competitive than it has been over the course of its of its last collective bargaining agreement that began with the 2005-06 season. A different team has won the Stanley Cup each season, with the champion coming from big markets like Los Angeles and Chicago, as well as small ones such as Pittsburgh and Raleigh. A total of 12 different teams reached the finals during the seven-year CBA.

So why have the owners thus far cancelled 422 regular season games of the 2012-13 season, as well as the All Star Game, insisting on a new CBA that drastically reduces the amount of money (currently 57% of hockey-related revenue) that can be spent on player salaries?

The reason is because on the financial scoreboard, the league’s 30 teams have never been further apart.

Consider the two most recent team sales. In May, Tom Stillman acquired the St. Louis Blues, the team’s American Hockey League affiliate, the Peoria Rivermen, the lease to Scottrade Center, and a piece of the Peabody Opera House for just $130 million. One month later, the NHL approved the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan sale of its controlling interest in Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, which owns Toronto’s Maple Leafs (NHL) and Raptors (NBA), and the Air Canada Centre, for an enterprise value of $2.05 billion. We estimate the transaction placed a value of $1 billion on the Maple Leafs.

Our data illustrates the league’s conundrum. Fueled by a 9% increase in overall revenue to $3.4 billion during the 2011-12 season, the average National Hockey League team is now worth $282 million, 18% more than a year ago. The increase in revenue and value speaks to the leagues ability to raise the average ticket price an average of 5% last season, fill its arenas to 95.6% of capacity and renew or secure new sponsorships with Discover, Geico, Honda, Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, McDonald’s, Paramount Pictures, Tim Hortons, Verizon and Visa.

But the spread between the rich and poor teams is dramatic. The top five teams–Maple Leafs ($1 billion), New York Rangers ($750 million), Montreal Canadiens ($575 million), Chicago Blackhawks ($350 million) and Boston Bruins ($348 million)–are worth $605 million, on average. The five least valuable–Carolina Hurricanes ($162 million), New York Islanders ($155 million), Columbus Blue Jackets ($145 million), Phoenix Coyotes ($134 million) and St. Louis Blues ($130 million)–are worth just $145 million, on average.

There is also an incredible bifurcation of cash flow. Overall operating income (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) almost doubled during the 2011-12 season, to $250 million. But the sport’s three most profitable teams–Maple Leafs ($81.9 million), Rangers ($74 million), Canadiens ($51.6 million)–accounted for 83% of the league’s income, while 13 of 30 teams lost money, before non-cash expenses and interest payments.

If the salary cap were lowered to, say, 50% of revenue and the subsidies given from high-revenue teams to their low-revenue rivals was increased to $200 million from the current $150 million, which is essentially what where the two sides seem to be headed, small-market team values would get a big boost (as was the case in the NBA when the New Orleans Hornets and Memphis Grizzles sold for $338 million and $330 million, respectively, after the league worked out a new labor pact last year), and the league’s overall profitability would increase. But teams like the Carolina Hurricanes, Phoenix Coyotes, Tampa Bay Lightning, Anaheim Ducks and Columbus Blue Jackets would still have trouble making money unless they went at least two rounds in the playoffs.

Drew Dorweiler, managing partner of Dartmouth Partners in Montreal, thinks the league needs to move some teams. “The Sunbelt has had plenty of time to prove that the viability doesn’t work.” Dorweiler thinks Quebec, where ground has already been broken for a new arena, will eventually get an NHL team, and he also thinks Portland, where minor league hockey is popular, and Seattle, where the city has approved a new arena, would be better cities to house teams than Arizona, North Carolina and Florida, where NHL teams are losing money.

The success of the Winnipeg Jets buttresses Dorweiler’s case for moving a team to Quebec. Last year, True North Sports & Entertainment bought the Atlanta Thrashers for $170 million (including a $60 million relocation fee paid the the NHL). The team moved to Winnipeg and was renamed the Jets, after the original franchise that moved to Phoenix for the 1996 season. The team lost a pile of money playing in Atlanta but posted an operating income of $13.3 million last season, when they sold out every game at their new arena. We think the Jets are now worth $200 million.

The emboldened excerpt there is shocking even knowing beforehand the growth in revenue was driven by a wealth imbalance. Three teams responsible for 83% of the league’s income.

From Forbes’ Mike Ozanian:

There will always be a huge gap in team values because telecommunications companies like Rogers and Bell Canada can leverage the media rights for the Maple Leafs multiples of what Stillman can command in media fees for the Blues. But a new CBA in the NHL along the lines of what the NBA has, coupled with the relocation of some teams, would shrink the disparity in hockey’s operating income. Hopefully, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and NHLPA director Donald Fehr stop fighting and start skating toward that goal before the entire season is lost.

Rank
Team
1Toronto Maple Leafs1,000921620081.9
2New York Rangers75048019974.0
3Montreal Canadiens575295016951.6
4Chicago Blackhawks35014012520.5
5Boston Bruins34873212914.2
6Detroit Red Wings3463012820.8
7Vancouver Canucks342142914330.4
8Philadelphia Flyers336161912410.9
9Pittsburgh Penguins2889351209.1
10Los Angeles Kings27619511201.8
11Washington Capitals2501152106-1.0
12Calgary Flames245111311711.0
13Dallas Stars2404621003.0
14Edmonton Oilers22564410616.2
15San Jose Sharks22360101-0.9
16Ottawa Senators22095911314.5
17Minnesota Wild21825299-3.9
18Colorado Avalanche210611914.5
19New Jersey Devils205131121222.8
20Winnipeg Jets200226510513.3
21Anaheim Ducks19243491-10.8
22Buffalo Sabres17514695-10.4
23Tampa Bay Lightning17402688-13.1
24Florida Panthers17055987-12.0
25Nashville Predators16725188-3.4
26Carolina Hurricanes162-46885-9.4
27New York Islanders15546566-16.0
28Columbus Blue Jackets145-56985-18.7
29Phoenix Coyotes13402683-20.6
30St Louis Blues130-174689-10.0

The $1 billion valuation ties Leafs with the NFL’s Carolina Panthers and MLBs Boston Red Sox at No. 23 and 24. How a losing team can make this much money is hard to wrap your head around. If that wasn’t bad enough, this was Mike Ozanian’s response to a question about their value if they were to actually become a winning team.

Toronto Maple Leafs Value

$1.5 Billion would put them at about the 6th most valuable sports franchise in the world behind Machester United ($2.33 billion), Real Madrid ($1.88 billion), The New York Yankees ($1.85 billion), The Dallas Cowboys ($1.85 billions), The Washington Red Skins ($1.56 billion) and just ahead of the Los Angeles Dodgers ($1.4 billion).

 

 

Mike Ozanian

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  • Komas Taberle

    Worth almost double the price of Montreal!

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  • http://www.afc.co.uk Scottish Leaf

    We’re worth a lot, fantastic bragging rights, we can’t win jack shit. 

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  • peterleafs

    Yeah wtf, who really gives a rats ass what we are worth if we cant win anything.  So Forbes you can shove your valuations up Brian Burkes…oh wait, thats harsh isnt it?  The Raptors are a clear example of just how delusional MLSE is and will continue to be along with our fan bases.

    Raptors bring in a bunch of highly touted youth and talent and CANNOT win anything.   The same as the Leafs, a lot of hype with no backup.  And we as fans, over value it every time just like we are doing with Kadri, Colborne, Rielly, Frattin….these are not saviours. 

    Really the incompetence and lack of winning mentality in Toronto is so pervasive it cannot be changed.

     

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  • Yaknowwhat

    Sounds like a timely leak from the NHLPA….

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  • phaneufoundlander

    you said it bud, I hate the cap, we should be filled with superstars from top to bottom and dominating the league

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  • http://www.afc.co.uk Scottish Leaf

    How did the Leafs never win anything when the cap wasn’t in place? Genuine question as I always hear how loaded etc we are but I’ve always been puzzled how we could never just say, fuck it we’ll sign x, y and z and win the Cup.

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  • phaneufoundlander

    Because Pat Quinn was the GM….he couldnt put a team of horses together, let alone a contender

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  • Burtonboy

    If I read the numbers correctly the League as a whole made a profit of around $220 mil. Thats not a very good profit margin considering the total revenues are 3.3 billion

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  • phaneufoundlander

    I hear, if you dont win a fucking cup you’re not worth shit in my eye..

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  • http://www.afc.co.uk Scottish Leaf

    Typical, I fairly know how to pick my sports teams. Take the good with the bad though :)

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  • Waiting4LSC

    I would have to suggest the profit margin is as skewed as the revenue. I cannot believe the maple leafs would have made the average of 5.8%. The skew will come particularly from those clubs with limited hockey revenue streams. The lower cap limit must also have had a negative impact. Players can’t effect a big change just reducing their share of HRR to 50%. Shows the owners disregard for the league itself IMO.

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  • Bob’s your uncle

    Is this a well thought out comment from the self appointed “voice of maturity and wisdom” around here … or just more of your unfounded nonsense?  

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  • Burtonboy

    Some more interesting numbers 

    There is also an incredible bifurcation of cash flow. Overall operating income (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) almost doubled during the 2011-12 season, to $250 million. But the sport’s three most profitable teams–the Maple Leafs ($81.9 million), Rangers ($74 million), Canadians ($51.6 million)–accounted for 83% of the league’s income, while 13 of 30 teams lost money, before non-cash expenses and interest payments.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/mikeozanian/2012/11/28/nhl-team-values-2012-maple-leafs-first-hockey-team-worth-1-billion/

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  • rustynail

    Elliotte Friedman ‏@FriedgeHNIC
    Portland Winterhawks clobbered by Western Hockey League — http://www.whl.ca/article/whl-sanctions-portland-winterhawks …

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  • Waiting4LSC

    Bboy:  My immediate reaction to this was “No Shit”. The “troubled” clubs do not have the HRR streams of the Big Boys, and are impacted by an “uneconomic” cap floor. Reducing the cap floor by $5-$10M makes a difference when added with the revenue make up.  A lot of the issues, IMO, go back to the award of the franchises. we have discussed this before, and your point about the changed economy was valid. However, I believe the financial plans presented at time of approval were optimistic and not viewed for risk. Most financial projections know where the risk factors are. I truly believe the NHL were so gung-ho on expansion, money in their pockets, that very risky decisions were made. Now, if they were in line with the sunshine state-Major TV contract strategy, then the NHL should be subsidizing these losses (part of the costs of the strategy). This is a quagmire of the NHL’s own making. The NHL has to work its way out, as TV revenue is not going to cover all the ills.  Lowering the cap floor, increasing revenue share, and reducing operating costs are all winners. Burkie’s proposal of allowing teams to trade cap money will also help. Billy Bean economics can work in the NHL if owners and GMs are smart. And that leads me to they are not, and that is why Betsy and Burkie must structure contractual terms to even the playing field for all teams, and thus make the trading of cap room a valuable tool for the poor teams.

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  • Bob’s your uncle

    If the league/owners continue to keep money losing teams/locations then it seems we will continue the cycle and the NHL will continue to target players’ salaries in future negotiations. Short of relocation out of tv markets, and it might be the wrong way to go in regards to parity of competition, but I would rather see the NHL allow small market teams to operate with a lower cap floor or have the ability to trade cap room to teams who want/can afford to spend the cash, for draft picks or prospects with the possibility of competing with mainly younger talented rosters.   
       
    Maintaining the status quo just gives the NHL the opportunity to cry poor with each CBA re-negotiation.  imo

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  • Zep2

    Imagine what the Leafs would be worth if there was  they where playing in a World Class league instead of Bettmans No Hockey League

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  • rustynail

    Katie Strang ‏@KatieStrangESPN
    #NJD Albany Devils announce C Adam Henrique will undergo surgery on left thumb tmrw. Expected to miss 4 to 6 weeks

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  • Burtonboy

    So lowering the cap floor, cutting expenses, and taking more money from the Leafs will solve this problem? I see all those thing helping but is it enough ? 

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  • rustynail

    Lance Hornby ‏@sunhornby
    Full Leaf house at Marlie practice today, Randy Carlyle, Dave Farrish, skating coach Barb Underhill and goalie coach Rick St. Croix.

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  • Waiting4LSC

    Wow. Like the NCAA here in the US. Fart and you get disciplined whereas Management of the Big Leagues seem to get away with abuse and manipulation. All about the money.  I have no idea whether the PW deserve this or not, but its always the players that suffer. Why should the squad be destroyed because of management. Surely, management should be fined and fired, and the Owners hit economically too. The players deserve every opportunity to succeed, and dollars to doughnuts, a high percentage of the players are clean. Personally, I can’t stand this kind of “death sentence”. Here in Texas most wanted Penn State football program closed for ever. I know it was bad for the victims, but the players did nothing to deserve a death sentence. US college coaches break rules and leave, and the school gets wacked. Wrong, wack the ADs and the Coaches and have terms built into the contracts that are enforceable.  These punishments impact the innocent you F’ing stupid governing bodies.

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  • Waiting4LSC

    Bboy: Absolutely not, its just the starting point IMO.  On a different note, can I thank you for the sterling job you did last night. Also appreciate your posts and links today.

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  • Mind Bomb

     Because 500 hockey and 4th in our divison is not acceptable for that team. I would BB is looking for answers

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  • rustynail

    Especially if the Leafs actually get something back. The article doesn’t even take into account how much cash Leafs Nation brings to other teams when the Leafs are on the road. Wonder what Buffalo income would be without us.

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  • Waiting4LSC

    The NHL itself has to undergo change. Relocation coupled with   expansion/contraction. Change in revenue support mechanisms. These come immediately to mind.  

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