Waddell+Reed's PBC investment has lost 59% of it's value.
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No, there is no way investors are happy to see there fighters fighting on another network. It also shows that NONE of these guys are signed to PBC.
I really don't think the investors understood what they were getting into with Haymon. Haymon is stealing from these guys, plain and simple.
When PBC falls, Haymon will just take his fighters to someone else.Comment
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From jump everyone in the boxing industry said how this was an extremely risky investment. How much longer can they afford to sustain losses before they pull the plug?
Ive said it time and time again. What's hurting PBC the most is its inconsistsnt boxing schedule. Network hopping along with having fights on random days and times makes it hard to build a following. Especially when you're not putting on quality cards. Sad part is he has the fighters to make this big fights and for whatever reason he just chooses not to!Comment
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From jump everyone in the boxing industry said how this was an extremely risky investment. How much longer can they afford to sustain losses before they pull the plug?
Ive said it time and time again. What's hurting PBC the most is its inconsistsnt boxing schedule. Network hopping along with having fights on random days and times makes it hard to build a following. Especially when you're not putting on quality cards. Sad part is he has the fighters to make this big fights and for whatever reason he just chooses not to!Comment
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I'm with you on that but let's be realistic. What actual shot did this have at becoming a success? Not many people follow the sport as they used to, I mean even if they were putting on good matchups on paper it doesn't mean it would translate to good fights in the ring. Also they are putting cards on channels that nobody knows(or at least I've never heard of before), I mean "Bounce", what the heck is that!? Now when they have fights on NBC and channels like it's a good thing. The scheduling of a lot of these fights is weird too, cause they go up against a lot of competition like the World Series and others. It's kinda sad but I honestly didn't see this doing real well before it began.
There modo going is to just overflood the channels with boxing and do that the quality wasn't there. If they had scaled back the flooding and only broadcasted the very special fights then things IMO wouldn't be so bad.
Because in less than a year from today their value can be in the negative and that means bye bye free boxing. Sad for us fans.Comment
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Showtime is a completely seperate entity from PBC.
No, there is no way investors are happy to see there fighters fighting on another network. It also shows that NONE of these guys are signed to PBC.
I really don't think the investors understood what they were getting into with Haymon. Haymon is stealing from these guys, plain and simple.
When PBC falls, Haymon will just take his fighters to someone else.
Boxing is a star driven business and money only really comes when stars are built then harvested. Showtime and PBC are all on the same side currently in that game.
Those guys know what they are doing with their money, and if they don't that is their problem losing it.Comment
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I hear yea on their three year plan but this thing is less than a year old and they have already lost more than half of its value. If this trend continues sponsorship won't be there because the value of this product will be zero in less than a year from today.Comment
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The bigger problem is whether or not they are attracting advertisers and starting to see an uptick in revenue. We won't know that unless we see their books. If you see revenue growth over the next year or so the investors will keep funding it.Comment
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