Green Bay is not selling the tickets below market price. They bump their prices every year or two. Their goal is to remain in the middle of the average price. They do a pretty good job of it.
Originally Posted by: wpr
Depends on what you mean by "market price". If by the term you mean "the average price paid for NFL tickets," probably not.
However, it seems to me that that's the wrong price to look at. The relevant market is the market for Packer tickets, not the market for NFL tickets. If GB has a waiting list in the tens of thousands for season tickets, and Jacksonville can't sell out their stadium even with selling individual tickets, then GB tickets should sell at a premium to Jacksonville tickets, not at roughly the same price.
If you have twice as many people willing to buy season tickets as there are season tickets to be sold, you have what the economist calls a "shortage." And markets have one built in mechanism for getting rid of shortages -- it's called a price increase. And the more the shortage persists, the more the price increase called for to eliminate the shortage.
As for brokers getting the money, that just highlights that the Packers aren't charging enough. Brokers make their money because they know there are a substantial number of buyers who are willing to pay more than the seller is asking. Game watchers who are willing to pay more than the Packers are charging.
I don't know how the split goes between the ticket holder who sells to the broker and the broker who sells to the ultimate watcher. But if it goes to *either* of them, it isn't going to the Packer organization. Their combined profits are what Dodd and I are talking about -- those combined profits are the real monies that Packer management is leaving on the table.
How many tickets are resold? I don't know. How much of an increase will the market bear before that shortage falls significantly? I don't know. That's what the economist calls a problem of elasticity -- and charges tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars to estimate. But I do know that if the shortage hasn't started to fall (and indeed has doubled or tripled in my lifetime), then the price increase hasn't been big enough.
I can understand the Packers wanting a waiting list as a form of insurance when the next stretch of "lean years" appears. But a waiting list that is bigger than the total number of seats available for any game? Why?
That is bigger, by far, than any expansion of the stadium might be contemplated? Suppose GB finds a way to add 25-30 thousand seats. They'd *still* have a waiting list that is on the order of 50,000 names! That's serious over-insurance. That's paying $100,000 for a $50,000 term life insurance policy.
It'll keep brokers feeling good. The more life insurance he sells, the more the life insurance salesman makes.
But the job of the Packers shouldn't be to ensure profits either for season ticket holders or for ticket brokers. It should be to maximize its return so that it can provide the best possible product.
The Vikings had to ask for public funds for their new stadium because they knew that the return on investment wasn't high enough to get outside investors, and because they knew they couldn't raise a half billion through ticket price increases either. But if the Packers had reacted to that shortage of tickets (which existed through most of the bad years, too) with bigger price increases, instead of keeping them down as they did, they could have had on hand a lot more wealth when the last expansion (or the next one) comes around. They wouldn't have had to go to Brown County and get that extra sales tax to pay for it.
If the Packers were a for-profit enterprise, they would have been ripe for a takeover decades ago. As a non-profit, with that "American Legion Post" provision, they of course have been insulated from the Carl Icahns and Boone Pickenses of the world. But their being a non-profit doesn't change the fact that they're assets are capable of financing much more spending on salaries, stadiums, and fan services than their current ticket prices obtain.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)