SourceESPN ↗
SubjectNew York Liberty
CategoryWomen's Sports
SignalValuation survey published
TierLOUIS XIII

The New York Liberty is worth $3.2 billion, according to Forbes' latest franchise valuation survey, making it the most valuable women's sports property on earth. No other women's franchise—WNBA, NWSL, European women's football—has crossed $3 billion. Clara Wu Tsai's team, purchased for $60 million in 2019, has multiplied 53x in five years.

The jump is structural, not speculative. The WNBA's new media rights deal, announced last July, pays the league $2.2 billion over eleven years—$200 million annually, up from $60 million. That baseline change rerates every franchise. The Liberty also plays in Barclays Center, shares infrastructure with the Nets, and sits in the densest sponsorship market in North America. Forbes counts $75 million in annual revenue for the Liberty, roughly $30 million above the league median. Margin is narrow—WNBA teams still lose money—but the asset trades on where the puck is going, not where it sits today.

What this means: women's sports franchises are no longer subordinated debt on a men's sports balance sheet. They're standalone assets with institutional bid lists. The Liberty's $3.2 billion figure implies a 42x revenue multiple, well above even NBA teams at 8-10x. That's not irrational exuberance. It's family offices and private equity pricing in scarcity—12 WNBA teams, fixed supply, rising media guarantees, and demographic tailwinds no one wants to short. The Liberty's rise also resets the floor for expansion. Commissioner Cathy Engelbert has said the next WNBA team will cost north of $200 million. That was before this valuation. Expect $300-400 million as the new ask, perhaps higher if San Francisco or Seattle bids materialize.

The Liberty's operating profile explains the premium. Tsai rebuilt the front office in 2020, hired Sandy Brondello after she won a title in Phoenix, and paid Breanna Stewart and Jonquel Jones above-market deals to secure a championship in 2024. The team sold out Barclays for the Finals, drew 15,000+ per game in the playoffs, and signed Unilever as a jersey patch sponsor at an undisclosed but likely mid-seven-figure annual rate. The Liberty also runs its own content studio, licensing highlights to TikTok and Instagram accounts that pull 8-10 million views per playoff game. That's monetizable inventory the league didn't control three years ago.

Other WNBA franchises are watching. The Las Vegas Aces, owned by Mark Davis, play in a 12,000-seat arena and win titles but lack the Liberty's sponsorship density. The Los Angeles Sparks, controlled by a group that includes Magic Johnson and Mark Walter, have the market but haven't fielded a contender since 2017. The Liberty's valuation creates a comp set for anyone trying to sell or refinance. It also creates pressure: if you own a WNBA team and can't extract $3 billion in enterprise value over a decade, you're underperforming the market.

What to watch: The WNBA's expansion process, currently targeting 14 teams by 2026, will test whether the Liberty's valuation is an outlier or a new floor. Portland and Toronto are expected to submit bids by March 2025. Those auction results will clarify whether $300 million+ entry fees are sustainable. Also watch the Liberty's 2025 season-ticket renewal rate, due by February. If renewals hold above 90% after a championship year, the franchise can justify premium pricing and sponsorship lifts heading into a renegotiated lease discussion with Barclays in 2027.

The Liberty is now worth more than 18 NHL franchises, more than Major League Soccer's most valuable team (LAFC, $1.2 billion), and more than the Phoenix Suns sold for in 2022 ($4 billion, but that included the Mercury at a stub valuation). Women's sports are no longer the side bet. They're the asset class institutional capital is rotating into while the terms are still friendly.

wnbavaluationsfranchise-saleswomens-sportsexpansionnew-york-liberty
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