Quote from: "Mark Kelly"Good to see Man Utd still in deep trouble.Their recent bond issue is one of the worst performers on the market and may restrict them from returning to the bond market to refinance their refinanced, refinanced debts.I thought that their bond issue went really well? Or is it a case of them all getting taken up and then performing like shite?
Good to see Man Utd still in deep trouble.Their recent bond issue is one of the worst performers on the market and may restrict them from returning to the bond market to refinance their refinanced, refinanced debts.
"The banks selling the bonds struggled to find buyers and went to the four corners of the earth to get it done," said Jonathan Moore, a high yield bond analyst at Evolution Securities. "There was very little appetite for the sterling part of the deal – of the 30 or so investors in London I have spoken to, only two bought it. As the markets have weakened since the deal was priced, the institutions have offloaded it, but there are particular worries on the Manchester United bond because of the weak covenants, and the Glazers' ability to take cash out of the company."
The bond, which was issued accompanied by a brochure that laid bare the club's spiralling debts and outlined the possibility of selling off the club's training ground, was initially priced at a discount to attract investors and has since fallen even further. Bond holders wishing to sell now would make a five percentage point loss.
CP - LFC is for sale. It will be sold. The owners have to sell, they are out of money. The bank want it sold, the fans want it sold and people want to buy it. The problems on the pitch at the minute aren't the fault of the owners. It is not simple enough to say that new owners will guarantee results on the pitch.
QuoteCP - LFC is for sale. It will be sold. The owners have to sell, they are out of money. The bank want it sold, the fans want it sold and people want to buy it. The problems on the pitch at the minute aren't the fault of the owners. It is not simple enough to say that new owners will guarantee results on the pitch.no wonder Purslow is disagreeing with these comments, they are inflammatory against Bentiez and lowers the selling price of the club, can not beleive any decent CEO would say that
Attended - Christian Purslow, James McKenna, Graham Smith, Jon Paul Hill, Nicky Allt, Fran Stanton, Stephen Monaghan, Keir Culvin, Daniel Nicolson, Tommy Keiner, Andy Williams, Paul Gardner, Peter Hooton.
SOS making things up eh ?
really they should have both agreed an independet person does the minutes.
Quote from: pdiddybabySOS making things up eh ?QuoteWell, we don't know, in fairness, he might actually have said that, in a misjudged attempt to get the fans "on board".Quote from: "pdiddybaby"really they should have both agreed an independet person does the minutes.Yes, if what was said in the meeting was going to be in the public domain, they should have agreed on this.Reading it, I bet the CEO wasn't aware it was going to come out. Which is very naive.yep regardless of whether he was misquoted or not, he has no way now of disproving it. Give SOS so much credit for actually boxing them in like that.
SOS making things up eh ?QuoteWell, we don't know, in fairness, he might actually have said that, in a misjudged attempt to get the fans "on board".Quote from: "pdiddybaby"really they should have both agreed an independet person does the minutes.Yes, if what was said in the meeting was going to be in the public domain, they should have agreed on this.Reading it, I bet the CEO wasn't aware it was going to come out. Which is very naive.yep regardless of whether he was misquoted or not, he has no way now of disproving it. Give SOS so much credit for actually boxing them in like that.
Well, we don't know, in fairness, he might actually have said that, in a misjudged attempt to get the fans "on board".Quote from: "pdiddybaby"really they should have both agreed an independet person does the minutes.Yes, if what was said in the meeting was going to be in the public domain, they should have agreed on this.Reading it, I bet the CEO wasn't aware it was going to come out. Which is very naive.
Pompey have been taken over again.Subject to the fit and proper persons test - don't laugh at the back.Football establishment no mark: "Ah yes my good man I can tell you are a fit and proper person by the cut of your expensive (looking) suit".Slimey, untrustworthy looking representative of new owner (who isn't even present at meeting): "Oh yes indeed, slither, slither, hiss, hiss".
I don't think Pompey will last till the end of the season. Eventually some absent-minded sheikh will forget he owns it, neglect to pay the gas bill, and the whole thing will disappear in a puff of debt
Dyer straits! Five starts, no goals...and Kieron Dyer will cost West Ham 30million quid!The former England midfielder is fast becoming an emblem of the reckless financial regime of Icelandic owner Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson and his sidekick Eggert Magnusson.West Ham’s medical team raised doubts about Dyer’s signing when he arrived from Newcastle in August 2007 but the transfer was rushed through before the deadline because the owners were keen to showcase top-class players.Dyer, who has managed just 558 minutes of League action for the club, signed a four-year deal reported to be worth £70,000 a week but broke his right leg soon after his debut and missed more than a year as he suffered complications in his recovery.His transfer fee was £7m - £1m more than the figure publicised at the time - and the agents’ fees on the deal cost the Hammers another £1m.Together with bonuses and National Insurance contributions, the club can expect to have paid out the thick end of £30m for him by the time his contract has expired at the end of next season.Dyer has struggled through this campaign with hamstring problems and the 31-year-old has not played since limping off at Bolton in December.He is closing in on another first-team return but if his fitness fails and he breaks down again, West Ham could seek to negotiate a deal to pay up his contract and bring to a premature end his disastrous spell at the club.Such lavish rewards and lengthy contracts are not likely to be encouraged by new owners David Sullivan and David Gold, who signed Mido on loan from Middlesbrough last month for a basic wage of just £1,000 a week