So the agreed upon sale between Ricketts and the Tribune is almost finalized. After it clears the bankruptcy judge it goes before the 30 owners. 75% of the owners must approve the sale. Do you think the sale will be approved? It seems I had heard it is not a guarantee that it will go through the ownership vote due the amount of leverage in the deal.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ ... 7196.storyThe sale of the Cubs to the Ricketts family is "imminent," sources said Thursday.More than a month after Tribune Co. agreed to broad financial terms of a deal to sell the Chicago Cubs to the Rickettses, the two sides are close to completing all the legal documents associated with the large and complicated transaction.
Sources close to the matter described the execution of a definitive agreement as "imminent," saying the expected a signing could come within days.
The completion of a definitive agreement would mean Tribune Co. would not be able to solicit any other bids for the team, sources said.
Tribune Co., unhappy with the pace of final negotiations with the Rickettses after selecting the family in January as the winning bidder of a protracted auction, opened discussions with another potential buyer several weeks ago. The prospective buyer wasn't new to the process. It was a group led by New York investor and former Chicagoan Marc Utay, which was one of three finalists in the auction for the team.
Tribune Co. spokesman Gary Weitman declined to comment. Dennis Culloton, a spokesman for Tom Ricketts, who has led his family's bid for the Cubs, did not immediately return a call for comment. Tom Ricketts, a Chicago investment banker, is the son of Joe Ricketts, who helped create the Omaha-based online brokerage TD Ameritrade Holding Corp.
The Rickettses have agreed to pay about $900 million for the team, Wrigley Field and a 25 percent stake in Comcast SportsNet Chicago, which broadcasts many Cubs games.
One of the main transactional documents lawyers on both sides have been working on is creating the limited liability company that would include Tribune Co. and the family. The company, which owns the Chicago Tribune, has desired such an ownership structure to shelter several hundred million dollars in capital gains that would be generated by selling assets the company has held through decades of growth. Tribune Co. bought the team and the stadium for about $20 million in 1981 from the Wrigley family.
Under the sale structure to the Ricketts family, Tribune Co. would retain about a 5 percent stake in the Cubs assets.
Once the definitive agreement is reached, Tribune Co. plans to show the deal to its creditors. The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in December and any major asset sale has to be approved by a bankruptcy judge.
The Cubs were not included in Tribune Co.'s bankruptcy filing but the company has considered placing the team in bankruptcy to expedite court approval of the sale.
When the sale makes it way through court, the transaction would be put to a vote by Major League Baseball owners. Seventy-five percent of the league's 30 owners have to approve a transfer of ownership.