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Mark Walters to purchase Lakers for $10 billion: Who is the billionaire new owner of NBA's most expensive franchise?

Mark Walters to purchase Lakers for $10 billion: Who is the billionaire new owner of NBA's most expensive franchise?

Express Tribune7 hours ago

The Los Angeles Lakers are set for a historic ownership change after Jeanie Buss agreed to sell a majority stake in the storied NBA franchise to Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter, in a record-breaking deal that values the team at $10 billion.
The transaction marks the largest sale in American sports history, surpassing the Boston Celtics' $6.1 billion agreement earlier this year.
The agreement was first reported by ESPN and later confirmed by multiple sources familiar with the matter.
Jeanie Buss, 63, assumed control of the Lakers after the death of her father, Jerry Buss, in 2013.
Jerry Buss bought the team in 1979 for $67.5 million, and under his ownership, the Lakers became one of the most successful and marketable teams in professional sports, winning 10 championships during his tenure.
During Jeanie Buss's time at the helm, the franchise signed four-time MVP LeBron James in 2018 and captured its most recent championship in 2020.
Despite the sale, she is expected to remain as the team's governor.
Walter, 65, is the chief executive of Guggenheim Partners, a global investment firm, and founder of TWG Global.
He is a well-known figure in sports investment circles, having purchased the Dodgers in 2012 for a then-record $2.15 billion. Under his ownership, the Dodgers have reached the postseason for 12 consecutive years, winning World Series titles in 2020 and 2024.
Walter also holds stakes in Chelsea FC, the Los Angeles Sparks, and the Cadillac Formula 1 team. His involvement with the Lakers began in 2021 when he acquired a 27% minority stake from billionaire Philip Anschutz, which included a right of first refusal in the event of a sale.
The deal comes amid a major transition for the Lakers, who traded for Luka Doncic earlier this year and led the NBA in merchandise sales for the 2024–25 season. Forbes recently ranked the Lakers third among NBA franchise valuations, behind the Golden State Warriors and New York Knicks.
NBA legend Magic Johnson, who played a pivotal role in both the Lakers' history and the Dodgers' ownership group, expressed support for the deal on social media:
'I told [Jeanie] that her dad Dr Buss would be very proud of her for getting $10 billion for the Lakers… I can understand why she sold the team to Mark Walter because they are just alike — competitive, generous, and low-profile.'
I just talked to my sister Jeanie Buss to tell her congratulations, and that I'm so happy for her and family. I told her that her dad Dr. Buss would be very proud of her for getting $10B for the Lakers, the largest sports franchise sale in history! — Earvin Magic Johnson (@MagicJohnson) June 18, 2025

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Mark Walters to purchase Lakers for $10 billion: Who is the billionaire new owner of NBA's most expensive franchise?
Mark Walters to purchase Lakers for $10 billion: Who is the billionaire new owner of NBA's most expensive franchise?

Express Tribune

time7 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

Mark Walters to purchase Lakers for $10 billion: Who is the billionaire new owner of NBA's most expensive franchise?

The Los Angeles Lakers are set for a historic ownership change after Jeanie Buss agreed to sell a majority stake in the storied NBA franchise to Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter, in a record-breaking deal that values the team at $10 billion. The transaction marks the largest sale in American sports history, surpassing the Boston Celtics' $6.1 billion agreement earlier this year. The agreement was first reported by ESPN and later confirmed by multiple sources familiar with the matter. Jeanie Buss, 63, assumed control of the Lakers after the death of her father, Jerry Buss, in 2013. Jerry Buss bought the team in 1979 for $67.5 million, and under his ownership, the Lakers became one of the most successful and marketable teams in professional sports, winning 10 championships during his tenure. During Jeanie Buss's time at the helm, the franchise signed four-time MVP LeBron James in 2018 and captured its most recent championship in 2020. Despite the sale, she is expected to remain as the team's governor. Walter, 65, is the chief executive of Guggenheim Partners, a global investment firm, and founder of TWG Global. He is a well-known figure in sports investment circles, having purchased the Dodgers in 2012 for a then-record $2.15 billion. Under his ownership, the Dodgers have reached the postseason for 12 consecutive years, winning World Series titles in 2020 and 2024. Walter also holds stakes in Chelsea FC, the Los Angeles Sparks, and the Cadillac Formula 1 team. His involvement with the Lakers began in 2021 when he acquired a 27% minority stake from billionaire Philip Anschutz, which included a right of first refusal in the event of a sale. The deal comes amid a major transition for the Lakers, who traded for Luka Doncic earlier this year and led the NBA in merchandise sales for the 2024–25 season. Forbes recently ranked the Lakers third among NBA franchise valuations, behind the Golden State Warriors and New York Knicks. NBA legend Magic Johnson, who played a pivotal role in both the Lakers' history and the Dodgers' ownership group, expressed support for the deal on social media: 'I told [Jeanie] that her dad Dr Buss would be very proud of her for getting $10 billion for the Lakers… I can understand why she sold the team to Mark Walter because they are just alike — competitive, generous, and low-profile.' I just talked to my sister Jeanie Buss to tell her congratulations, and that I'm so happy for her and family. I told her that her dad Dr. Buss would be very proud of her for getting $10B for the Lakers, the largest sports franchise sale in history! — Earvin Magic Johnson (@MagicJohnson) June 18, 2025

Gulf states on Iran's doorstep scramble for end of war
Gulf states on Iran's doorstep scramble for end of war

Business Recorder

time11 hours ago

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Gulf states on Iran's doorstep scramble for end of war

DOHA: As Iran and Israel trade strikes and the US weighs joining in, wealthy Gulf states on the conflict's doorstep are engaged in frantic diplomacy to halt the war — but solutions remain elusive. A spillover of the conflict or the Iranian government's collapse are both worrying outcomes for the energy-rich region, which hosts several major US military bases. Peace and stability have been central to the rise of Gulf powers including Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, who are pivoting their economies towards business and tourism. Hoping to avert the crisis, Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, has been talking to Iran and the United States since 'day one', Ali Shihabi, an analyst close to the royal court, told AFP. 'But it does not look promising that something will happen very soon,' he added. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the de facto Saudi ruler, and the UAE's President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, have both spoken to Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian in recent days. The Emirati president also held a phone call on Wednesday with Russia's President Vladimir Putin, an ally of Iran, who offered to mediate in the conflict. Israel's launching of the war scuppered Oman-brokered talks between Tehran and Washington that were supported by Gulf nations, who have been pursuing a detente with their giant neighbour after years of strained ties. On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump demanded Iran's 'unconditional surrender' and warned it could easily assassinate its supreme leader, fuelling fears of American intervention. Hours later, the UAE's Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan said the Gulf country's president had 'conducted intensive diplomatic calls... to de-escalate tensions and prevent the conflict from spreading'. Sheikh Abdullah warned against 'reckless and miscalculated actions that could extend beyond the borders of the two countries', in a strongly worded statement published by the official WAM news agency. Trump had initially urged Iran to come to the negotiating table, but an official briefed on talks said Tehran told Qatar and Oman that it 'will not negotiate while under attack'. Oman, Iran's traditional intermediary, said it was engaged in diplomatic efforts as the daily strikes continue. Meanwhile Qatar, a key mediator in the Israel-Hamas war and a negotiator with Iran in the past, has also been 'engaging daily' with the US, its foreign ministry spokesperson said on Tuesday. Former Qatari Prime Minister Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani warned on X that 'it is not in the interest of the Gulf states to see Iran... collapse', adding that they would be 'the first to be harmed' by the war's repercussions. An Arab diplomat told AFP: 'Everyone in the Gulf is going to say we are better off making sure we have a deal with Iran, a diplomatic solution with Iran.' Shihabi, the Saudi analyst, echoed the sentiment, saying the best outcome was 'obviously an agreement between Iran and (the) US'. Diplomatic intervention by Saudi Arabia, once a fierce critic of Iran, comes two years after they restored ties. The UAE, which recognised Israel in 2020, has also patched up relations with Tehran since 2022. 'Whereas the Saudis may have once called for 'cutting off the head of the snake', their approach toward Iran has shifted dramatically,' said Hasan Alhasan, a senior fellow for Middle East policy at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. However, 'the Arab Gulf states have almost no ability to shape Israel's or Iran's behaviour or influence the outcome of this war,' he told AFP. 'It is difficult to see how Israel's military campaign against Iran, whose objectives seem to have quickly metastasised from eliminating Iran's nuclear and missiles programmes to overthrowing the regime, ends well for Iran's Arab Gulf neighbours,' Alhasan added.

‘Israel's wet dream'
‘Israel's wet dream'

Business Recorder

time13 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

‘Israel's wet dream'

One of the many enduring paradoxes of American democracy is that a businessman-president—soon to return to his real estate empire and million-dollar book deals—can very much bend the world to serve the interests of another state. And not just in defiance of most of his own people's will, but in betrayal of the no-more-wars promise he made to them. All because that other state has mastered the art of controlling the purse strings that keep the most powerful people in the most powerful country firmly in office and nicely in line. So it's no surprise that Donald Trump has now issued his UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER ultimatum—an effort to bring to life what Israeli journalist Gideon Levy bluntly, and rightly, called Netanyahu's wet dream. The phrase, crude as it is, couldn't be more apt. It captures the disturbing reality that war with Iran isn't some regrettable last resort—it's a fantasy long incubated in Tel Aviv and eagerly underwritten in Washington. And now that fantasy is being realised in real time, with all the grotesque theatre that comes with it. Israel pounds Tehran with airstrikes. Iran retaliates. American bombers reposition. Oil spikes. Traders flinch. Civilians flee. The choreography is familiar because the instinct behind it is rehearsed—manufacture escalation, provoke the backlash, call it existential, then drag the United States into the mess. It isn't just Netanyahu's wet dream anymore. It's becoming a bipartisan one. There's barely any dissent. Not in Congress. Not in the media. Certainly not in the donor circuit. If anything, Trump's language — demanding Iran's 'unconditional surrender,' praising Israel's 'success,' warning of 'brutal consequences' — has only set the tone for what comes next. And none of it has anything to do with American interests. But that's the point, isn't it? This was never about American interests. It was always about compliance. About who gets the funding. Who gets the endorsements. Who gets to run again and who doesn't. Whose secrets will not be spilled. The speed with which Washington closed ranks behind Israel's offensive — before any American life was even touched — says everything about how deep the rot is entrenched. And how complete the capture now is. That's what makes Levy's comment so cutting. Because this isn't about defence. It's about gratification. About delivering the climax of a policy obsession that's been edging forward for two decades. And like all such fantasies, it demands suspension of reason. The pretext doesn't have to make sense. The costs don't have to add up. The global reaction doesn't even matter. What matters is that Netanyahu gets his war, and American power makes it possible. The entire policy architecture sustains itself now — donor networks, lobbying operations, security think tanks, revolving-door consultants — all aligned, all funded, all committed to the same outcome. It no longer matters who occupies which office. The machine runs itself. And it always runs in one direction. Nobody in Washington is asking what this will achieve. They're only asking how much is too much before the polls start to suffer. The calculus is electoral, not strategic. The war has become a stage, and Trump—the showman—knows exactly how to work the lights. He doesn't need to care what happens to Iranians, or Israelis, or Palestinians, or oil markets, or civilian infrastructure. As long as the right people applaud, the bombs will keep falling. And the world will pay for it. In blood, in volatility, in diplomatic collapse. Thousands of Tehranis are already fleeing. Insurance rates in the Gulf are climbing. Global supply chains are bracing. But Washington is too far gone to blink. This is no longer about brinkmanship. It's about indulgence. And that makes it infinitely more dangerous. So when Trump talks about backing Israel 'all the way,' he's not signalling resolve. He's signalling submission—to a foreign policy vision that isn't even his. One that predates him, that will outlast him, and that's now so deeply embedded in the political bloodstream that it no longer registers as foreign at all. The irony, of course, is that none of this is really about only Iran either. Not the rhetoric, not the strikes, not the ultimatums. Iran is just the canvas. The real subject is the unspoken consensus in Washington that no cost is too high, no lie too obvious, and no backlash too severe — so long as the machinery of loyalty keeps running. That's what's playing out now, in all its delusional grandeur. And it's why Levy's vulgar metaphor lands so hard. Because it isn't just about Israel's fantasy anymore. It's about America's complicity in turning that fantasy into policy — no matter who burns. And with Trump now threatening to go further, and no one in Washington willing to say no, this may only be the beginning. Iran's response has been brutal — far beyond symbolic retaliation — and has shocked not just the region but Israel itself. Parts of Tel Aviv and Haifa now resemble the very images long used to justify its own excesses in Gaza. For all his theatrics and defiance, even Netanyahu never dared imagine a nightmare this vivid springing from his fantasy. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

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