Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert is close to selling a minority stake in the franchise, according to Sportico, in what would be his first material equity move since the 2019 stroke that shifted his operational footprint across Rocket Companies and the downtown Cleveland real estate portfolio. Terms were not disclosed, but NBA minority transactions over the past eighteen months have priced teams at 12-14x trailing revenue, putting the Cavaliers—who pulled $380M in 2023-24 season revenue—in the $4.8B-$5.3B range. Gilbert bought the team for $375M in 2005.
The timing tracks with two things. First, Gilbert has been unwinding concentrated positions since his health event: he took Rocket public via SPAC in 2020, sold chunks of downtown Cleveland office holdings in 2022, and stepped back from day-to-day casino operations at Jack Entertainment. Second, the Cavaliers are in year two of a competitive window that makes the asset attractive to strategic buyers. The team is 35-6 through early January, the best record in the Eastern Conference, anchored by a core under contract through at least 2027. That stability matters to buyers pricing in playoff revenue and postseason sponsorship lifts. A competitive team also justifies the $185M Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse renovation Gilbert funded in 2019, which added 1,200 club seats and 34 suites that now command premium pricing during deep playoff runs.
The deal structure will clarify what kind of capital is entering. If it's a family office or institutional allocator, expect passive equity with board observer rights. If it's an operator—someone with arena management experience or adjacency to Fanatics-style direct-to-consumer plays—the stake likely comes with governance on sponsorship renewals and media strategy. The Cavaliers' local TV deal with Bally Sports expires after the 2024-25 season, and the team has been in quiet conversations about direct-to-consumer streaming packages that would bypass traditional RSN economics. A minority partner with digital infrastructure could accelerate that shift and capture margin upside when the NBA's national media rights reset in 2025-26. Gilbert also owns the Lake Erie Monsters AHL franchise and has development rights on 1.2M square feet of mixed-use space around the arena. A strategic buyer may want optionality on those assets if the Cavaliers become an anchor for a larger downtown sports-betting or entertainment district.
Watch for the buyer announcement within 30 days, likely before the February trade deadline when franchise valuations firm up around playoff positioning. If it's a known NBA investor—Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment has been circling secondary opportunities—it signals pure financial engineering. If it's a first-time entrant, it's a dry run for a future controlling stake. Gilbert is 62 and has not named a succession plan. His son, Nick, works in the Cavaliers front office but has not taken a public leadership role. Also watch whether the deal includes drag-along rights or a right of first refusal if Gilbert moves the majority stake within five years. Those terms have become standard in NBA minority deals since the $3B Mat Ishbia purchase of the Phoenix Suns triggered unexpected liquidity events for passive investors.
The Cavaliers are 3.5 games ahead of the Celtics in the East. If they finish first and make the Finals, Gilbert just priced this stake at a discount.