The NHL Board of Governors approved three new minority stakes in the Carolina Hurricanes last week, including one held by former forward Jeff Farnham, according to league filings. The other two investors were not disclosed. No purchase prices were reported, though recent comparable minority transactions in sunbelt franchises have ranged from $25 million to $75 million for stakes under 10%.
Farnham played parts of four seasons with the organization between 2011 and 2016, logging 41 games and 4 goals before moving into private equity work in Toronto. The approval follows a November board meeting where two other Carolina minority stakes cleared; majority owner Tom Dundon has now cycled six minority partners into the cap table since acquiring control in 2018 for $420 million. The franchise is currently valued at approximately $1.2 billion by Sportico, implying Dundon has booked substantial paper gains while maintaining operational control and avoiding dilution below his 60%-plus stake.
The timing is not incidental. Dundon, who made his money in subprime auto lending through Santander Consumer USA, has structured the Hurricanes ownership slate as a quasi-syndication vehicle, bringing in partners at escalating valuations as the franchise's on-ice success and arena economics improve. Since 2018, the team has posted seven consecutive playoff appearances, rebuilt PNC Arena's premium inventory, and locked in a long-term lease with Wake County through 2044. The minority stakes function as partial exits for Dundon while keeping operating control centralized—a model more common in European soccer than North American professional sports, where majority owners typically hold until a full sale.
The three new stakes also coincide with a broader NHL push to deepen ownership benches. Commissioner Gary Bettman has quietly encouraged teams to add minority partners with operational expertise or regional connectivity, particularly in markets where arena projects or expansion opportunities are on the table. Carolina faces neither pressure, but Dundon has openly discussed his interest in adding baseball to Raleigh—either through expansion or relocation—and has met with MLB officials at least twice since 2022. Minority partners with adjacent sports or media experience would simplify a dual-franchise pitch, especially if Dundon can demonstrate institutional backing beyond his personal balance sheet.
Farnham's inclusion carries symbolic weight. Player-turned-investor stakes are rare in hockey but common in basketball, where retired stars often take sub-5% positions as brand ambassadors and business development conduits. Farnham's Toronto private equity background suggests he may have brought capital partners into the deal or structured the stake as part of a broader fund allocation. His playing tenure in Carolina was brief, but he remains connected to the organization through alumni events and charity work, which matters in a market where season-ticket retention still lags peer sunbelt franchises.
The two undisclosed investors are likely either local real estate operators or out-of-market family offices testing NHL exposure. Dundon has previously sold stakes to North Carolina-based developers with interests in the Research Triangle, and the current approval aligns with a wave of arena district projects under discussion in Raleigh. Alternatively, the stakes could have gone to Canadian or European allocators looking for dollar-denominated sports assets as a hedge against home-market volatility. The NHL does not require public disclosure of minority owners below 10%, so clarity may not arrive until the next franchise sale or bankruptcy filing forces a cap table reveal.
What to watch: whether Dundon adds more minority partners before the 2025-26 season, which would suggest he is either preparing for a larger capital project or positioning for a partial exit at a higher multiple. Also watch for MLB's expansion timeline; if Raleigh emerges as a serious candidate, Dundon's recent minority-stake activity will read as early-stage institutional preparation rather than incremental estate planning.
The NHL's next Board of Governors meeting is scheduled for June 2025 in Las Vegas. By then, Carolina will have completed its first season in the reconfigured Metropolitan Division playoff bracket, and Dundon will know whether his on-ice investment continues to justify the $1 billion-plus valuation he is now selling into.
The takeaway
Dundon has now cycled six minority stakes into Carolina's cap table since 2018, extracting liquidity without surrendering control—a structure that tests NHL tolerance for rolling partial exits.
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