Klutch Sports Group | RBC

Team building

The Rise of Sports-Anchored Mixed Use Districts

Sport-Anchored, Mixed-Use Districts (SMDs) are on track to be one of the largest growth engines for the future of sports, attracting $100B in investment over the next 15 years. KLUTCH Sports Group in collaboration with RBC has written a new white paper that unpacks the data and what it means for investors, fans, and communities.

Nav caret

SMDs will transform the entiresports industry.

The building of new sports venues and the surrounding commercial, residential, retail, and community developments will transform how sports teams generate revenue and increase their enterprise values — not to mention how people live in, work in, and travel to these areas.

Professional sports-team ownership, long considered a symbol of wealth and success, has a new “teammate” in the form of out-sized financial returns from adjacent real-estate developments that are lifestyle-focused and designed with “live, work, and play” in mind. These SMDs bring an important new dimension to professional sports ownership.

Anatomy of an SMD

What It Means

Sports-Anchored

Stadiums, arenas, venues, practice facilities, corporate offices, or training centers anchored by a sports tenant

Mixed-Use

A combination of residential housing, retail and dining, commercial offices, and/or conference venues

Districts

Generally comprising several acres of land, these areas include community-focused facilities and venues such as park space, amphitheaters, community centers, and recreational facilities

Why It Matters

Sports-Anchored

There’s a guaranteed, reliable calendar of events, plus association with a sports brand that fans and consumers are passionate about

Mixed-Use

Mixed-use locations heighten consumer experiences by increasing (and concentrating) foot traffic and dwell times around games and events

Districts

These are important components for people who have active lifestyles and prioritize live-work-play communities

A Closer Look

In December 2023, Mark Cuban sold 72.3% ownership of the Dallas Mavericks to the Adelson family for $3.5B – an impressive sum, but likely undervalued. Cuban knew that, however, and he understood that the biggest play in pro sports was including real estate development.

Quotation mark left

That’s just not me. I wasn’t going to put up $2B to get an education on building. If we’re able to build a Venetian-type casino in Dallas with an American Airlines Center in the middle of it, the valuation is $20B.

Quotation mark right

Dallas is not an isolated situation. Many other existing SMDs leverage sports venues as anchors of larger development projects, including The Battery Atlanta and the Green Bay Packers’ Titletown.

37SMD projects announced in North America in 2024
5xMore visitors to SMDs than sports venues themselves
40Stadium leases that’ll expire between 2030 and 2039

Factors That Positively Impact Team Valuations

Long-Term, Consistent Revenue

Innovation

Cost Certainty

Demand Limitations

Ownership of pro sports teams used to be about prestige and on-field performance. But the game is changing.

SMDs are turning pro sports teams into an increasingly attractive asset class. Revenue streams for major and minor professional teams (think media rights, sponsorship, ticketing, etc.) are increasingly maturing, thus making the districts surrounding sports venues an attractive way to grow team valuations.

The Ross-Arctos Sports Franchise Index (RASFI) analysis of the largest North American leagues reveals sports franchise ownership generally drives higher returns than equity, fixed income, and commodities asset classes. They also have low value volatility, are uncorrelated with equities markets, and have largely proven to be recession- and disaster-proof.

The Big Revenue Play

Traditional revenue streams are well-known, have largely matured, and have already been priced into future team valuations.

League-Led Revenues
(National & International)

Generally shared amongst all league teams

Team-Led Revenues
(Local)

Varying levels of league-share and team-level capture and retention

Sports-Anchored,
Mixed-Use Districts

Returns are fully retained by the owner/developer

Women’s sports are exploding and represent long-term SMD opportunities.

Despite 37 SMDs in the U.S. pipeline across men’s sports, few investments dedicated to women’s sports have been announced. Monarch Collective is one example of a fund that wants to change that by investing in women’s sports teams, leagues, and rights-based adjacencies.

Quotation mark left

Women’s sports teams have not yet experienced many of the revenue maturation concerns facing men’s teams. Growth in the core team and league revenue streams is rapid, so stagnating growth is less of a motivator.

Quotation mark right

Jasmine Robinson

Monarch Managing Partner

A Closer Look

Women’s sports often have immediate needs for new facilities given the historic underinvestment in teams and leagues. SMDs typically require longer lead time planning than a standalone venue or practice facility. While men’s teams can use venue and facility upgrades, their need for the facility is not as urgent as for women’s teams.

The Success of the Kansas City Currents’New NWSL Stadium

$117M

Private financing for the first ever stadium purpose-built for a professional women’s sports team

10 years

Naming rights agreement with railway giant CPKC

~$40M

Revenue generated in 2024, a 200% increase over 2023

$800M

Investment into announced 20-acre SMD featuring waterfront retail, entertainment, restaurants, 1,000 residential units, and 20,000 square feet of office space

Number To Know

+99%

How much revenue retail locations at SMDs drove compared to same-chain locations in the surrounding market, during the season

The Big Idea

Quotation mark left

Any team that does not have non-sports revenue will not be as valuable as one that does. This adds value to the team whether it is performing well or not.

Quotation mark right

Kelli Fischer

Texas Rangers CFO

SMDs can attract private credit and public financing.

Public financing remains a viable option, too. Towns, cities, states, and countries have typically relied on debt, such as municipal bonds, to finance these projects. Local governments can also increase taxes and use this money to provide a low or zero interest loan to sports organizations

Private credit is becoming more popular thanks to advantages like flexible valuation methods, unique fee structures and capital requirements (compared to banks), and potentially longer-term time horizons.

A Closer Look

Traditional banks have historically struggled to finance SMDs given their risk tolerance; however, that does not mean they won’t participate in financing. Loans may look more like the following:

Provide on average $200M-$300M in debt capital with a five-year term, though we note substantial variances on amounts and term lengths

House

Participating banks will often use their own balance sheets with a view to refinancing after 3-5 years by other lenders once the SMD build is complete. These other lenders are typically institutional investors (insurance companies or private credit firms) that come in via private placement

Local officials and team owners will collaborate to directly impact local communities.

SMDs can serve as catalysts for further community investment by helping maximize the value of existing real estate investments, driving increases in tourism, and building awareness for a local community. The area surrounding an SMD can be boosted by investors funding a variety of non-gameday activities in their communities, such as youth tournaments, concerts, festivals, farmers markets, and other events.

Team
Owners

Public
Officials

Local
Leaders

Citizens

Organizations

Quotation mark left

There is now a much greater willingness by ownership groups to invest [additional] capital in real estate and infrastructure. This direct investment approach allows for the ability to unlock new revenue streams both in premium experiences and mixed-use development.

Quotation mark right

Tim Katt

Managing Director, Sports & Entertainment, Transwestern

Case Study

New York City FC

Willets Point, Queens was a long-neglected area of New York City until the New York City FC broke ground on its new stadium there. The Etihad Park project is a novel SMD that combines critical community needs with state-of-the-art infrastructure.

When the stadium opens in 2027, entirely privately financed by New York City FC, it will serve as the cornerstone of the landmark $3 billion redevelopment of Willets Point, including:

  • Etihad Park: New York City FC’s 25,000-seat stadium
  • 2,500 units of all-affordable homes
  • A brand-new 650-seat public school
  • 115,000 square feet of public space
  • A new 250-key hotel
  • Neighborhood-serving, ground-floor retail shops

The stadium was designed to be a resource for the surrounding community, inspired by the club’s core belief of empowering better lives through soccer. Whether it’s providing meeting space for community organizations, hosting farmers markets and other businesses that will be open on non-match days, or other events, Etihad Park will bring tremendous benefits for Queens and New York City.

$6.1B

Estimated economic
impact over 30 years

A Closer Look

IRR ranged from 9.88%-27.3% depending on the combination of input variables

Operating margins hit as high as 85% depending on residential and commercial occupancy rates

The combination of margins and tax benefits associated with amortization/depreciation can generate generous levels of free cash flows

SMD growth rates can materially outpace traditional sports revenue streams.

KLUTCH Sports developed a 10-year discounted cash-flow model using data from The Battery Atlanta — an SMD located approximately 10 miles northwest of Atlanta, Georgia — as the foundation, as well as publicly available information from the Atlanta Braves Holdings, Inc. and Cobb County, Georgia.

We ran plan scenarios on a host of different variables such as dwell times, visitor density, revenue per dwell minute, and more. The data, purely illustrative, represents a range of upside and downside scenarios.

Maximizing Sponsorship Return from SMDs

SMDs capitalize on a full calendar year of events, reach a net-new audience, and create new inventory.

~80%

New venue naming rights increase

~50%

New venue sponsorship increase

~20%

Potential impact of major partner deals

58%

Increase in naming rights by selling the campus (venue + district)

More Reasons to Root for SMDs

New builds and major transformations have led to substantial commercial upside thanks to a variety of factors including the enhanced attractiveness of expanded event schedules and broader audiences, as well as additional community engagement and increased dwell times.

SMDs also broaden the aperture of potential brand targets: Sports teams can use districts as a more budget-friendly entry point for brands that want to tap into team associations but can’t fund a traditional sponsorship. SMDs create more opportunities to unlock brands’ budgets across retail, OOH, community and more.

Ready to learn more about SMDs and their ROI? Download the full white paper from KLUTCH Sports Group and RBC.

About KLUTCH Sports Group

Founded in 2012 by CEO Rich Paul, KLUTCH Sports Group is a premier agency representing some of the world’s biggest athletes, brands, and rightsholders across major professional sports. Sitting at the intersections of sports, entertainment, and culture, KLUTCH has been able to build a best-in-class global partnerships, brand consulting and valuation and insights group on the commercial side of the business. In 2019, KLUTCH partnered with the leading global talent and entertainment company UTA, and in 2024, was named one of GQ’s 20 Most Creative Companies in the World. Ready to make a play? Reach out to us at SMDinquiries@unitedtalent.com.

About Royal Bank of Canada

Royal Bank of Canada (including City National Bank, an RBC company) is a global financial institution with a purpose-driven, principles-led approach to delivering leading performance. Our success comes from the 100,000+ employees who leverage their imaginations and insights to bring our vision, values and strategy to life so we can help our clients thrive and communities prosper. As Canada’s biggest bank and one of the largest in the world, based on market capitalization, we have a diversified business model with a focus on innovation and providing exceptional experiences to our more than 18 million clients in Canada, the U.S. and 27 other countries.

The report is intended as general information only and is not to be relied upon as constituting legal, financial or other professional advice. A professional advisor should be consulted regarding your specific situation. Information presented is believed to be factual and up-to-date but neither KLUTCH Sports Group nor Royal Bank of Canada guarantee its accuracy and it should not be regarded as a complete analysis of the subjects discussed. All expressions of opinion reflect the judgment of the authors as of the date of publication and are subject to change. No endorsement of any third parties or their advice, opinions, information, products or services is expressly given or implied by Royal Bank of Canada or any of its affiliates. ® / ™ Trademark(s) of Royal Bank of Canada. Used under licence. ‡ All other trademarks are the property of their respective owner(s).

Privacy PolicyTerms and Conditions