US mortgage lending billionaire Mat Ishbia has agreed a deal to acquire the Phoenix Suns and Mercury basketball teams at a valuation of $4bn, in what would be a record transaction for a National Basketball Association franchise.
An agreement between Ishbia — together with his brother Justin — and the teams’ current owner, Robert Sarver, will give the brothers more than 50 per cent ownership of the two teams. The deal is still subject to due diligence and approval by the NBA’s board of governors before a transaction can go through. As it stands, the $4bn valuation of the Suns and its sister team, the WNBA’s Mercury, comes in at almost double the enterprise valuations of other recent NBA transactions.
The 2019 sale of the Brooklyn Nets to Alibaba co-founder Joseph Tsai for $2.35bn, was a US professional sports record.
News of the Suns and Mercury sale was earlier reported by ESPN. A sale of the teams would conclude years of tumult under Sarver’s administration. He agreed to sell them both in September shortly after the NBA suspended him for using racist and bullying language and behaviour throughout the front office.
The Phoenix transaction would be the latest in a string of record sales of professional sports teams this year. The National Football League’s Denver Broncos sold for $4.6bn in June, a record price for a professional team, to a consortium led by Walmart heir Rob Walton. In football, Chelsea FC and AC Milan fetched record sums for transactions of English Premier League and continental European clubs, respectively.
Mat Ishbia is the chief executive of United Wholesale Mortgages, a Detroit-based business that went public through a special purpose acquisition company in September 2020 just as the boom in blank-cheque companies was taking off. The deal with Gores Holdings IV valued the mortgage lender at $16bn and made Ishbia a billionaire on paper. However, shares in the company have declined by more than half since it made its public market debut. Ishbia is known to be a big basketball fan and played for Michigan State University. He helped the Spartans to the 2000 National Collegiate Athletic Association championship and has donated millions to his alma mater’s athletic programme. “Basketball is at the core of my life,” Ishbia said in a statement late Tuesday. He said he had spent the past two decades of his career building United Wholesale, “and I’m confident that we can bring that same level of success to these great organisations on and off the floor”.