The Carolina Hurricanes closed three minority ownership transactions this week, adding former forward Bobby Farnham and two undisclosed investment groups to the franchise's cap table. NHL Board of Governors approved the stakes at the December meeting. The moves keep majority owner Tom Dundon above 70% equity while adding $40M-$60M in estimated capital, based on the franchise's $1.5B enterprise value set during Dundon's 2018 acquisition at $420M and subsequent market repricing.
Farnham played 27 NHL games for Carolina across three seasons, last appearing 2016. He joins a minority tier that includes Dundon family office allocations and three regional real estate operators who entered 2021. The two new investment groups have not been named but league filings show one Charlotte-based family office and one multi-family vehicle with holdings in Southeastern industrial logistics. All three stakes clear the NHL's 3% minimum threshold for Board review but remain under 10% individually, keeping governance concentrated.
The timing matters for two reasons. First, Dundon has spent 18 months repositioning the franchise's revenue base after local sponsorship declined 11% year-over-year through Q2 2024, per team financial disclosures. Adding partners with Charlotte and Raleigh business networks creates natural sponsor pipeline without hiring external consultants. Farnham specifically brings youth hockey relationships across North Carolina, where the Hurricanes operate 14 branded training facilities generating $8M annual licensing revenue. His equity stake formalizes what was already a paid advisory role.
Second, the Hurricanes are 22 months from a 2027 arena naming rights renewal with PNC, currently paying $3.3M annually in a deal signed 2002. Comparable recent NHL agreements (Mullett in Arizona at $5M, Climate Pledge in Seattle at $6M) suggest a $12M-$15M annual floor for a renovated building in a top-25 metro. Dundon has privately told potential sponsors he wants a financial services brand, not a consumer-facing tech platform. Two of the new minority partners run firms that clear PNC's credit committee for commercial real estate syndication, a signal the franchise is building leverage for the negotiation.
The expanded ownership group also simplifies Dundon's long-term succession planning. He turns 54 in 2025 and has no children involved in hockey operations. Adding operational partners with 15-year investment horizons removes pressure to sell if his private equity portfolio requires liquidity. The Hurricanes generate $210M annual revenue with $42M operating income, per Forbes 2024 estimates, making minority stakes attractive to regional buyers who cannot underwrite a full franchise but want exposure to Sun Belt sports infrastructure.
Watch three developments. First, whether Farnham takes a formal front-office title by the end of this season, signaling deeper operational integration. Second, whether the Hurricanes announce a PNC Arena renovation plan before the 2025 All-Star break, which would trigger early naming rights conversations. Third, whether Dundon adds another minority partner before the NHL's June 2025 Board meeting, continuing the strategy of building a 12-to-15 person ownership group modeled after the Tampa Bay Lightning's structure.
The Hurricanes have sold 94% of available season tickets for 2024-25, second in the Metropolitan Division behind the Rangers, and Dundon has told league governors he expects the franchise to cross $250M revenue within three seasons.