| sachmo71 |
07-08-2003 11:56 AM |
Here is another article on the subject, with some comments from both sides.
Quote:
Hicks' sports group in technical default on debt
Monday, July 07, 2003
A report in a highly respected sports business journal says Tom Hicks' Southwest Sports Group is in technical default on $135 million in debt.
Street and Smith's Sports Business Journal reports that Southwest Sports Group, which owns the Dallas Stars and Texas Rangers baseball team, is in default because of bigger losses than expected.
"The fact that Tom is in financial default on the Southwest Sports loan is becoming well know among that niche of the finance world," the author of the article, Daniel Kaplan, said in an interview Monday afternoon with The Ticket's Hardline.
Kaplan's article, which was published Monday in the Sports Business Journal, cited "four well-placed sources." The report that said the problem for Southwest Sports Group has been its failure to maintain certain levels of financial performance required by the loans.
In other words, according to Kaplan, Southwest Sports Group is not in default on its payment of principal or interest on the loans. Those have been paid on time.
"The default that Southwest Sports Group has is a different one. It defaults on a requirement to meet certain financial performance goals," said Kaplan. "Most corporate loans have these financial covenants built in. The performance could be the amount of revenues. It could be certain attendance. It could be a certain amount of cash flow. This is very, very common.
"What is not common is the default. That's what is going on here. The reason they are in default is because the Texas Rangers have done so poorly. They lost $50 million last year."
According to the article, last fall, just before Hicks announced his intention to sell the Stars, Southwest Sports Group worked out an agreement with his lenders to lower some of the financial performance requirements. That agreement ended June 15, which is when Southwest Sports Group went into default.
The report said Hicks will try to rectify the default through refinancing and perhaps -- emphasis on perhaps -- aggressively slashing the payroll of the Texas Rangers. The Stars payroll could take a hit as well.
"There are two things that are happening," said Kaplan. "One is that Southwest is in the process of refinancing. As part of refinancing they are obviously going to try to get rid of some of those covenants. That will be up to the banks to decide whether that will indeed happen.
"The second thing, and this is the one that is going to impact the fans down there the most, is that you are going to see drastic reduction in payrolls for those two teams."
When asked if the payroll cuts were a prediction or a fact, Kaplan said he sees it as fact.
"I think it is pretty obvious that he is going to be cutting dramatically the payroll of his teams," said Kaplan. "He is going to have to. He's losing too much money and he is now in default."
Michael Cramer, who is the chief operating officer of the Southwest Sports Group, told the Dallas Morning News that "Nobody is broke," but added that both the Stars and Rangers need to cut costs.
Cramer put the Rangers losses at $45 million for 2002 and the Stars red ink for last season at $3 million.
"All we want to do is operate on firm financial ground and to do that we have to get our payrolls down," Cramer told the Morning News. "We have to put our house in order with our younger players."
There have been several media reports about the Stars slashing their payroll for next season. The Stars have maintained that they are not cutting payroll, but trying to keep it at the same level as last season. That is about $66 million.
Late last month Stars president Jim Lites addressed the issue during an interview on The Ticket's BaD Radio show.
"We do not expect any reduction on payroll," said Lites. "If we just sign the players that we currently have on our roster and committed and those which are restricted -- Marty Turco, Aaron Downey, Niko Kapanen -- we anticipate with just those players our payroll will be where it was a year ago. We are going to keep this team intact."
But the Stars lost a key member of that team when Derian Hatcher signed a five-year, $30 million contract with the Detroit Red Wings last week.
The Stars said at the time that they were not able to offer a Hatcher a five-year contract because of concerns over the Collective Bargaining Agreement, which expires after next season.
There is belief that the new CBA will impose some kind of cap or luxury tax on team payrolls. The debate over the new CBA could lead to a lockout in 2004-05.
Reports of problems with Hicks' financial empire are nothing new. Dan McGraw, a Fort Worth writer and former senior editor for U.S News & World Report, wrote an article for D Magazine last summer on Hick's financial situation. McGraw, in an e-mail, offered this take on Monday's report in the Sports Business Journal.
"This technical loan default may or may not be serious." McGraw wrote. "Only the bankers and SWSG know for sure. But any sign of dark clouds hovering over SWSG is not a good sign for DFW sports fans. And for Stars fans, this is particularly troubling"
The line from Southwest Sports Group in the past has been that the Dallas Stars and Texas Rangers are separate entities and that the financial performance of one does not have an impact on the other.
That very issue came up late last month when the Stars announced they would not offer a contract to Hatcher before he became an unrestricted agent on July 1.
Lites, during an interview on The Ticket, was asked about suggestions that the financial woes of the Rangers might have had an impact on the Hatcher situation. Lites said no, adding he was "insulted" by the suggestions.
But McGraw, the author of last summer's D Magazine article, doesn't buy that argument.
"For SWSG to say that the finances of the Rangers and Stars having nothing to do with one another is disingenuous. The red ink being thrown out by the Rangers is bleeding over to the Stars," McGraw said in his e-mail. "In effect, it is not a stretch to surmise that the reason Derian Hatcher was not signed has as much to do with the financial performance of the team in Arlington as it does with worries of a labor shutdown next year."
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There is still more info coming out on this, but I don't see how Hicks can keep losing money on the Rangers and not have it affect the Stars. I realize that with corporate laws the teams can easily be considered seperate entities, but in the end, it comes out of one man's pocket.
It's a very interesting story, and the spin control has been extraordinary. The president of Southwest was on the same station mentioned above this morning, saying basically that there were no financial problems and the plan for both teams was to try to win first and worry about the budget later. When I look back at the pricing structure of the Stars playoff tickets, I find that statement a bit hard to swallow.
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