Steph Curry’s Thirty Ink generated $174 million in revenue last year, and all of its businesses are profitable, company says

by | Jun 4, 2025 | Business

Steph Curry’s Gentleman’s Cut bourbon.Courtesy: Gentleman’s CutSteph Curry is one of the greatest basketball players ever, and judging by his company’s financials, he’s off to a pretty good start in the business world.Curry is the CEO of Thirty Ink, a house-of-brands conglomerate that owns companies including Unanimous Media, Gentleman’s Cut bourbon and Underrated Golf and Basketball. CNBC Sport profiled the company in “Curry Inc.: The Business of Stephen Curry,” a production centered on Curry’s career and business ambitions that airs Wednesday on CNBC at 9 p.m. ET/PT.Thirty Ink generated $173.5 million in revenue in 2024, the company told CNBC Sport. The highest percentage of that revenue comes from its partnership with Under Armour, where Curry is president of Curry Brand, the company’s basketball and golf footwear and apparel brand. As part of a 2023 deal, the 11-time NBA All-Star was given 8.8 million Under Armour common shares, valued at $75 million at the time, in addition to other awards and incentives.While Thirty Ink incurs annual expenses for delivering on Curry’s name, image and likeness, as well as related marketing around the brand, it doesn’t rack up traditional bottom-line operational costs to fuel those sales, helping contribute to a gaudy $144 million in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization last year, the company said.Still, every business in Curry’s Thirty Ink portfolio is profitable, said Suresh Singh, the company’s secretary-chairman. Singh helped transform Curry’s business from SC30 to Thirty Ink, which has broadened its scope to different business lines such as bourbon, sports drinks and a branding consultancy and agency for other athletes.”It’s completely unique,” said Singh. “One of the big things, I believe, is that there’s a lot of athlete- and celebrity-driven partnerships and businesses that aren’t necessarily focused on profit, aren’t necessarily focused on mission. We do both.”Unanimous MediaThe company’s mission is to “elevate the under.” That manifests itself differently depending on the business line. Unanimous Media attempts to hire diverse writers to create projects about family, faith and sports, said Erick Peyton, the multimedia company’s co-founder and co-CEO along with Curry.”He knows every single project on our slate, which is probably around 40 …

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