–
The increase in value in the franchise may help Katz to forget that the team that he took over in 2008 is not doing so hot on the ice.
–
Will you offer us a hand? Every gift, regardless of size, fuels our future.
Your critical contribution enables us to maintain our independence from shareholders or wealthy owners, allowing us to keep up reporting without bias. It means we can continue to make Jewish Business News available to everyone.
You can support us for as little as $1 via PayPal at [email protected].
Thank you.
Daryl Katz
–
Daryl Katz, owner of the Edmonton Oilers NHL franchise must be feeling pretty bittersweet these days. The sweetness comes from the news that the Forbes magazine, to every year produce valuations on all NHL franchises, have valued the Edmonton Oiler franchise at $400 million, up $175 million or 78% of the value set by Forbes last year.
The Forbes valuation makes for the fifth highest jump for the Oilers in franchise value for any of the 30 franchised NHL member clubs, of whom 23 are located in the United States and the remaining seven in Canada.
If Forbes figures are accurate, it means that Daryl Katz is more than $200 million better off on the deal having spent approximately $200 million to acquire the franchise in 2008.
Although the Oilers are doing well financially and appear to have an easier rosier future , their performance this season on the ice have left little room for celebration around Edmonton, with the team having won just seven of its 24 games so far.
According to Forbes the increase in value of the Oilers can be directly contributed largely to the increased projected value of the franchise thanks to the new downtown arena being built, and due to be completed in 2016. The recently negotiated NHL and NHLPA’s collective bargaining agreement have also played their part in increasing the value of the franchise, as it has for the rest of the NHL clubs.
–
NOVEMBER 25: Nail Yakupov #64 of the Edmonton Oilers chases Jonathan Toews #19 of the Chicago Blackhawks/ Getty
–
The Edmonton Oilers arena is the name being used for the new multi-use indoor arena in Edmonton, Alberta, that is currently in the planning stages, which will house the Oilers when completed. When completed the new arena will have a capacity of 18, 500 spectators, and will replace Rexall Place the current home of the Edmonton Oilers.
Rexall Place place is the third oldest arena currently in use by NHL franchises, behind Madison Square Garden and the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, and is capable of seating just 16, 500 for ice hockey matches.
Katz was ranked by Forbes as the 11th wealthiest Canadian and 554th in the world with an estimated net worth of $US 2.6 billion (as of March 2013),
Daryl Katz was born in 1961 in Edmonton, Alberta. After completing high school, Daryl went on to study at the University of Alberta, graduating first with a degree in arts in 1982 going on to complete his law degree three years later.
Karz began his professional career, practicing law with, Shoctor, Mousseau and Starkman, before leaving to establish his own legal focusing particularly on corporate and franchise law.
In the early nineties, Daryl Katz formed a partnership with his father Barry, who had considerable experience in marketing within the retail pharmaceutical industry, to acquire the marketing rights for Canada for the Medicine Shoppe drug store group, who were particularly active in the USA with more than 1, 000 outlets.
In 1992, Katz founded the Katz Group of Companies as the holding company for the group, which with Daryl acting as CEO set off on an acquisition drive throughout the nineties, which saw the group eventually owning 2, 000 retail outlets, the majority in Canada with some in the United States.
After a series of unsuccessful bids, in mid June 2008, Daryl Katz succeeded in acquiring the franchise for the Edmonton Oilers, for an estimated $200 million.
–