No owner is selling until these expansion franchises hit. When the league expands, as it’s been rumored to for a few years, every owner will be given a check for close to or possibly north of 200 million dollars. The new owners have to pay an expansion fee that is shared amongst the current owners. That money isn’t shared with players or front office or coaching staff it is 100% the owners. Even though this cheap bastard investment has tripled in value he isn’t selling until he gets his free 200 million. I want him to sell as much as the next person, but I highly doubt he sells until that happens.

  • Crazy_Employ8617B
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    1 year ago

    Inherited assets tax basis is valued at step-up basis. In simplified terms this means the tax basis “steps up” to the fair market value. Your taxable income for a sale is determined by the sale price less the tax basis (oversimplified).

    To explain in more detail:

    If Gores sells now:

    -Tax Basis of Pistons (purchase price): $325M

    -Current Fair Value: $3.08B

    -Taxable Value on sale: 2.7 Billion

    If Gores inheritor sells the team:

    -Current Fair Value of the Pistons: $3.08B

    -Tax Basis (step-up basis): $3.08B

    -Taxable Value on the sale: $0

    If he dies the tax basis of the Pistons will equal its fair value and the gain on sale will, in theory, be $0 for them if they sell immediately.

    Sports teams are a fantastic way for Billionaires to pass wealth to their children tax free, which is why so many wealthy people hold on until death. Only in the US can one of the richest human beings alive sell a $3 Billion asset for $2.7 Billion in profit and not have to pay any taxes on that sale. If Gores owns this team for financial planning purposes he won’t be selling.