I think a discussion is fine, but i actually found the wording of the thread to be questionable too. Its not a spelling, grammar or that kind of issue. The OP posted twice it will be sold. I think it should be renamed only so as not to spread false rumours. Its far from decided as to be sold. Inbev has no issue with capital by the way.
As for the conversation though, its an interesting one, will they sell it? Hmm, I dont know, they'd do it so they dont have to manage theme parks, thats probably the only reason. This would have other effects, possibly saving money being one of them. Inbev has no experience with theme parks, so it would make sense to sell it for that reason.
If they do want to sell it though, who to? Disney, no way, won't happen. Ridiculous amount of eggs to put in one basket owning that many theme parks, particularly ones you didn't build and may not mesh with the existing ones well. Disney obviously is trying to spread out, hence the new WDW hotels being on property but not owned by disney.
Who else? There are probably a ton of people/companies that could, but I dont think it'll be any existing theme park giants, and there are only a handful. Its just too risky in this economic market.
If the parks are making money Inbev could very likely split that division off on its own, run it and shop it around at the same time. This would involve quite the expense to Inbev though when they did that, they'd lose a bunch of capital assets if they went that route instead of selling it outright. It may alleviate some of the percieved problems though, mainly how can Inbev run a theme park, assumedly the people in place would continue to do so.
I suspect Inbev is going to really focus on consolidation, they were well aware they were getting these parks, they'll let them run with existing management in place for some time, before they even start to turn their attention to it. Firstly they are going to focus on making money of alcohol sales, and in all likelihood expanding their brands from Europe to America. Anheiser Busch offers very little in reverse, the big brand is already in Europe, although it tastes a lot more like the Canadian version of Budweiser than the American version (think more alcohol, less watery). They're going to worry about all the big merger problems, losing staff and management that are duplicitous and turning even bigger profits, then get onto the theme parks.
If someone else buys the theme parks, I doubt it'll be a huge deal. The Seaworld franchise is kinda all over the place right now anyways. Do they want thrill rides or animals, both? Whoever started running it doesn't really have to hold to a solid line, as one isn't in existence today. What could happen is a further strenthenging of their relationship with Universal Florida at least, to fight disney. An outside buyer may see that as even more desirable than current management does and go further. Probably a smart move.