Why are MLB players contracts getting longer? Bond market.
Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2022 3:56 pm
I really liked this article. And like the author, I had been wondering about it. It seemed strange that both players and teams wanted these longer contracts (for a lot of reasons (at least to me)). 13 years? That's just bizarre. Totally ahistorical. I've never been particularly bothered by players getting paid huge amounts. I know others are and I get it. It's only possible in a degenerate society/culture. But for me, other things in sports are worse, much worse. The owners and the media and the fans are what grind my gears. But I just could never figure out why these contracts got soooooo long. I wouldn't do it as a player or owner. But that's because I hadn't thought about Bonds and Interest rates.
Tl:Dr The author makes the (now obvious) point that the completely disastrous economic conditions today (admittedly for only 99.99% of the population (who don't matter (Black rock and Vanguard partners matter you dumb pleb))) make extending payments the wise decision for owners. Especially in light of an expectation that these conditions are not transitory and that the salary cap (I know it is a tax (it's a cap)) will increase. High interest rates and the bond market make it so. Owners after all are intensely conscious of the macroeconomic conditions (and they should be). So, the bizarre illogical behavior is a manifestation of clever men doing what they need to do to navigate a broken system.
https://blogs.fangraphs.com/why-are-tea ... contracts/
"If that doesn’t make sense to you, think of it as Correa issuing the Giants a loan as part of his contract. If they paid him based on his contributions each year, he’d get the lion’s share of his money upfront. He’s taking less than his contributions in the early years of the deal, and getting that money back with some interest in the later years. If the rate implied in Correa’s contract works out to a 4% loan, but they’d have to pay 7% on the open market, everyone can be a winner. He gets a better rate than he would by investing in 10-year treasuries, and they get a better rate than they would have by issuing debt. That only works if the deal is long-term; there’s not much benefit to be had in a five-year loan relative to a 13-year one.
That can be a fine deal for both Correa and the team. Even if the team weren’t planning on borrowing money to issue contracts — and it probably isn’t — these longer-term deals let it move production to the present and cost to the future at a good rate on both. The higher interest rates go, the more this kind of deal makes sense. For the same present value of money, teams can present longer deals with higher guarantees, which sounds like exactly what players are always clamoring for. The present value might work out the same, but the headline numbers look decidedly different."
Tl:Dr The author makes the (now obvious) point that the completely disastrous economic conditions today (admittedly for only 99.99% of the population (who don't matter (Black rock and Vanguard partners matter you dumb pleb))) make extending payments the wise decision for owners. Especially in light of an expectation that these conditions are not transitory and that the salary cap (I know it is a tax (it's a cap)) will increase. High interest rates and the bond market make it so. Owners after all are intensely conscious of the macroeconomic conditions (and they should be). So, the bizarre illogical behavior is a manifestation of clever men doing what they need to do to navigate a broken system.
https://blogs.fangraphs.com/why-are-tea ... contracts/
"If that doesn’t make sense to you, think of it as Correa issuing the Giants a loan as part of his contract. If they paid him based on his contributions each year, he’d get the lion’s share of his money upfront. He’s taking less than his contributions in the early years of the deal, and getting that money back with some interest in the later years. If the rate implied in Correa’s contract works out to a 4% loan, but they’d have to pay 7% on the open market, everyone can be a winner. He gets a better rate than he would by investing in 10-year treasuries, and they get a better rate than they would have by issuing debt. That only works if the deal is long-term; there’s not much benefit to be had in a five-year loan relative to a 13-year one.
That can be a fine deal for both Correa and the team. Even if the team weren’t planning on borrowing money to issue contracts — and it probably isn’t — these longer-term deals let it move production to the present and cost to the future at a good rate on both. The higher interest rates go, the more this kind of deal makes sense. For the same present value of money, teams can present longer deals with higher guarantees, which sounds like exactly what players are always clamoring for. The present value might work out the same, but the headline numbers look decidedly different."