The only problem I have with this is that at some point in time, the team will be a loser again and game attendance will be 9,000 and when the share holders start dumping the stock, what befalls the athletic department? http://sports-law.blogspot.com/ Boise State Athletic Department Selling Stock USA Today is reporting today that Boise State has officially formed a non-profit corporation and will begin selling shares to the public at $100 per share in hopes of raising $20 million (Boise State Athletic Department Hopes Stock Offering Raises $20 Million). AD Gene Bleymaier said, "If we are to continue the success we are enjoying now we must generate new revenues to pay for coaches' salaries, scholarships and facilities." The shares will not pay dividends, but shareholders can vote on members of a 12-person board at an annual meeting and the board will determine how money raised through the offering would be spent. Bleymaier also said this fundraising program mirrors the offering made by the Green Bay Packers when they raised $24 million in the sale of more than 105,000 shares back in 1997. If this is true, needless to say, it's a very interesting development. One would certainly think this has to violate some provision, somewhere, in that 437-page NCAA Bylaw manual. It also raises all kinds of interesting corporate law questions in the context of fiduciary duties, state and federal securities regulations and non-profit corporation laws, just to name a few. The more I think about it, this has to be a joke, right? But perhaps this is no different than what is already taking place in big-time intercollegiate athletics, the only difference is that we call them boosters instead of shareholders. This new development also relates to the topic of my article I posted on two days ago to the extent the proceeds generated from this stock sale go to fund coaches' salaries. Boise State along with Cincinnati and TCU are prime candidates to have their successful football coaches solicited by competitor schools, making them soon-to-be victims of both tortious interference and breach of contract. The presidents of these three schools have a choice. They can pay their coaches more money or let them go and then proclaim that they are "powerless" to do anything about rising salaries. Or, they can exercise their legal rights and stand up for all the current and prospective student-athletes who committed to their school in reliance on the fact that their coach was obligated to be there for a period of years....the same student-athletes who, unlike their coach, are prohibited from transferring to another school.
Nothing. Why would it matter? This isn't stock. You don't own anything if you buy it, except the right to help elect representatives who will "decide" how to spend your money. Something you could do yourself by donating to the university for a specific project. That said, it's a cute fundraising idea. barfo
I would think that if the value of the stock dropped, say 75%, it would have some sort of detrimental effect on the BSU athletic department.
You mean in terms of loss of face? I don't think there will be a market for this stock, so I'm not sure how anyone would ever know whether the price dropped. barfo
OK, now I see what you're saying. I was presuming this stock was going to on an exchange. I am certain now it will not be. But let me then put it this way. Let us say I buy 1000 shares at $100 each. At some point in time, I may want to sell them (unless my "purchase" is for services like season tickets...) back to recoup my investment and any interest. Does not the athletic department have to buy them back from me? If so, how is it determined the price per share? Is it always $100? Can;t the share value have gone up or down? I mean, isn't that the reason to buy stock? Buy low, sell high? What am I missing here?
I don't think they are under any obligation whatsoever to buy them back, nor would they actually have any intention of doing so. barfo
If you can find someone to buy them from you, tell 'em you'll throw in the bridge over the Snake River Canyon and naming rights to Evel Kneivel's earthen ramp.