Also read: Manchester United choose Wall Street for their return to the stock market
Glazer’s Appetite
The British daily Daily Mail reported in its Sunday edition that the Glazer family, the majority shareholder of the club, would have given up on selling its stake, judging the offers submitted too low.
According to the British press, the two potential buyers still in the running, the founder and CEO of the petrochemical group Ineos, Jim Ratcliffe, and Sheikh Jassin Bin Hamad al-Thani, president of the Qatar Islamic Bank (QIB), have both submitted close deals, which value the club at around five billion pounds, or about $6.3 billion.
Related: Football: Qataris and Ratcliffe in the running for the takeover of Manchester United
But, according to the Daily Mail, the Glazers were hoping for some ten billion pounds to leave control of ManU, of which they hold about two-thirds of the capital, but almost all of the voting rights. The figure is significantly higher than the estimate given by most other UK media of around £6 billion.
Continuation of negotiations
Manchester United’s market capitalization is now $3.15 billion, less than half the price the Glazers are hoping for ($7.5 billion).
Citing anonymous sources close to the Glazers and potential buyers, the specialized site 90min indicated that discussions were continuing with a view to a sale.
The club was gradually bought between 2003 and 2005 by American entrepreneur Malcolm Glazer, who then sold his shares to his six children on his death in 2014. The businessman’s heirs announced in November 2022 that they were considering the sale of the three-time Champions League-winning club.
Many ManU supporters are hostile to the Glazers, whom they accuse of having put the club in debt when it was taken over and of not having invested enough to allow the Mancunian institution to remain competitive.
2023-09-06 03:58:48
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