Yeah, and that probably means this whole thing is a pipe dream.I know the PE industry pretty well. I have personally never seen a deal that was contingent on a government entity (like a school) providing a revenue stream (such as student fees) that the government entity was not legally obligated to provide for some service it needed. PE firms invest in revenues and cash flow, not typically a stream of subsidies. The closest I have ever seen to something like this is investing in a business that is dependent on tax subsidies or some other kind of regulatory arbitrage, but even that is a much firmer investment strategy than being dependent on an athletic department's student fee stream.
Like you, I don't see anyone looking to make an investment in an athletic department's media rights. Too much uncertainty in a changing media landscape.
If you are correct that the big revenue streams are off limits for outside investors, then this discussion is all just noise and there is never going to be a deal.
But here:
I have personally never seen a deal that was contingent on a government entity (like a school) providing a revenue stream (such as student fees) that the government entity was not legally obligated to provide for some service it needed.
I don't think this is necessarily going to stop an aggressive PE investor. Just because you have not seen it, doesn't mean someone is not going to try it. They may not succeed, but if they ever do I hope it's at FSU.
