Showing posts with label Chicago Cubs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago Cubs. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

WRIGLEY FIELD NAMING RIGHTS MIGHT BE SOLD

Chicago billionaire Sam Zell said in an interview on CNBC that he will not hesitate to sell the naming rights for Wrigley Field, home of the Chicago Cubs.

From AP via The Chicago Tribune:

Zell said he plans to sell the Cubs and Wrigley separately and in his own time frame. He also disclosed that Major League Baseball has approved "four or six" potential ownership groups and that any one of them would be fine.

The sale of the team has been delayed by Zell's plan to sell the team and the stadium separately, and to have a state agency acquire and renovate Wrigley

Thursday, December 13, 2007

BUSINESS NEWS IN BRIEF

NOVEMBER RETAIL SALES UP 1.2% - Reuters
Sales at retailers posted a much stronger-than-expected 1.2 percent rise in November, government data showed on Thursday, as holiday shoppers coped with high energy costs and the fallout from a housing slump.

Excluding autos, retail sales gained 1.8 percent, the Commerce Department said.


ILLINOIS INVESTIGATING COUNTRYWIDE FINANCIAL - The New York Times

The Illinois attorney general is investigating the home loan unit of Countrywide Financial as part of the state’s expanding inquiry into dubious lending practices that have trapped borrowers in high-cost mortgages they can no longer afford.

The inquiry follows an investigation by Ms. Madigan’s office into One Source Mortgage, a Chicago mortgage broker that recently closed its doors. Ms. Madigan sued One Source on Nov. 27, contending that the company misled borrowers by promising low rates on mortgages without advising them that their payments would jump sharply shortly after the loans were made. Countrywide was One Source’s primary lender, according to the lawsuit.



PRODUCER PRICE INDEX JUMPS 3.2% - Reuters
Producer prices surged 3.2 percent in November, the biggest rise in 34 years, on a record rise in gasoline prices, the Labor Department said on Thursday.

Excluding food and energy prices, the producer price index rose an unexpectedly large 0.4 percent, the heftiest gain since February, the report showed. When cars and light trucks also were stripped out, core producer prices rose 0.1 percent.


CONGRESS VOTES TO MOVE RETIREMENT FOR AIRLINE PILOTS TO 65 - USA Today

The Senate approved a measure late Wednesday allowing airline pilots to continue flying past age 60.

Final passage of the bill first approved unanimously on Tuesday by the House answers pleas by older pilots who have lost their pensions because of airline bankruptcies. The bill now awaits President Bush's signature.



STATE INTERESTED IN BUYING WRIGLEY FIELD - Chicago Tribune
City and state officials have had discussions with Cubs executives about possibly selling historic Wrigley Field to a state government entity that currently owns and operates the White Sox's home, U.S. Cellular Field, sources close to the Cubs told the Tribune.

The talks with state and city officials centered on selling the 93-year-old facility to the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, the government unit the Illinois General Assembly created in 1987 for the purpose of building new Comiskey Park, now U.S. Cellular Field.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

CUBS EXPECTED TO FETCH $1 BILLION IN 2008

The Cubs have announced that they expect to complete the sale of the team in the first half of 2008 and plan to use the proceeds to pay down some debt and complete the $8.2 billion buyout from Chicago billionaire Sam Zell.

From Reuters via MSNBC:

Publisher and broadcaster Tribune Co said on Wednesday it now expects to complete the sale of the Chicago Cubs baseball team, Wrigley Field and other assets in the first half of 2008.

Analysts believe the assets, which include a stake in sports cable TV network [Comcast] SportsNet Chicago, could attract bids topping $1 billion.

Monday, April 02, 2007

CHICAGO TRIBUNE SOLD TO SAM ZELL

From ChicagoTribune.com:

After an epic corporate drama, Chicago's Tribune Co. sold itself in a deal that puts the 159-year-old media conglomerate in the hands of the city's most iconoclastic entrepreneur, setting up a high-stakes bet that a pillar of the nation's old-media establishment can tug itself into the digital future without toppling over.
Early Monday, following a weekend of heated negotiations, the company's board accepted a revised $34-dollar-a-share proposal from Chicago real estate magnate Sam Zell to take the company private in a complex, $8.2 billion deal structured around an employee stock ownership plan.

In addition, the Tribune said it intends to sell the Chicago Cubs and its 25 percent stake in local sports cable channel Comcast SportsNet Chicago.