Explainer: Breaking down the Buss family’s US$10 billion sale of Los Angeles Lakers
Los Angeles Lakers owner Jeanie Buss and husband Jay Mohr. Jeanie took over as principal owner after Jerry Buss's death and is set to continue as team governor. PHOTO: REUTERS
UPDATED Jun 20, 2025, 11:27 AM
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LOS ANGELES – The Buss family, architects of 11 NBA championships, is poised to relinquish their four-decade reign over the Los Angeles Lakers, with ESPN reporting they are entering an agreement to sell a majority stake in basketball's most glamorous franchise.
The following is the breakdown of the deal.
Lakers minority owner Mark Walter is set to take majority ownership in a deal valuing the Lakers at about US$10 billion (S$12.84 billion), making it the most expensive United States sports team valuation in history.
The deal will end family control of the Lakers.
The Buss family will retain a minority share of just over 15 per cent for a period of time after the deal, ESPN reported, bringing to a close its stewardship of a franchise that became synonymous with Hollywood allure and championship excellence.
Reuters could not immediately ascertain what Walter's new stake in the team would be. He purchased a minority stake in the Lakers with Todd Boehly in 2021.
The previous record for biggest sports deal was held by the Boston Celtics, who agreed in March to be sold for US$6.1 billion.
The Lakers are one of the most storied franchises in NBA history. The team was valued at US$7.1 billion by Forbes in 2024, behind only the Golden State Warriors and New York Knicks in the NBA.
They are the second-most successful NBA team with 17 championships. The Celtics have 18.
Jerry Buss, who bought the Lakers for US$67.5 million in 1979, transformed them into one of the most well-known franchises in professional sports. The team won five championships during the celebrated "Showtime" era of the 1980s.
The Lakers have LeBron James, arguably the league's biggest star, on their roster. They also snapped up Slovenian Luka Doncic in a high-profile trade with the Dallas Mavericks in February.
Los Angeles Lakers during the second half in game five of first round for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena, on April 30. PHOTO: REUTERS
Walter is a 65-year-old American billionaire businessman who is CEO and chairman of holding company TWG Global. He is also CEO of investment firm Guggenheim Partners.
Walter, whose net worth is listed as US$6.1 billion by Forbes, has owned the LA Dodgers baseball team since 2012.
He is adding the Lakers to a sporting portfolio that includes stakes in the Cadillac Formula One team, the WNBA's Los Angeles Sparks and English Premier League football club Chelsea.
Jerry Buss's 66 per cent stake in the Lakers was passed on to his six children via a family trust after his death in 2013. Buss died at the age of 80 due to kidney failure.
His daughter, Jeanie, took over as principal owner after his death and is set to continue as team governor, maintaining a family connection to the purple-and-gold empire her father built.
The Celtics set the previous benchmark in NBA sale valuations after agreeing to a US$6.1 billion sale to a group headed by private equity firm Symphony Technology Group co-founder William Chisholm in March.
The National Football League’s (NFL) Washington Commanders sold for US$6.05 billion in July 2023, in a deal that, at the time, was the biggest for a North American sports franchise.
Also in 2023, British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe finalised a deal to acquire a minority stake in Manchester United that valued the English football club at US$6.3 billion.
In 2022, former owner Roman Abramovich sold Chelsea to a consortium led by Boehly that included Walter, for about US$3.2 billion.
Final approval of the sale could take several months. The Celtics' sale has yet to receive final approval from the NBA Board of Governors.
The Board is scheduled to meet in July in Las Vegas, though that session is expected to focus primarily on potential league expansion plans. REUTERS
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