IT.COM

domains Breaking: $90 Million Domain Sale Revealed

NameSilo
When I logged on to Twitter this morning, I was met with a tweet from domain investor George Kirikos claiming to have uncovered one of the most expensive domain transactions in history.

Edit: Article updated for accuracy. The domain deal is for $90,000,000 payable until 2040. Not $65 million as was previously announced.

After reaching his Twitter target of 10 Retweets, George Kirikos revealed details of the massive $90 million domain name sale. The information, which was revealed on George's Twitter page shows that LasVegas.com sold for a $90 million payment agreement in 2005, starting with an initial $12,000,000 fee.

This sale dwarfs any other domain name sale in public record. The highest domain sale recorded has previously been Sex.com for $13,000,000. Some media outlets claim insurance.com for $35.6 million in July 2010 is the highest domain sale of all time, but this was not purely a domain name purchase.

The SEC filing from Vegas.com LLC shows that they entered into an agreement to buy the domain name LasVegas.com. They initially paid a fee of $12,000,000 and will pay up to $90 million in total.

Here's a quote from the SEC filing:
In May 2005, the Company entered into a contract under which it agreed to pay $12,000,000 for exclusive right to use the domain name “LasVegas.com.” The contract term is 35 years. The Company is amortizing the domain name rights over 35 years. The Company is also obligated to make payments of approximately $208,000 a month


If Vegas.com LLC wish, they can stop paying for the domain in June 2016 and lose the right to use the name, or they can pay $208,000 per month until 2040. So far they have paid around $30,000,000 for the domain name (includes the initial $12 million payment and subsequent monthly payments).

Here is how the payments have been broken down:
  • An initial $12 million payment in May 2005
  • $83,000 per month for the next 36 months
  • $125,000 per month for the next 60 months
  • $208,000 per month for the next 36 months
After June 2016 (as mentioned above), Vegas.com LLC can opt to stop using the domain or pay $208,000 per month until 2040, bringing the total sale to $90,000,000.

LasVegas.com shows a fully operational website, displaying information regarding hotels, shows, and tours in Las Vegas. LasVegas.com has a global Alexa ranking of around 30,000 and shows up on the number 1 spot on Google for the search term Las Vegas.

Incidentally, NamesCon will be in Las Vegas in 2016. With this new information, it seems very apt that domain investors will flock to Vegas!
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
To clarify: LasVegas.com is the domain name purchased. So far they have spent around $30,000,000 on the domain acquisition, with around $60,000,000 to pay until 2040 should they wish to continue past next year.
 
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Note 7.
LasVegas.com Purchase Obligation
In June 2005, VEGAS.com, LLC entered into an agreement for the purchase of LasVegas.com. The agreement specified that a $12,000,000, one-time payment be made upon execution of the agreement along with monthly payments of approximately $83,000 for 36 months, $125,000 for the next 60 months, and then $208,000 for the next 36 months. Per the terms of the agreement, after June 30, 2016, following the 132 initial monthly payments, VEGAS.com, LLC in its sole discretion may terminate the agreement and forfeit the domain name. If VEGAS.com, LLC chooses not to terminate the agreement, they will continue making the monthly payments of approximately $208,000 until June 30, 2040, at which time the seller will transfer the domain name to VEGAS.com, LLC without further payment or cost to VEGAS.com, LLC. As of June 2005, the present value of the future payment obligations was determined to be approximately $12,264,000, using a discount rate of 6.25 percent. The initial $12,000,000 payment has been capitalized and is being amortized over 35 years, which is the term of the agreement. The present value of the future purchase obligation of approximately $12,264,000 was capitalized and is being amortized beginning July 2005 and ending June 2016, which is the period that VEGAS.com, LLC is legally bound by the agreement to continue making payments. Subsequent to June 2016, the agreement will continue on a month to month basis until June 30, 2040, and all payments made will be recognized as an expense. Minimum annual future payment obligations are as follows:
.
 
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Would be interesting to see how long they keep paying.. who knows how the future of domains looks like in 10 years from now... or how we will navigate websites etc..
 
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they paid 4 million last year so it'quite an expensive domain ;) but not sure if you can say the paid $90 million for it. I would say it's less than that.
 
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@dordomai - it's a $90m agreement. They've paid around $30m so far.
 
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Unbelievable.
Some guy here on NP has lasveg.as
 
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i wonder what orlando.com is worth?
 
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Article updated to show all the latest information.
 
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Wow!

That has to obliterate the previous known sales record for a single domain name, doesn't it?
 
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A joke or Virtual Reality. This is amazing, what a hell domain business is becoming?
 
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so if I understand well.. in essence there was at some point in past a time when this 90mil domain could have been ANYONE's property for regfee more or less equal to today's value

did I get that bout right?
 
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@alcy Yes, it was registered in 1997 so there was a time it was available.
 
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Thats a Crazy amount of cash
 
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@alcy Yes, it was registered in 1997 so there was a time it was available.

so in short few words, can someone explain to me why I or they did not handreg in 199X lasvegas.com or sex.com or cars.com or somethingelsenice.com?

did it really require one to be a fortuneteller to forsee these prices back then?
 
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You needed internet access for that and at that time not more than a few % had it and no one would think about domain names as the internet was just a fad. so why register a stupid "domain name" whatever that is for this fad that soon no one will care about?

Fully agree. Moreover, the process to register a domain was way more complex and expensive (but I was not in domaining at this time :))
 
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You needed internet access for that and at that time not more than a few % had it and no one would think about domain names as the internet was just a fad. so why register a stupid "domain name" whatever that is for this fad that soon no one will care about?
Anyone thinking the internet was "just a fad" was just as clueless in 1997 as they'd be today in 2015.
 
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so in short few words, can someone explain to me why I or they did not handreg in 199X lasvegas.com or sex.com or cars.com or somethingelsenice.com?

did it really require one to be a fortuneteller to forsee these prices back then?

I would have bought a ton, but was actually under 18 with no credit card. Several good ones I had were actually bought by an older friend who later forgot to renew them. If I remember correctly it was about $70/domain per year so it was not super cheap.
 
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Remark Media: For the quarterly period ended March 31, 2016

https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1368365/000136836516000046/mark_31mar2016x10-q.htm

See: NOTE 10. CAPITAL LEASES AND PURCHASE OBLIGATIONS

Purchase Obligation

On June 10, 2005, Vegas.com entered into a license agreement providing for, among other things, Vegas.com’s exclusive use of the domain name “LasVegas.com” (the “LasVegas.com License Agreement”). Under the terms of the LasVegas.com License Agreement, Vegas.com paid $12 million upon execution of the agreement, was required to make monthly payments of approximately $83,000 through June 2008 and $125,000 through June 2013, and is currently making monthly payments of $208,000 through June 2040. If Vegas.com continues making the required monthly payments through June 30, 2040, ownership of the domain name would transfer to Vegas.com, without further payment by or cost to Vegas.com, on that date. After June 30, 2016, however, Vegas.com has the option, in its sole discretion, to terminate the LasVegas.com License Agreement and forfeit its rights to use of the domain name upon 30 days notice.

As of March 31, 2016, the remaining accounting liability, representing only those payments we are required to make through June 30, 2016, was approximately $0.6 million, and was reflected in Accrued expense and other current liabilities in our Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet. Payments under the LasVegas.com License Agreement after June 30, 2016 will be made on a month-to-month basis and will be recorded as an expense.
 
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Woooow!!! Just mindboogling!!!
 
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