New York, June 14, 2026, 09:02 (ET)
- Madison Square Garden Sports shares ended Friday at $384.68, falling $8.95. The stock hit an intraday high of $397.00 earlier in the session.
- Knicks win first NBA title since 1973, handing MSG Sports a new brand and revenue angle, but shares have yet to trade after the clincher.
- Investors are watching for updates on the planned tax-free spin-off that would split off the Knicks and Rangers businesses.
MSG Sports Corp. (MSGS) heads into the week with a championship win and possible valuation moves ahead. The New York Knicks took their first NBA title since 1973 with a 94-90 victory over the San Antonio Spurs on Saturday, Jalen Brunson went for 45 points and took home Finals MVP, Reuters reported. MSGS shares last changed hands at $384.68 on Friday, inside a session that saw a range from $378.14 to $397.00 and left the company with a market cap near $9.30 billion.
Monday is the first time investors will be able to price the Knicks championship into shares of MSGS. For MSG Sports, a title doesn’t shift earnings overnight but can move sentiment on ticket prices, sponsorships, merchandise, and what buyers might pay for a trophy asset. The Knicks’ win also gives more weight to MSG Sports’ main strategic play: spinning off the Knicks and Rangers businesses.
MSG Sports moved forward with its planned split. On May 18, the company said it filed a confidential initial Form 10 with the SEC to spin off the Rangers business from the Knicks. If finished, shareholders would get stock in a new public company. MSG Sports expects the deal to be tax-free for shareholders but said there’s no guarantee it will go through. The spin-off still needs to clear several hurdles, including SEC approval, a tax opinion, league sign-off and a final board vote.
The spin-off is still the next big catalyst for investors after Monday’s open. MSG Sports’ board laid out the plan in February, saying it would result in two public companies and make it easier for investors to see each team’s assets and growth. “We are exploring the opportunity to further create value for our shareholders by separating our two professional sports franchises into distinct companies,” executive chairman and CEO Jim Dolan said back then. On the day of the announcement, Reuters said MSGS shares surged more than 16% to a record close of $341.76, citing LSEG figures with an average analyst “buy” rating and a median target of $337. investor.msgsports.com
Knicks’ title win could fuel the sports-asset trade, bulls say. MSG Sports, which owns the Knicks and Rangers, posted higher demand in the fiscal third quarter—more revenue per game from tickets, premium seats, sponsorships, and food and merchandise. Revenue came in at $432.2 million, up 2% from last year, as league payouts and the NBA’s latest media rights deals provided a boost. Details are in the company’s release.
The bear case is that a lot of good news may already be in the stock. MSGS jumped on spin-off talk and the Knicks’ playoffs. But the latest quarter showed some hits below the revenue line. Operating income dropped to $2.0 million from $32.3 million last year. Adjusted operating income, which strips out things like depreciation and share-based comp, slid to $10.3 million from $36.9 million. Direct operating expenses climbed 12%, with the increase tied to higher team personnel pay, league revenue sharing, and NBA luxury tax costs.
MSGS trades more like a risk than a bargain at current levels. The proposed spin-off and MSGS’s entertainment assets give bulls a story about scarcity and possible franchise re-rating, but with market cap at $9.30 billion, trailing earnings still negative, and the stock sitting at a new intraday high on Friday, there’s little cushion if things slip. Monday’s trade will show if interest holds up post-championship. After that, it’s about whether MSG Sports can push the Form 10 process through—no holdups, no league pushback, no tax issues.