The Golden State Valkyries reached a $1 billion valuation in their inaugural WNBA season, according to CNBC's 2026 franchise rankings released May 4. No women's sports franchise has crossed ten figures before. The team began play eleven months ago.
The valuation reflects $50 million in estimated annual revenue, triple the league average, driven by Chase Center shared services, Warriors corporate sponsor crossover, and Bay Area market density. The franchise paid a $50 million expansion fee in 2023. Ownership led by Joe Lacob and Peter Guber structured the Valkyries as a Warriors subsidiary, embedding ticketing, hospitality, and broadcast infrastructure from launch. First-season attendance averaged 11,200, filling 68% of Chase Center's lower bowl for Valkyries-specific configurations, comparable to mid-tier NBA arenas.
The 20x return in under two years signals institutional capital reassessment of women's professional sports assets. Portland paid $125 million for its 2025 expansion slot; Toronto's 2026 bid rumored near $200 million. Eight of twelve current franchises now carry valuations above their acquisition or expansion cost, per CNBC. Las Vegas ($875 million) and New York ($780 million) trail Golden State, both benefiting from new venue deals and local broadcast packages signed in the past eighteen months. The Los Angeles Sparks, valued at $680 million, operate under separate Crypto.com Arena economics despite AEG ownership overlap.
Sponsorship explains the gap. The Valkyries secured $22 million in year-one partnership revenue, anchored by Rakuten ($6 million annually, jersey patch), Google Cloud ($4 million, practice facility naming), and Charles Schwab ($3 million, founding partner tier). Each deal includes activation rights across Warriors inventory, effectively selling sponsors access to 200+ annual events across NBA, WNBA, and Chase Center concerts. Six Valkyries sponsors already held Warriors relationships. The incremental cost to extend those agreements into women's basketball proved lower than standalone market entry, according to two sponsor executives who spoke on background.
Television remains asymmetric. The Valkyries' local NBC Sports Bay Area deal pays an estimated $3 million annually, split with the league under revenue-sharing rules. Comparable Warriors rights fetch $35 million locally. But the Valkyries' twelve nationally televised games in year one—on ABC, ESPN, and CBS—drew an average 780,000 viewers, outperforming all but four NBA teams' regular-season local broadcasts in the same market. National inventory matters more in women's sports; local cable households skew older and male.
Critics note the valuation relies on projections, not transaction comps. No WNBA franchise has sold above $95 million (Connecticut Sun, 2024). The league's collective bargaining agreement expires in 2027, with player salary cap increases expected to compress margins. The Valkyries' $15 million estimated operating profit in year one reflects Chase Center cost efficiencies unlikely to transfer to single-sport operators in second-tier markets. Portland's expansion franchise, playing in a retrofitted Moda Center, projects $28 million revenue against $24 million expenses, per investor documents reviewed by Sportico.
Lacob's broader strategy positions the Valkyries as content inventory for Chase Center's 220-event annual calendar. Women's basketball fills eighteen dates in a spring window previously occupied by G League or concert dark nights. Incremental ticket, concession, and parking revenue offsets player payroll ($2.3 million in year one under the CBA). The Warriors' jersey sales include Valkyries SKU as of last summer; team officials declined to break out Valkyries merchandise contribution to the Warriors' $180 million annual retail figure.
The valuation arrives as Toronto's expansion bid enters final diligence. Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in March the league targets sixteen teams by 2028. San Francisco mayor London Breed attended eight Valkyries home games in year one, sitting courtside for playoff appearances; her deputy chief of staff joined Lacob in a luxury suite for Game Three against Seattle. No public subsidy underwrites the Valkyries, but the mayor's visibility suggests City Hall interest in Chase Center's anchor tenant diversification ahead of the venue's naming rights renewal in 2027.
The Valkyries open their second season June 3 against Las Vegas. Season ticket renewals closed April 15 at 94%, per team-supplied figures. Four additional corporate sponsor announcements expected before tipoff, according to a Valkyries executive who requested anonymity. The franchise hired a CFO in March—its first finance chief distinct from Warriors back-office leadership.
The takeaway
**$1B** valuation proves Bay Area sponsor density and arena-sharing economics can scale women's sports faster than standalone models.
wnbavaluationgolden state valkyriesfranchise economicssponsorshipexpansion
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