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AEG Sale In Full
Within hours on Sept. 18, word that Anschutz Co. was selling off Anschutz Entertainment Group went from a possibility to a certainty. And by the next morning, a possible buyer was being widely reported.
That Denver billionaire Philip Anschutz would sell the abundant assets of AEG came as a surprise – not because there were rumblings it was hemorrhaging money but quite the opposite. The assets of AEG – from Stanley Cup champions L.A. Kings to London’s O2 arena to the holdings of promotion wing AEG Live – have been viewed as moneymakers, although only so much can be known of a privately held conglomerate.
What is known is that it can be considered one of the biggest sports-related sales in history, which just happens to include the second-largest promotion company in the world behind Live Nation.
The leadership roster is intact. Anschutz recently renewed the contract of AEG President Tim Leiweke, and the contracts of others, such as AEG Live President Randy Phillips, are also secured. And ownership of a Los Angeles sports team – or many – is enticing.
See Also: Tim Leiweke Talks AEG Sale.
The Wall Street Journal and the New York Times first reported Anschutz was considering the sale of AEG. By that evening, the Los Angeles Times reported it as fact, and soon Leiweke sent out an internal memo, and AEG shot out a press release, that the reports were true – reaffirming the employees that their jobs were unaffected. Soon, the NHL stated it had prior knowledge of the deal, and so did Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
The sale is being handled by Blackstone Advisory Group, which brokered the deal that sold the Los Angeles Dodgers to Guggenheim Partners. In fact, Guggenheim Partners is one of the names that was being bantered about at press time as a potential buyer of AEG. So were MSG’s Jim Dolan, Liberty Media Chairman John Malone and Liberty CEO Greg Maffei.
But the name that landed quickly was Patrick Soon-Shiong, the richest man in L.A. The pharmaceutical mogul had made an unsuccessful run at the Dodgers and owns a stake in the Los Angeles Lakers, bought from Magic Johnson. He’s reportedly worth north of $7 billion.
With a purchase of AEG, Soon-Shiong would oversee privately held management shares of the Lakers.
“Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong is keenly aware that AEG is in play,” a representative said. “We have the utmost respect for Phil and Tim and what they have accomplished in entertainment and sports and in revitalizing the downtown community. We clearly are interested in furthering this legacy for Los Angeles.”
That’s not to say the good doctor will soon be changing all of the AEG signage to S-SEG. It’s possible that he expressed interest in private but Anschutz wants to see what the company is worth on the open market. The assets, by the way, include Axs TV, with investment from Mark Cuban, the billionaire owner of the Dallas Mavericks basketball team.
It could take until 2013 to negotiate a sale price. Estimates range from laughably low numbers to $7 billion – possibly a sign that analysts haven’t had a chance to count up all the jellybeans in the jar. There’s real estate (L.A. Live, itself estimated at $2.5 billion), more than 100 venues it owns or is affiliated with (
The media was falling over itself predicting who would buy the company, but little ink was dedicated to why Anschutz was selling. Whatever the case, no signs of dissention within the ranks reached Pollstar. In fact, it could be as simple as Anschutz, who turns 73 in December and remains a biking enthusiast, may just want to streamline his work calendar.* Or maybe there’s all that Michael Jackson email hubbub. Or that damned Mayan calendar.