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NFL wants a cut of private equity investment profits

Brock Purdy, #13 of the San Francisco 49ers, prepares to take a snap in the first quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs during Super Bowl LVIII at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Feb. 11, 2024.
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  • The NFL informally told owners and private equity firms it wants to take a percentage of potential private equity profits on sales of ownership stakes if the league votes to allow the firms to own pieces of teams.
  • It is unclear if the NFL's decision will deter future private equity investment.
  • The league voted Tuesday to allow private equity ownership of up to 10% of teams.

The National Football League has informed owners and investment firms that it intends to take a percentage of private equity profits on any future sales of ownership stakes, according to people familiar with the matter.

NFL owners voted Tuesday to allow private equity firms to take a maximum 10% stake in teams.

The league has never allowed private equity investment before. Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association and the National Hockey League already allow up to 30% of teams to be owned by investment firms, though the cap for individual funds is between 15% and 20%.

No other league takes a percentage of the so-called carry — the percentage of a fund's investment profits that managers typically receive as compensation — for all private equity firms. It was unclear heading into the owners' meeting if the NFL plan would apply to all or only some firms, or what percentage of the profits the league wanted to take.

The NFL has informally told investment firms that if they make a return on an investment, it wants a portion of the profits to be returned to the league.

"Each of us are privileged to own an asset that we're custodians of the local community and we don't want ownership that's putting making money first," New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Wednesday. "If you do your job and you present a good product, the community gets behind it."

It was unclear if the NFL's plans to take a piece of profits would deter future investment from private equity. The initial approved firms include Ares Management, Sixth Street Partners and Arctos Partners, and a consortium of investors including Dynasty Equity, Blackstone, Carlyle GroupCVC Capital Partners and Ludis, a platform founded by investor and former NFL running back Curtis Martin.

The NFL declined to comment.

Over the past 20 years, the league's total value has risen from $23.46 billion to $190 billion, a 710% gain, according to Sportico. The S&P 500 index has risen about 660% during the same time span.

— CNBC's Jake Piazza contributed to this report.

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