Motley Fool Money - The WWE Makes a Match

Episode Date: April 4, 2023

The WWE agreed to merge with UFC parent company, Endeavor Group, to form a new publicly traded company. (00:21) Dylan Lewis and Jim Gillies discuss:  - The terms of the deal, and the media rights sto...ry.  - How Vince McMahon “wins”.  - Anti-trust questions for the new company. (11:50) Alison Southwick and Robert Brokamp continue their conversation with Asit Sharma about evaluating CEOs, and an understated leader for investors to watch.  Companies discussed: WWE, OKTA, NVDA Host: Dylan Lewis  Guests: Jim Gillies, Alison Southwick, Robert Brokamp, Asit Sharma  Producer: Ricky Mulvey  Engineers: Dan Boyd, Tim Sparks, Rick Engdahl Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 If you're a small business owner, you already know what it takes to keep everything moving. You're juggling customers, invoices, and about 100 decisions every day. Thankfully, taxes don't have to be one more thing on that list. With Intuit TurboTax, you can get your business taxes done for you with a full service expert. TurboTax matches you with your dedicated tax expert. Who knows your industry understands your business write-offs and gives you the personalized advice your business deserves. upload your documents right in the app, hand everything off, and still feel like you're in the loop the whole way through. You can even get real-time updates on your expert's progress right in the app,
Starting point is 00:00:42 which makes it so much easier to stay on track. And you can get unlimited expert help at no extra cost, even on nights and weekends during tax season. Visit turbotax.com to get matched with an expert today, only available with TurboTax full service experts. Step into the ring. Motley full money starts now. I'm Dylan Lewis sitting in for Chris Hill, and I'm joined by Jim Gillies. Jim, how's it going?
Starting point is 00:01:26 It's going pretty good, Dylan. I was delighted to have you on today's show because this is so firmly in your lane the topic that we're going to be talking about today. WrestleMania was this past weekend, but the big news in wrestling this week is that the WWE, the World Wrestling Entertainment Group, is combining with Endeavor-owned UFC.
Starting point is 00:01:48 And this is one of those things that I think you've been kind of watching and saying could happen for quite some time. Yeah, I mean, we've recommended WWE in both Hidden Gems Canada, where I'm Lead Advisor as well as Stock Advisor Canada, where I contribute, where our colleague Nick Seipel also contributes, and both Nick and I have been quite outspoken, I think, that we thought WWE was going to be acquired. And it sort of is.
Starting point is 00:02:15 but it also sort of isn't. It's an interesting deal, and we'll get into the terms in a minute. The overall value of the deal, $21 billion, it brings together leaders in wrestling and in the business of entertainment. It puts a sticker price on WWE of roughly $9.3 billion. Jim, you mentioned that you felt like this was a property that would get acquired at some point. Why does partnering up with UFC here make sense? What do these two dancing partners see in each other? Sure.
Starting point is 00:02:49 Well, I'm going to first caution that the deal value of $21 billion, the value of $12.1 billion, they've slapped on UFC and the value of $9.3 billion on WWE. Those are guidelines more than hard and fast rules. They're not, you know, those are numbers they've decided to throw on to make the deal work from a tax perspective and to merge these things together. The cynical part of me, which is larger than I'd like to admit, says this deal makes sense because it's the best way for Vince McMahon, who is the controlling shareholder of WWE. He's got about just under 40% of the shares and just around 80% of the vote.
Starting point is 00:03:27 This is a way for him to stay involved, frankly, because he's going to be the new executive chairman of the combined company, as opposed to just selling for a bag of money, which was kind of what we were hoping for, because this is an all-stock deal. The true value of the company is going to be whatever the market says it's going to be once all the dust settles. Now, that said, I think this is a very good deal for pretty much everyone involved. I'm not sure it's because of the companies being put together so much as the ecosystem they happen to find themselves in, which is very advantageous for the style of business that both of these
Starting point is 00:04:07 companies do. And that can probably be summarized in two words, and that would be media rights. It's one of the large themes of streaming over the last five to ten years. And yeah, they are incredibly differentiated in what they offer, UFC and WWE. And is this just two people that are, or two groups that are really good at a specific kind of entertainment getting together and saying, we think we're better as a bundle here? To a certain degree, yes, I think. As the ecosystem, the streaming ecosystem has been developing, as you say, over the past half decade, decade. What we've learned is as people have been cord cutters and cable companies have struggled. I couldn't tell you the last time I watched
Starting point is 00:04:49 network television, but I will pay for my sports package because I want to see sports live. And that is kind of what's happening here. If you can deliver, we've all learned we can wait for the next edition of NCIS, whatever. But we want to know, we want to see sports live. We want to see it as it's happening so we can participate in kind of the broader, you know, social value of, hey, we've all watched WrestleMania last night or the most recent UFC. And so what this is, and we've seen, you know, media rights negotiated for all the big sports, you know, hockey, soccer, football, what have you, just getting ever greater value. values with the deals that they're negotiating. And like it or love it, WWE and UFC, they have
Starting point is 00:05:41 a very specific niche market who still want to see it similar to watching the most recent hockey game, watching the Super Bowl or whatever your baseball game is. And people are willing to tune in for that, which makes it really valuable from the perspective of media rights and being able to advertise to the people who are willing to pay up for that. And so, WWE has a couple of deals. They have a deal with Comcast, NBC Universal for their Monday Night Raw program and whatever night their minor league wrestling NXT shows up. They're affiliated with Peacock, which is where all of their premium live events take place,
Starting point is 00:06:21 which we used to call paper views. But they have a deal with Peacock. And they also have a deal with Fox Sports to air Friday Night Smackdown. You can probably expect the rights. We were already expecting those rights would probably go for more than double what the last round was, which is almost five years ago. Now, don't discount the possibility that you can be negotiating for both WWE rights and UFC rights.
Starting point is 00:06:51 Because I believe those are up at the end of 2025. Yeah, that's what I have in my head and in my notes here too, Jim. And yeah, I think that that's one of the interesting elements of this. The WWE is already making pretty healthy amount of money on its entertainment rights based on those past deals. I believe it's about a billion dollars a year coming in. We've seen the value of them only go up. And the timing of this, you can't help but see everything from the WWE as somewhat theatrical. They announced this, you know, right after WrestleMania, and they announced this deal right before they're heading into these big negotiations.
Starting point is 00:07:27 I feel like it only gives them more leverage as they're trying to get as much value as they possibly can out of those deals. Oh, absolutely. And, you know, I mean, it wasn't, if you know anything about Vince McMahon, and I know an unhealthy amount about Vince McMahon, I wish I could use that brainpower for something else. But, you know, he's a fascinating guy, and he does generally win on deals. Now, you know, there's some unsavory elements to the man's character as well. But as a business person focused on, as a business person focused on the wrestling business, he has been spectacular. He put everyone else pretty much, if not out of business.
Starting point is 00:08:07 I mean, he is the top dog in the industry. But if you also know anything about Vince McMahon, you know that he's been desperate to move beyond wrestling. And so, you know, he started the XFL twice. He started the World Bodybuilding Federation in the, I believe, the early 90s, something that probably no one besides me remembers. He's done all kinds of movies, like WWE pictures. He's desperate to be not wrestling. And look at this. He's just signed a deal. And now he's moving into real fights, or he's moving to a company that will be the chairman of the board for a company that does real fights as well. So this might be in, I believe he's 77.
Starting point is 00:08:46 You know, at this latter stage of his life, this is kind of, you know, he's almost getting to a spot where he's been trying desperately for years to move beyond. wrestling. He doesn't even like to use the term wrestling or wrestlers. He likes to call them sports entertainers. I mean, I've always admired the fact that as our colleague Bill Mann likes to say, sometimes you refer to someone who's a lot of success in a business, you don't really think about it. Oh, that's a public company. Vince McMahon took over a mountain. No one else wanted. That's Bill's line. And no one else realized they wanted it, except now you look at it, And he's just striking a deal that values his company at $9.3 billion, at least on paper.
Starting point is 00:09:30 Maybe a few other people should have fought for that mountain. That's all I'm saying. If I'm not mistaken, he bought the WWE from his father for $1 million back in the early 80s. Granted, he does not own the entirety of that $9.3 billion that you're talking about there. But that is a very healthy kegher on that initial investment. One of the things that I wanted to talk about with you is, Anytime we look at mergers, acquisitions, any major deals like this, we have to briefly entertain antitrust and whether anything is going to be viewed as monopolistic. You talked about this being, from the WWE's perspective, a move to get broader than wrestling.
Starting point is 00:10:08 Do you see anything here that could get in the way of this deal happening? I am very, very bad at predicting what legislators will choose to do, mainly because I try to live my life through logic. and occasionally I question theirs. So I will just say this. I don't see this as problematic. But again, I'm not the one who will ultimately decide here. I don't see it as problematic because these are, first off, there are alternatives to UFC.
Starting point is 00:10:36 There are alternatives to WWE. But I would argue that, and I would presume they would have lawyers who would argue this point far better than me, I would argue that these are entertainment brands, These are sports brands or sports entertainment brands. As such, you are lining up against not just WW versus Impact Wrestling or AEW or New Japan or whatever. You're lining up against Monday Night Football. You're lining up against 162 games of Major League Baseball.
Starting point is 00:11:08 You're lining up against the Stanley Cup playoff starting in a few weeks. As entertainment brands, this is still a relatively small, even together, with the Stanley Cup playoff, with UFC, this is a relatively small entity at about $20, $21 billion, again, on paper. We'll see. And so I don't, do I think that antitrust regulators will look? Of course, they'll look. Do I think it will block the deal? I would be betting no.
Starting point is 00:11:38 The truth about antitrust is it always comes down to how you define markets, right? Baseball says hi. Well, that's a look at potentially at wrestling's future. But before we wrap, Jim, I have to look back to this past weekend and ask you. I know you're a fan of the WWE. Do you have a favorite moment from WrestleMania? I would say night one where Kevin Owens and Sammy Zane defeated the dastardly bloodline to become the tag team champions. Because both Sammy Zane and Kevin Owens are proud Canadians.
Starting point is 00:12:09 And so I'm going to raise the flag. Listeners, if you don't know those names, you're just like me. I did a lot of frantic Googling for the team. this episode to make sure I was up to speed. And I'm happy to do that. It's nice to learn something new. It's always nice to talk to my friend Jim Gillies. Jim, thank you so much. Thank you, sir. Last week on the podcast, Robert Brokamp and Allison Southwick talked leadership with analyst Asset Sharma. Today, they pick up that conversation with how investors can evaluate CEOs, including one of the
Starting point is 00:12:42 most understated leaders to watch. Let's start off today with looking at the management team's quality. And Why do you look at that when you're evaluating a CEO? You know, it's funny because the management team is about so much more than one person, but it's often the CEO who is driving the rest of the selection of that executive suite. And so this is a reflection of that toolkit that we were talking about last week that I said, should be broad, it should be wide. They should be good at so many things and be able to handle these opposite skill pairs at once.
Starting point is 00:13:23 So, when you look at most of the companies that are fun to invest in, that are growing, let's say they each have one or two identifiable, strategic imperatives that seem to override everything else. We've got to expand our cloud-based platform, or we have to increase our user's engagement. How capable is that management team in making these critical imperatives happen? Well, the CEO is the person who has chosen the people in the various seats who can work together as a team to do all the thousand things that may drive engagement for a company A or platform growth for company B.
Starting point is 00:14:04 So I think this is simultaneously learning something about a company, but also, again, going back to the first driver of leadership, which is that executive chair position. So how do you figure that out? I mean, it's often difficult enough to find information about a CEO, especially, if you're trying to get beyond the PR and the salespersonship. How do you dig a lower level down to find out who's in charge of a project and do research on that person? One of the first things you can do is simply go to a corporate page and look at the management team. Most people will put their C-suite people all on one page.
Starting point is 00:14:42 And then from there, interestingly enough, I mean, two great sources are LinkedIn profiles and something that Tom Gardner taught me, which is like you. You can find interviews with chief marketing officers and chief financial officers and chief product officers. Go watch those videos. You're going to learn a lot about those people. All the skills that we develop trying to judge these CEOs, guess what? They're really translatable when you start to get a bead on the other people that are assisting
Starting point is 00:15:09 the CEO. And many times I've come away just wowed by a management team, I'm like, these guys really seem to have something here. And other times I've been like, boy, they are, they're, they're. They're all so boring and they don't seem excited by their products and services. Do I want to invest in this company? Come on, team. You wake me up.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Do you have an example of a management team that recently made you go, one way or the other? Good or bad. Let's skip the bad because there's several of them. They could come after me. Yeah. Let's get that. We'll go for the good. So what?
Starting point is 00:15:49 Name a management team. Now you have five people after you. I think for me, Octa's management team is great. This is a company that's been around for a while. They hit a speed bump, and they've had some turnover actually on their management team. But going back to the founders, like the people they've selected to move into new positions, those who are sticking around, they're really personable people, always very smart and vibrant. I think there are some good videos.
Starting point is 00:16:20 on the internet as well that you can find from that management team. So both the mix of old and new, I think that's a team that usually impresses me and still does today. All right. Let's move on to incentives. This is a fun one. Who doesn't love talking about corporate pay, golden parachutes, all that kind of stuff. So what do you look at when it comes to how the CEO is incentivized? Very, very much. We should try to tie a company's incentives to management's incentives. So if a company is incentive, let's say to grow revenue. That's what investors are rewarding. Then it makes sense if management is incentivized to grow revenue. Sometimes you see incentives that are just shaped towards share
Starting point is 00:17:04 price, which is this double-edgedged sword. And I sort of hate and I love it. There's a poem by this dead Latin poet, I think he's Latin, Catullus, Odietammo. I hate and I love. And I feel this way about this kind of incentive when you say, a board says, basically, okay, is, okay, if this company quadruples or goes up eightfold in the next 10 years, then the CEO is going to get a gazillion billion dollars. That's not tying the company's performance to anything that's long-lasting except share price. On the other hand, if you hold shares, and it goes up eight-fold in five years, okay, maybe that makes some sense there. But the red flag that I would love to bring up here is just if you're reading through a proxy statement, or maybe if you're
Starting point is 00:17:52 not an investor who likes to go to that level of detail, if you just understand from interviews, etc., or reading a company's filings, how the management is incentivized, if you see something that's just way out of whack, where it looks like through accounting manipulation or through just a few big maneuvers, a management-level person can get a big payout, that's something to be careful of. Don't just look past that and say, oh, I like everything else about the company. It can often come back to bite you as an investor. So you have an accounting background. So when you're talking about looking at the funny jiu-jitsu that they might be doing, it's maybe going to be more obvious to you than it is to someone who doesn't have an accounting background. So
Starting point is 00:18:34 for someone like me, what am I looking for? Yeah. And the most common one is, and I see bro nodding his head, because we're watching each other as we record, is earnings per share, right? So, when you see these big incentives that are tied too much to earnings per share growth, and a company, let's say, has obscenely great cash flow, but they're not investing in the future, but they're buying back shares so that there are fewer shares outstanding. So earnings on a per share basis look better and better and better, and then the management team's getting a lot of money for that climbing number, where we know that the company, isn't building up its resources for the future. That's sort of a great yellow red flag that I'm talking
Starting point is 00:19:17 about. You don't need an accounting degree to look through that. All right. Now we talked a bit about management teams, but here's another sort of group influencing the CEO, and that is the board. How do you evaluate a board of directors? There are two types of boards. So there are like boards that are filled with professional board members who make a living. They've had a former eminence, and now they sit on four or five different boards and tend to rubber stamp what a company does. And then there are boards that are constructed really with the idea to help the company reach a certain goal. And a great CEO isn't going to give themselves the easy way out and to pull in a board
Starting point is 00:19:56 that's going to rubber stamp actions, but they will find board members that help them learn, challenge them, help the company grow, bring relevant expertise in every area, and are tough in some circumstances to work with. you actually want people who are going to challenge you. So it's a very simple sort of dividing line for me. I just ask that question. Is this more rubber stamp or is this more let's go conquer this market? And if the board is the kind that's going to help a company do that in a way that's also looking at the fiduciary interests of the company and making sure that shareholders are well served, that's the kind of board that I personally gravitate towards.
Starting point is 00:20:35 How do you evaluate a rubber-stamped board? Is it just like as easy as looking at being like, oh, this board is full of 90-year-old ex-senators. That's a rubber-stampy board. Like, how do you tell? Yeah, I mean, it's funny. You should say that because age can be really great in a board. I mean, sometimes, like, the oldest members who have the most experience. But again, if it looks like that's all that they're doing with their time is just serving on multiple boards, then maybe they're not contributing as much. So this, this is, This is one thing that I look at is to try to understand how involved the board member is
Starting point is 00:21:16 with that. If they're on four or six or eight boards, how much time can they spend with company X? That's one. And the second is, too, I think you've touched on something important, which is diversity. All kinds of diversity help a board. Diversity of perspectives, diversity of experiences. Yes, some of the things that get more controversial in the real world, does it have gender diversity? Is there a racial diversity? I look for these things, because I think these are all
Starting point is 00:21:45 types of diversity that bring different experiences to a board and really inform a robust debate around whatever the subcommittees are working on. Boards are broken into subcommittees. I think that's always helpful for a board. And when I find a board that's very homogenous, it doesn't have to be like 9-year-old people. It could be a group of like 20-somethings that a tech bro now founder has built up. I think, like, okay, I'm going to dig a little more here. I don't think this could be that great for this company. Yeah, now, I don't want to get accused of ageism here, but I guess I was just more going for the homogeneity of it. You were also thinking of Theranos' board. I was. That's exactly what I was thinking of. My rule of thumb is,
Starting point is 00:22:28 if I look at the board and I know everyone, they're in trouble because they're on the board because they're famous, not because they're like particularly technically knowledgeable. about some aspect of that business. Oh, that's a good one, too. I like that. All right, awesome, we're in the home stretch. And the last one we're going to talk about today is actions speak louder. What are you talking about here? So, narrative is very, very important for anyone who's investing.
Starting point is 00:22:52 Do you want to understand what a company's narrative is? I was mentioning looking through earnings calls, transcripts. That's a great place to understand where a company is going, what its goals are, how it's trying to compete with its rivals and its, marketplace, where it's innovating. But it's important to understand the assessments that a management team may give and their plans. We were just talking about this. Are the plans the correct ones? Are the estimates and projections that they're laying out reasonable? There's a really fun way to do this, to see is a company executing or is it moving the goalpost?
Starting point is 00:23:26 And that's to go back a couple of years and look at old earnings transcripts and to see what the narrative was two years ago. Management said they were going to do X. Well, Just look at the latest transcript as it looks like they were executing on this. Did they change the narrative because whatever they put forward was the wrong solution? I think older earnings call transcripts are often more informative than the one that's hot off the press from last week's earnings. I think looking at the past earnings calls and transcripts are interesting, because so much of businesses, frankly, predictions, right?
Starting point is 00:24:03 Like you're making a prediction where you think a market is going or technology is going and you want your business to be skating where the puck will be, as they say. You want to know, like, do these business leaders have a pretty good idea of where things will be one to five years from now? Yeah, absolutely, bro. And what you're looking for really isn't that sort of aha-gotchu moment, maybe that I was juicing up just now. But if you're looking for that confluence of what you thought about the team and it really happening, that's where you get, I get the warm fuzzy, You're like, okay, two years ago, they thought the puck was going here.
Starting point is 00:24:36 And look, it went there. So they're pretty good at this. They sort of have some vision. And I want to keep following this company and investing in them. All right, Asset, before we let you go, do you have an all-time favorite ride-or-die-die-die-sego? It doesn't matter what company there at the helm of you would follow them through the gates of hell. Or like whatever CEO comes closest to that for you. Alison, I'm the type who will follow a leader towards the gates of hell.
Starting point is 00:25:03 And then I'm like, hey, take that exit off the interstate before we get there because, you know, I just want to want to hit the bathroom and then I'm out of there. But there are some CEOs that I really like. I mean, I would definitely like ride in that direction with them. One is Jensen Huang. I think Jensen Huang, who is the CEO and founder of NVIDIA, is one of the most, I want to say, understated CEOs out there. I mentioned him earlier in last week's episode here.
Starting point is 00:25:33 I also think that he's going to turn out to be one of the most consequential CEOs of this century, just because of how pervasive Nvidia's tech is in everything now and the role it's going to play in generative artificial intelligence. What I like about Jensen Wong is he inspires amazing employees to stay for the long term, like Ian Buck, who was one of the pioneers of the parallel processing technology that informs all of Nvidia's products now, came years ago and has just enjoyed staying there and has created more and more value for shareholders. One example of one of the intangibles that I talked about earlier, Jensen Huang sent a letter to his employees last
Starting point is 00:26:15 summer when the company hit the skids on its revenue. They missed their revenue estimates by $1 billion, one quarter. And he basically told employees, look, I'm not going to do any layoffs. And by the way, here's a raise for your families. I know inflation is spiking times are tough. We'll cut in other places. We're going to get through this together. We see so many companies this year, big tech companies laying off thousands and tens of thousands of employees. Well, guess what? Invidia is back in a big way this year, and part of that is the way that Jensen Huang manages the company, the culture there, his passion for his people, his care for his people. Lastly, about him, curiosity and passion, they're off the charts. This is a person who looks at these
Starting point is 00:26:59 weird fundamental physics problems. And he's done this for decades. And he's an engineer by training and asked, like, how could we realize this? If we made a chip architecture to try to solve this one problem, and then they spend years trying to develop an answer. And I really love that about Jensen Huang. I would stay with him probably until the very last exit on that highway to hell. As always, people on the program may own stocks mentioned, and the Motley Fool may have four more recommendations for or against. So don't buy or sell anything based solely on what you hear. We'll catch you next time.
Starting point is 00:27:39 I'm Dill Mose.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.