Apollo, Ares to Open Professional Sports Investments to Retail Clients
Some of the leading alternative investment managers, like Apollo and Ares Management, are working on new funds that would open the exclusive world of sports investing to individual investors. Ares' top chief Michael Arougheti reportedly said financial advisors had specifically requested the new strategies for their clients. It's the latest move to democratize investments in sports, while opening up a whole new segment of lucrative customers to alternative asset managers.
READ ALSO: Bonsai With Clients? Here Are Advisors' Favorite Pastimes and M&A Just Broke More Records. But What Happens to Clients?
Neck and Neck
Ares became the undisputed heavyweight in the sports sector after it raised a $3.7 billion fund in 2022. Its next venture will target both debt and equity investments across sports leagues and media businesses in a semi-liquid fund that pays out quarterly, according to a Bloomberg report published last week. The Los Angeles-based firm has its sights on some $100 billion in assets from individual investors by 2028, which it said could generate an estimated $600 million in management fees.
Not to be outdone, Apollo wants to build a 'permanent capital vehicle' that would eye up longer-term investments in the industry. That strategy would primarily focus on loans to professional sports teams and leagues, with the option to take equity positions, per the report.
The funds come on the heels of a groundbreaking decision by the National Football League to allow private equity firms to take minority stakes in individual franchises last year — a rule that paved the way for owners to raise fresh capital. About a third of all teams in both Major League Baseball and the National Basketball Association are already backed by PE.
The Home Stretch. It could become big business for the alts industry. Alternative assets are expected to top $2.5 trillion by the end of 2028, according to a 2024 report from Cerulli. The research also found:
Advisors owned roughly $1.4 trillion in less-than-fully-liquid alternative investment assets last year.
While just 13% of AUM is from the retail channel, it's projected to almost double to 23% over the next three years.
The downside is that the funds will likely only be accessible to accredited investors — those who generally meet $1 million in investable assets minimums, or other income thresholds — and can sometimes come with minimums in the millions of dollars, experts said. Space will also be limited until more products launch, with similar funds closing in about a month. Get 'em while they're hot.
This post first appeared on The Daily Upside. To receive financial advisor news, market insights, and practice management essentials, subscribe to our free Advisor Upside newsletter.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Legendary Long Island law firm Sullivan-Papain turns 100
They've pleased the court. A Long Island law firm that changed the world using out-of-the-box thinking on everything from smoking to cars to beer at baseball games is celebrating centenarian status this year. 'Everything that you have grown up with and have taken for granted is because of what's happened in this firm over the last 100 years,' New York State Supreme Court Justice Christopher McGrath told The Post of firm Sullivan-Papain, which has recovered north of $2 billion in settlements in the past decade alone. 4 Sullivan-Papain partners Thomas McManus, Eleni Coffinas, John Nash, Nick Papain (back row left to right) and Bob Sullivan (seated) at the law firm's office in Garden City. Dennis A. Clark The judge cut his teeth with the Garden City-based practice as a 23-year-old under the tutelage of its late 5'2″ skinny founder, Harry Lipsig, who was a giant in the legal world 50-something years ago. 'He was just different. He's a genius — and yet, we'll call him a little quirky at the same time,' McGrath said. 'One time, my job was to meet him at his apartment at seven in the morning. The train got me in late at 7:05, and he said, 'Good afternoon.' ' Lipsig's high standards weren't without reason. He used a mix of sheer brilliance and common sense to change how the world operated; perhaps most notably, starting with how stadiums sold beer 80 years ago, after a man at a New York Giants baseball game got belted in the head with a glass bottle at the old Polo Grounds. 4 Harry Lipsig was a founding partner of the 100-year-old firm. Dennis A. Clark 'The Polo Grounds was saying it wasn't their fault. … 'We can't put a police officer in every other seat. We can't have everybody stop anybody from throwing something down,' ' recalled senior partner Bob Sullivan. During the three-day trial, Lipsig, who passed away in 1989 at age 89, brought a mysterious handheld paper bag into court with him each day and left it sealed on the table. 'When he got to summation, he pulled out a paper cup and he said, 'This is how you stop it.' … That's how that came to be in stadiums all across the country,' Sullivan said. 4 Senior partner Bob Sullivan recalls the creative way Lipsig was able to win a case against the old Polo Grounds stadium. Dennis A. Clark On a case-by-case basis The novel way of thinking that Lipsig was known for — he once won a shark-bite case by proving the victim's hotel wasn't dumping its garbage far enough at sea and drew in the predators — has been passed down generation to generation. New York state recruited Sullivan-Papain in its lawsuit against smoking companies in the late 1990s, which yielded an end to cigarette ads and $25 billion in recovery locally. 'The genius was that we didn't represent the smokers, we represented the nonsmokers,' Sullivan said. 'Your taxes, what you pay for Medicare, Medicaid, for all these people who got sick and were dying of cancer, went through the roof. That was the key point.' 4 Partner Nick Papain was involved in a case that helped make cars safer. Dennis A. Clark Ironically, most of the firm's team on the case was hooked on nicotine. 'Every hour, we would take a 10-minute break so the lawyers could go out and smoke,' said partner Nicholas Papain, a lawyer who led to changes in how cars are built. He was involved in several cases of people who got into accidents by unintentionally hitting the gas rather than the brake when first getting into their cars. Ultimately, the high-volume litigation led to automakers keeping gearshifts locked unless a driver's foot was on the brake. The firm has also branched out into medical malpractice and represented the FDNY for four decades, with partner Eleni Coffinas saying cancer patients often find emotional strength in court victories. Sullivan-Papain has done an estimated $40 million in pro bono work for the families of first responders on 9/11, too. 'I think it speaks to that firm culture, philosophy, that is a big reason why it has been around for 100 years,' said managing partner TJ McManus, who added that it is common for new workers to hear of Lipsig's legend during their first week on the job. 'I think he set certain parameters and a legacy that is followed all the way through to today.'

Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Kamala Harris isn't running for California governor. Is Rick Caruso?
SACRAMENTO, California — Kamala Harris just answered the biggest question in California politics. Now everyone is asking about Rick Caruso. For months, the prospect of Harris' entry into the governor's race froze the 2026 contest as candidates and donors waited to see if she would seize the frontrunner's mantle. But if Harris was the largest domino still teetering, the Los Angeles billionaire and former mayoral candidate was widely seen as a close second — and Harris' pass has given him options. 'I do think he'd now be more likely to look to a possible gubernatorial race," said Donna Bojarsky, a Los Angeles civic leader and fundraiser. 'There's not only no obvious frontrunner — there's a very challenging path for every single person running.' Caruso's political debut ended in failure when the Republican-turned-Democrat mall magnate lost his City Hall bid by seven points despite sinking more than $100 million of his own wealth into the campaign. But few political observers thought he was finished, and his path diverged into two obvious choices: challenge Bass again or shift his aim to the governor's office. Without Harris, the governor's race looks like a wide open contest. And while Caruso has been circumspect about his next move — he did not release a statement about Harris bowing out and declined to comment for this story — behind the scenes, the wheels are turning. Supporters lit up Caruso's phone after Harris made her announcement, according to a confidante, some urging him to run for governor, while others pushing the mayoral race. Harris' decision gave Caruso a cleaner path in the governor's race, given that he would no longer have to contend with the former vice president's universal name ID and strong fundraising. 'The race has opened up a bit. Kamala had weaknesses and a ceiling, but she had support, too,' said the confidante, who was granted anonymity to discuss Caruso's view of the political playing field. 'Everything clicked up a notch, maybe two notches, as far as the excitement level. But in terms of a plan, it's going to be a while.' The signals from Caruso world that suggest he is in no rush to declare reflects the billionaire's luxury of time, given his ability to self-fund. So far, Caruso has taken a deliberate approach. He has polled both races and spent the last five or six months traversing California on a listening tour with prominent political donors, including tech entrepreneurs, gathering their input on key issues and their thoughts about outgoing Gov. Gavin Newsom. Caruso has often acted and sounded like a man still running for mayor, lambasting Bass over her faltering response to the January wildfires, which ignited while she was out of the country. But in recent weeks, Bass has found some footing, rallying her base against the Trump administration's sweeping immigration raids and presiding over a steady reduction in homelessness. 'After the fires, the prevailing wisdom was Karen Bass was politically vulnerable and Caruso was a prime opponent to run against her — six months later she's seen as handling the ICE raids in LA very well and her political standing is much better than it was,' said Kevin Liao, a Los Angeles-based political consultant who has worked in the California statehouse. 'Governor appears like a path he'd have a more realistic chance of winning.' In 2022, Caruso ran for mayor as a business-savvy outsider willing to defy an ossified political establishment. He sought to win over working-class and Latino voters disillusioned with the city's pervasive homelessness problem and spiraling cost of living. It was not enough to win in deep-blue Los Angeles, where Bass enjoyed the backing of labor unions and was well known to voters and political power brokers after years in Congress. But some observers believe there is an audience for a similar message in the 2026 governor's race after California Democrats lost ground in 2024. 'Many Californians, including lifelong Democrats, are looking for change in California,' said Sam Yebri, a nonprofit executive and head of a centrist political group who supports Caruso. 'Voters in this moment want someone who will deliver real results for the average Californian, not someone who will just kick and scream and stomp around about the Trump administration.' A governor's race would offer new insight into how Caruso defines his political identity. His past affiliation with the GOP has led many stalwart Democrats to view him skeptically and his party shape-shifting was used as a cudgel against him in the 2022 race against Bass. But Caruso has since tried to shore up his bona fides as a Democrat, including donating to the party's House candidates last cycle and co-hosting a Joe Biden fundraiser. A visit to Caruso's office has also become a rite of passage for would-be 2028 Democratic presidential aspirants in Los Angeles to raise money and rub shoulders with Hollywood's elite. Caruso would also hold an important asset in a prohibitively expensive statewide race. He could draw on his considerable fortune to counter the family wealth of Eleni Kounalakis and small-dollar appeal of former Rep. Katie Porter. 'Think of the governor's race as a congested freeway — Rick has the resources to at least clear a lane for himself,' said former Los Angeles Councilmember Mike Bonin, who now directs the Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs. He could also seize the moderate lane from contenders like former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who would be vying for a similar base without being able to marshal Caruso's resources. But money isn't everything, as Caruso's 2022 bid showed. In an overwhelmingly blue state where many Democratic base voters are itching for combat with a hostile Trump administration, Caruso may not have a message for the moment. 'The shoals of California politics are littered with the wrecks of rich centrists who try to run for higher office,' said Mike Shimpock, a Southern California political consultant. 'There's always this belief that there's some secret centrist path to the governorship. I find it akin to the yellow brick road: It doesn't really exist.'
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
The Lakers' full 2025-26 preseason schedule has been revealed
It may be the middle of the summer, but before we know it, it will be time for NBA teams to report to training camp and start the new season. About two months ago, the Los Angeles Lakers announced their preseason schedule for the upcoming season. They will have games at Arena versus the Golden State Warriors and Sacramento Kings, as well as a contest at Acrisure Arena in greater Palm Springs against the Phoenix Suns and one in Las Vegas against the Dallas Mavericks. Their full preseason schedule has now been revealed, per Khobi Price of Southern California News Group. The Lakers will also play a road game on Oct. 5 versus the Warriors and another one against the Suns on Oct. 14. One thing to note is that the Lakers will have a set of back-to-back games on Oct. 14 and Oct. 15, as well as a total of four games in six games to close out their exhibition schedule. It will therefore be interesting to see how much the team's veterans, especially LeBron James, will play during that stretch. This article originally appeared on LeBron Wire: The Lakers' full 2025-26 preseason schedule has been revealed