Fanatics Inc. raised a new round of funding valuing the online sports-merchandise retailer at $18bn, people familiar with the matter said, roughly tripling its valuation from a year ago as it works to expand into new business lines, including sports betting.
The company raised $325 million in a funding round that closed Monday with new investors including rapper Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter and the entertainment company he founded called Roc Nation LLC and existing investors Major League Baseball, SoftBank Group Corp.’s Vision Fund, and private equity giant Silver Lake, the people said.
Subscribe to our Newsletter to increase your edge. Don’t worry about the news anymore, through our newsletter you’ll receive weekly access to what is happening. Join 120,000 other PE professionals today.
Fanatics has been working to grow its business beyond its core of selling sports apparel and memorabilia online and some bricks-and-mortar locations. It launched a nonfungible token company called Candy Digital earlier this year.
The company plans to use the new capital to transform itself into a digital platform with multiple related businesses, such as ticketing and media in addition to sports betting and internet gambling.
“We think we have a structural advantage to building any digital sports business, and online sports betting is no different,” said Michael Rubin, Fanatics’ founder and executive chairman, referencing the company’s database of 83 million people who have interacted with Fanatics.
Source: Wall Street Journal
Can’t stop reading? Read more
Top private equity news of the week
Top private equity news of the week Harvard University is advancing plans to sell approximately...
Edmond de Rothschild launches private equity fund of funds under Eltif 2.0 to expand private investor access
Edmond de Rothschild launches private equity fund of funds under Eltif 2.0 to expand private...
Private equity firms advance bids for Poundland as sale process accelerates
Private equity firms advance bids for Poundland as sale process accelerates The sale of high...