I think people all over are speaking to the owners' profitability without any knowledge on the subject. Obviously, the teams are losing money. The players union and the fans can dispute this but it's a very realistic scenario.
There are in all likelihood only a few franchises that make money on the way the NBA is currently structured(the Clippers come to mind). Player salaries are the easiest costs to manage and that's why the owners are going after them. Player salaries have skyrocketed over the past decade for no reason! It's not like players these days are any better than they used to be. player agents and unions just have the flexibility to hold teams by the cajones and demand more money. This does not foster a successful business environment.
I'm not even going to mention the ongoing macroeconomic events that I'm sure have put a number of sports franchises under pressure.
Let's face it. If anything is broken its the players union and player contracts. There's absolutely no reason that teams should be at the mercy of a Carmelo Anthony or a LeBron James who get whatever they want. In the end, they're not the ones who have a say in what goes on. They're simply performers, they're a product, they're employees. The people who cut their paychecks are and should be in charge.
You say "obviously" and yet provide 0 evidence. And yes, there is a reason teams should be at the "mercy" of Lebron and the like. It is called supply and demand.
I mean, let's compare investment options for the guy who bought the warriors:
in 1995, he bought the team for 119 million. In 2010 he sold it for 450.
If he had bought 119 million in microsoft stock in 1995 he would have 400 million last year (and that is with 4 2:1 stock splits).
If he had bought 119 million dollars worth of gold in 1995, he would have about 430 million in 2010.
Which means that even if they are losing money, they more than make up for it in the valuation of their franchises.
Not to mention the fact that cash losses aren't actual real losses given the fact that you can not only count player contracts as costs, but you can actually depreciate them like any piece of machinery and get a nice tax bonus.
Again, if the NBA is such a money loser, why are so many owners dying to get into it? Why do we need a stricter cap to protect owners from themselves?