A third of U.S. baseball teams' values decline: report

Thu Apr 23, 2009 9:33am EDT
 

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The wealth gap in Major League Baseball is widening as a third of the sport's teams saw their values decline, according to an annual survey by Forbes magazine.

Overall team values increased an average of 1 percent over the past year to $482 million, led by the New York Yankees, which saw their value jump 15 percent to $1.5 billion, according to the survey, which was released late on Wednesday.

The Yankees had the biggest percentage increase in value on the list partly because they moved into a lucrative, new $1.5 billion ballpark this season.

League revenue, including funds used to finance stadium debt, rose 5.5 percent to $5.8 billion last year, while operating income increased 1.8 percent to another record at $501 million, according to the magazine.

However, Forbes said the decline in value of 10 teams was the most since 2004 as the U.S. recession has hurt franchises with a lot of debt or stadiums in cities with high unemployment.

Major League Baseball, like most U.S. sports leagues, has been hurt by the recession, which has led consumers and companies to cut spending. League attendance could fall as much as 10 percent this year, while revenue may come in flat, baseball officials have said.

The Washington Nationals had the biggest decline in value, at 12 percent to $406 million, while high unemployment in Michigan and Ohio was a factor in the value of the Detroit Tigers and the Cleveland Indians falling 9 percent and 4 percent, respectively.

The Texas Rangers saw their value fall 2 percent to $405 million. The team is owned by billionaire Tom Hicks, whose Hicks Sports group did not make a recent quarterly interest payment on $525 million in loans as it seeks to restructure the debt or bring in new minority investors.

Other teams with values that declined included the Atlanta Braves, Houston Astros, Seattle Mariners, San Francisco Giants, Oakland Athletics and Pittsburgh Pirates.   Continued...

 
<p>Washington Nationals second baseman Anderson Hernandez (L) calls off first baseman Nick Johnson (R) as he fields a high pop by a Florida Marlins batter in the third inning of their National League baseball game at Nationals Park in Washington, April 18, 2009. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst</p>