The Seattle Kraken have been quietly shopping themselves since before puck drop. Five years into the franchise's existence—three as an expansion team, two before that as a sales pitch—the ownership group still hasn't closed on a meaningful secondary transaction, and the NBA's return to Seattle is now compressing the window.
The Athletic's reporting confirms what three Western Conference executives and one private-equity sports allocator have been saying for eighteen months: Seattle is a one-anchor-tenant market pretending to be two. The Kraken launched in 2021 with a $650 million expansion fee, the highest in NHL history at the time. Owner Jerry Bruckheimer's Hollywood group and majority owner Samantha Holloway assembled a clean capitalization table, but the exit strategy assumed appreciation comparable to Vegas Golden Knights velocity. Vegas went from $500 million entry to a $1.2 billion implied valuation in four years. Seattle has not tracked that curve.
The problem is structural. The Kraken play in Climate Pledge Arena, a $1.15 billion renovation financed largely by Oak View Group and Amazon. The building is excellent. The market is saturated. Seattle supports the Seahawks, the Mariners, the Sounders, and a University of Washington football program that draws seventy thousand. The Kraken average 17,151 fans per game this season, 92 percent capacity, which sounds fine until you compare it to Vegas at 17,874 and a waitlist. Seattle's ticket revenue per game lags Pacific Division comparables by an estimated 12 percent, per two Western Conference finance officials.
Now the NBA is coming. The league has made no formal announcement, but commissioner Adam Silver has said Seattle is "at the top of the list" for expansion, and Las Vegas is the other shoe. Expansion fees are expected to start at $4 billion per franchise. That number pulls capital. A family office writing a $200 million check for a 30 percent Kraken stake is the same family office that might anchor $500 million into an NBA bid with better brand leverage, better media tailwinds, and a forty-one-home-date schedule that moves premium inventory faster.
Two people with knowledge of Kraken ownership discussions say the franchise has fielded inquiries but no serious offers above the $950 million-to-$1 billion range, which would value the team roughly 45 percent above the expansion fee but 20 percent below where the group privately hoped to be by year five. One Western Conference executive said the Kraken are "stuck between a league that doesn't move needles nationally and a market that already has its arms full." The NHL's U.S. media deal is worth $625 million annually through 2028; the NBA's is $2.66 billion and climbing.
The Kraken are not distressed. Revenue is steady, the on-ice product is respectable, and Climate Pledge Arena hosts concerts and other events that generate ancillary income. But the ownership group has not been able to execute the kind of marquee secondary sale that establishes price discovery. Vegas sold a 15 percent stake to Blackstone in 2023 at a valuation north of $1.9 billion. Seattle has no comparable transaction.
What's worth watching: NBA expansion decisions are expected by late 2025 or early 2026. If Seattle gets a franchise, the Kraken's sale process gets harder. If Seattle doesn't, the Kraken might benefit from being the only new major-league asset in town, but that's a narrow edge. Kraken minority owner Adrian Hanauer also owns the Sounders; his MLS equity is more liquid than his NHL position, and he has not been shy about portfolio optimization in past years.
The Kraken are three years into what was supposed to be a ten-year hold before a liquidity event. The NBA is eighteen months from clarifying Seattle's two-team capacity. The market will decide who was early and who was wrong.
The takeaway
Seattle Kraken stall at **$950 million** valuation as NBA expansion pulls capital, leaving five-year-old franchise without comparable secondary sale.
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