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Thursday, May 12, 2005

Pickoff Moves

McCourt Refinances, Borrows $250M, Parked In Chavez

Comments from the Pollyanna peanut gallery aside, the news that Frank McCourt has come up with $250M in new financing is possibly good news, though it should be noted he's doing so with the aim of retiring $221M in existing debt. The terms of the loan is 5.66% fixed for 25 years, a solid deal for McCourt, considering. Given that the U.S. Treasury recently dusted off its 30-year notes, can anyone not take this as a sign that interest rates are headed up, and for a long, long time? The only downside I can see to this -- and it isn't all that great -- is that McCourt will be borrowing slightly more, which means he'll have to increase prices of everything at the stadium yet again. His notes are triple-A rated, which is more than we can say for Ford or GM. However, in their defense, customers have legal recourse against the carmakers when the latter hand them a bad product; all we can do with the Dodgers is throw things at the TV set.

In related news, dodgers.com reported that the Dodgers will stay in Chavez Ravine for 25 years. While the parking lots may not be safe over time, the possibility -- and it really is only a possibility, for as Jon points out, "agreements are made to be broken" -- is that the Dodgers aren't going to play their games anywhere else for a while. It's a pleasant thought.

Roster Notes

Liars, Damn Liars, And Marketing Executives

Heh!
My heart beats harder whenever I encounter another human being so obsessed with sports that it has taken over their daily lives .... Inspired, I tried to write a baseball-themed ad for one of my clients this afternoon. It was promptly killed by the rest of the creative team, who told me that most people just don’t care about baseball. I am glad to know that this is a lie.

Comments:
My point was actually that if you want a good rate, better to do it now, as rates are climbing; the fact that the treasury is issuing 30-year-notes at present means they think they can sucker some people into buying them while rates rise over the coming years, leaving them to hold the bag on a bad investment.
 
Bad show by UTK (whomever that is) for releasing Sosa's confidential medical info. I don't care to much about the leak per se, except that it places the hospital at liability under the stick HIPPA confidentiality guidelines established by the feds. Anyhow, MSRA is bad new but it is not untreatable. My brothers best friend just had a cut infected by it within the last month and now he is ship shape. The doctors just have to use a different antibiotic.
 

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