'Seinfeld' going Wall Street? Yada yada yada ...
Copyright © 1998 Nando.net
Copyright © 1998 Reuters News Service
By NANCY LEINFUSS
NEW YORK (April 21, 1998 5:02 p.m. EDT http://www.nando.net) - A television show about nothing could amount to something if the latest push toward securitizing future receivables in the asset-backed securities market includes comedian Jerry Seinfeld.
Picture this: Jerry and his TV sitcom cronies take on Wall Street. Touring the stock exchange, George comments on a firm's impending bankruptcy and triggers a stock slide; Kramer wreaks havoc at a private board meeting and gets toss tossed out with George. All the while, Elaine and Jerry talk to an investment banker about securitizing the rights to their future royalties.
David Pullman, managing director for Fahnestock & Co. Inc., the banker largely credited for coming up with the notion of rock 'n' roll securitization, is now zeroing in on another media realm: television syndication securitization.
When asked if there was a Seinfeld deal on the production line, Pullman said, "We can't comment on any of our clients because of the confidential nature of it, but we are doing TV syndication deals and there's going to be a great one.
"If there were something happening, we'd be doing it. No one besides us has done a deal," he added.
Seinfeld attorney Jay Cooper of the Manatt, Phelps and Phillips law firm, said "There's no such deal in the works."
Last year, Pullman raised $55 million for rock icon David Bowie with bonds backed entirely by the anticipated flow of royalties from his first 25 albums.
This year, Pullman produced a deal for Motown songwriting trio Holland-Dozier-Holland, which included $30 million in bonds backed by the group's future royalties.
With Seinfeld's successful television show already in syndication and in its final season, will there be anything left to securitize?
Pullman said shows like Seinfeld go through first-run, second-run, and even third-run syndications, noting that individuals like Seinfeld who own a piece of the show in terms of percentages receive revenue over time. Studio heads, however, make their money up front.
"So, if these guys (Seinfeld and other percentage holders) want to attend to their projects right now, this would be a good avenue for them to get their money up front for the value of the show going forward for years," Pullman said. "They then could invest and diversify."
Kevin Duignan, senior director of commercial asset-backed securities at credit rating agency Fitch IBCA, said such a security would be "an intriguing asset" and something that his firm thinks will grow in popularity.
"But from an actual securitization standpoint, it (any Seinfeld deal) is more talk than action right now," he added.
"We have been looking at a number of proposals of transactions that involve royalties, or intellectual property, or some sort of entertainment finance, and I will tell you that stand-alone transactions, namely one artist, are more difficult to analyze than are pooled transactions," Duignan added.
Making a loan to a celebrity such as Seinfeld is a "relatively easy" transaction, Duignan said. However, securitizing any single loan would be "more difficult."
Since Bowie's deal caught Wall Street's eye last year, bankers have been rubbing elbows with rock stars to cash in on what is seen as a budding new venture -- and competition is on the rise.
Just last week, Rascof Zysblat Organization, the business manager of stars like Bowie and The Rolling Stones, aligned with Prudential Investments to offer financing to entertainers and stars.
That follows last year's creation of Nomura Capital Entertainment Finance, the entertainment lending division of Nomura Asset Capital Corp. Earlier this year, Charles Koppelman of CAK Entertainment Inc. formed a joint venture with Prudential Securities Inc. called CAK Universal Credit Corp., which offers loans secured by income streams from intellectual property.
Seinfeld attorney, Jay Cooper, of the Manhattan, Phelps and Phillips law firm said, Theres no such deal in the works.
Reuters April 21, 1998