Spoony
The People's President
Athletic article says they’ve bid 4.5bn and will go higher.
Ahh, well it's as obvious as the most obvious thing in the world. Till then we'll probably add another 600 pages to this thread.
Athletic article says they’ve bid 4.5bn and will go higher.
We are cash poor, we literally don’t have money until the end of the season when PL & sponsorship money pays out - and even then we still have transfer debts to pay, so we won’t be able to spend anywhere near 200M.
We need to be sold.
I have an idea. Why not support the Qatar bid to buy United and they revamp the Stadium, training facilities and clear the debt. Then after all this is done, fans can protest their ownership and force a sale to Ineos? Win-win? Then we don't have to worry if Ineos will clear our debt or have enough money to put into infrastructure. They use us, we use them? All's fair?
Why would anyone want some loser whose leading a 7th place Nice when they can get the serial winners at PSG?
Are you sure? It seems their sale cooled off because we went on the market. However FSG would be open to selling if they can get the price they want
Athletic article that’s just gone up about it says United being for sale played a part in them not selling as it took interest away. That strong rumour around Qatar going for Liverpool before switching to United does seems to fit.Make of it what you will but FSG announced yesterday that Liverpool is not up for sale.
Like a multiple-choice question of Life... it usually answer E, all of the above. Bezo bought the Washington Post and looking at buying the Washington Redshins or whatever they are called nowadays.
Its just not a new thing. Even Steve Gibson bought Middlesbrough years ago and did it, on a smaller scale; his company is based in Middlesbrough. There is always a non-altruistic element.
The question is how do you measure 'soft power'? It's longitudinal.
Whereas we can certainly measure the financial gains of say an Elliot or even an INEOS bid (though I think there is some element of greenwashing in their equation.) Its not sustainable at the price/loans/debt that's required going forward.
And also I do not link my personal identity to the Club directly and its supposedly ethos. I think I am more than that as a person -- not someone who is determined by some external 'identifier' and especially something that I have almost ZERO control over.
Thats why so many are upset -- they wholeheartedly support the club and therefore directly see themselves as part of some evil regime. (Nobody ever wants to see themselves as evil --- even the terrorist that flew the planes into some building a couple of decades ago. Everyone likes to see themselves as doing good.)
That's why as they mature they will recognise that the owners or even Manchester United as a club isn't just who they are in terms of their primary identity. They are more than that.
Or when we start winning silverware all this will blow over. But they have not delinked that external identifier of who they are, still.
There are probably only a handful of people in the world that would have such a reputation.
Even Bill Gates and all that the Gates Foundation has achieved, will have a bunch of blowhards complaining about how evil he has been --- or the conspiracy theorist who will claim that he will use United to control the world with subliminal messaging at OT.
Even Jesus would struggle in this woke world we are living in.
First time in my memory that we have 3 loanees in a window and two of them in the starting 11 on Sunday.
Not sure what else folks here need to illustrate our current financial position.
Key points:
1. Consensus is that the bid is in the region of £4.5billion ($5.4bn) and it can go higher if needed.
2. HBJ (Jassim's father) personally owned almost half of Qatar Airways when he sold his shares to QIA back in 2014.
3. Much of Jassim's money is tied to HBJ's wealth, which is thought to be run into the billions. For what it is worth, the 2022 Sunday Times Rich List had HBJ's personal wealth at just over £2billion, a number many believe is very, very conservative.
Athletic article that’s just gone up about it says United being for sale played a part in them not selling as it took interest away. That strong rumour around Qatar going for Liverpool before switching to United does seems to fit.
I mean, you have to laugh at people questioning the credibility of of support of someone who’s willing to cough up somewhere between £4b-£6b to purchase the club. For me, you could have started supporting United 10 minutes ago after supporting Liverpool all your life, but the second you cough up that amount of money to purchase the club makes you a pretty staunch supporter regardless I’d say.
So come on then you plastic bastards, you might have been supporting United for years but when was the last time you spent £5b on the club?
So he’s the son of someone who used to be involved in the Qatari Government, there’s no evidence to suggest that he is still tied in anyway, in fact his father’s involvement ended when the current Emir took reign?
We don’t know rich he actually is, because these ‘Rich List’ things are never accurate, but in any case his father is seemingly rich enough anyway and therefore wouldn’t need State funds.
What am I missing here? This doesn’t marry up with the other reports of this being the Qatar State owning us in all but name.
If really just this guy on his own then he hasn’t got the money to make the claims he’s making.We don’t know rich he actually is, because these ‘Rich List’ things are never accurate, but in any case his father is seemingly rich enough anyway and therefore wouldn’t need State funds.
What am I missing here? This doesn’t marry up with the other reports of this being the Qatar State owning us in all but name.
As much as I want Qatar for the possibilities of their resources, that bit about the women not being forgotten is hilarious.
We won't forget the women, tacked on the end, as if you're talking about a pet. This is where United fans need to be vocal and demand support for all parts of the club if we do get bought.
It doesn't fit the narrative for them, they are trying so hard to push all anti Qatari news.So he’s the son of someone who used to be involved in the Qatari Government, there’s no evidence to suggest that he is still tied in anyway, in fact his father’s involvement ended when the current Emir took reign?
We don’t know rich he actually is, because these ‘Rich List’ things are never accurate, but in any case his father is seemingly rich enough anyway and therefore wouldn’t need State funds.
What am I missing here? This doesn’t marry up with the other reports of this being the Qatar State owning us in all but name.
As much as I want Qatar for the possibilities of their resources, that bit about the women not being forgotten is hilarious.
We won't forget the women, tacked on the end, as if you're talking about a pet. This is where United fans need to be vocal and demand support for all parts of the club if we do get bought.
The Athletic have been very ant Qatar in everything they are doing. They clearly realise that if the club gets sold to a Qatari, they will not be able to get scoops they could with Ratcliffe.
They were also running Poch campaigns before ETH got the job.
Whatever the Athletic have been reporting, its for their good, not Manchester United.
If really just this guy on his own then he hasn’t got the money to make the claims he’s making.
3 fecking thousand?
This goes somewhat towards my point of being state owned or being seen as state owned.
I don’t blame UEFA for not being able to sort through that
A- The Glazers spent nothing to buy the club. They basically bought it and made us pay for it. Thus whatever dividends or loan interest payment United paid came from our pockets in exchange for nothing.
B- The Glazers also saddled us with incompetent people who literally threw 1B of our transfer money in the dumpster. Some of the main players bought (ex Pogba and ADM) were bought simply for brand name purposes and not to help us on the pitch. Finally most those transfers were bought on credit card and the debt surrounding these deals will remain long after the Glazers are gone
C- Because of dividends/loan repayments barely any money was spent on infrastructure. That means that whoever buys the club will be saddled with 2B to rebuild the stadium. Then there's the debt repayment for transfers, the squad still need to be strengthened etc.
D- One of those incompetent people owns 0.5% of the Class B shares. That means that he will be rewarded around 1.5m (probably more) for his lousy services.
Seriously its like defending someone who lives off on protection money simply because some of the businesses he's 'protecting' are still thriving.
I reckon so. I think this was their plan all along. They are still hopeful of forcing through the ESL and that creates potential for club value to skyrocket - they will be hoping to hang on for another 5 years and then sell for £10bn+.It's gonna be Elliot with the money suckers staying on, isn't it? We are so fecked if that happens.
Where does 1.5m (that I saw several times) come from? 0.5% of class B shares is around 0.35% of total shares. If the club sells for 5B-6B, Ed is gonna net 17-22m pre-tax.A- The Glazers spent nothing to buy the club. They basically bought it and made us pay for it. Thus whatever dividends or loan interest payment United paid came from our pockets in exchange for nothing.
B- The Glazers also saddled us with incompetent people who literally threw 1B of our transfer money in the dumpster. Some of the main players bought (ex Pogba and ADM) were bought simply for brand name purposes and not to help us on the pitch. Finally most those transfers were bought on credit card and the debt surrounding these deals will remain long after the Glazers are gone
C- Because of dividends/loan repayments barely any money was spent on infrastructure. That means that whoever buys the club will be saddled with 2B to rebuild the stadium. Then there's the debt repayment for transfers, the squad still need to be strengthened etc.
D- One of those incompetent people owns 0.5% of the Class B shares. That means that he will be rewarded around 1.5m (probably more) for his lousy services.
Seriously its like defending someone who lives off on protection money simply because some of the businesses he's 'protecting' are still thriving.
I think the assumption that this would be state funds is lazy. Like you say, son of a prime minister of a country as rich as Qatar, along with being a banker for individuals in said country means he could theoretically have amassed the funds.So he’s the son of someone who used to be involved in the Qatari Government, there’s no evidence to suggest that he is still tied in anyway, in fact his father’s involvement ended when the current Emir took reign?
We don’t know rich he actually is, because these ‘Rich List’ things are never accurate, but in any case his father is seemingly rich enough anyway and therefore wouldn’t need State funds.
What am I missing here? This doesn’t marry up with the other reports of this being the Qatar State owning us in all but name.
The they in the tweet is quite clearly the Qatar state. The monarchy/state needed someone more obscure to get around UEFA rules.We don’t know that though because how would The Times know exactly how much assets/investments/cash this random guy in Qatar has unless he or his financial advisors disclose that?
At best they can make a guess based on publicly available information (which is what they almost always do, hence the inaccuracy) but a lot of that information is usually outdated or inaccurate because their wealth isn’t always linked to their name (shell companies, offshore investments, stocks & property etc) it’s very possible for them to be off by billions especially when dealing with individuals who don’t disclose much about themselves.
In a way we should all be hoping he's state-backed. Because if he was actually the chairman of a national bank suddenly producing billions in unaccounted for private wealth to the surprise of the autocratic government to which he is accountable, well that would be a whole other world of problems.
As much as I want Qatar for the possibilities of their resources, that bit about the women not being forgotten is hilarious.
We won't forget the women, tacked on the end, as if you're talking about a pet. This is where United fans need to be vocal and demand support for all parts of the club if we do get bought.
As much as I want Qatar for the possibilities of their resources, that bit about the women not being forgotten is hilarious.
We won't forget the women, tacked on the end, as if you're talking about a pet. This is where United fans need to be vocal and demand support for all parts of the club if we do get bought.
That option IS Ratcliffe. This whole furore around the way he is choosing to fund the acquisition is just a distraction designed by the oil cash hungry brigade to detract from his bid, which sadly has got traction with the Glazer scarred fan base of this club.I think truth be told we might be a less divided fanbase IF there was a middle option. So someone who is able to comfortably fund transfers,stadium, training facilities and hasn't got human rights issues. Unfortunately that option doesn't exist so its Qatar or Ratcliffe.
If really just this guy on his own then he hasn’t got the money to make the claims he’s making.
The they in the tweet is quite clearly the Qatar state. The monarchy/state needed someone more obscure to get around UEFA rules.
Also the argument that we don’t know how rich the guy is and that he is a independent actor seems to be a massive argument against wanted him to own the club. Because of this
That option IS Ratcliffe. This whole furore around the way he is choosing to fund the acquisition is just a distraction designed by the oil cash hungry brigade to detract from his bid, which sadly has got traction with the Glazer scarred fan base of this club.
The whole Qatar vs Ratcliffe thing has quickly become so entrenched and divisive that the other silent bids that we know nothing about are getting ignored and could be the real danger here.
Great post. You are absolutely spot on. This sale isn’t just about the future of our club, but because we are the biggest it’s about shaping the future of football in the UK and probably Europe too.I know that sounds extreme, but as soon as the established top names in football give in then its over in the long term. Everyone kicked off about the super league. If all top clubs become go down this route then it the future. Closed league for billionaires to have a dick swinging contest.
The article suggests the funding could be coming from his dad who is worth an absolute shed ton due to linking himself personally (sounds a lot like corruption…) into any deals he made on behalf of Qatar as PM - Barclays for example back in 2008. He also half-owned Qatar airways when it was sold in 2014. Nobody has a scooby how much he’s worth but the 2bn listed in the times rich list is thought to be “very conservative”.Indeed if he isn't state backed then people should be more worried about his bid than Ratcliffe's. Because he'd have to have access to tens of billions to comfortably accomplish what he is promising.
If he isn't state backed then the question must be asked could he be borrowing it all?
How is leaving the Glazers debt on the club simply a furore? Fans have every right to be concerned about that and it’s ridiculous to write off their worries as being oil cash hungry.That option IS Ratcliffe. This whole furore around the way he is choosing to fund the acquisition is just a distraction designed by the oil cash hungry brigade to detract from his bid, which sadly has got traction with the Glazer scarred fan base of this club.
The whole Qatar vs Ratcliffe thing has quickly become so entrenched and divisive that the other silent bids that we know nothing about are getting ignored and could be the real danger here.
So they’re using someone who doesn’t have any direct ties to the State as a prop, gotcha. I can see why they’d need to do that to get around UEFA rules, but I don’t get what’s supposed to be the next phase of this plan once he actually owns us. All decisions are made with the blessing of the Emir afterwards? What happens when the current Emir leaves his position?
I don’t doubt it being a possibility, it just seems quite farfetched.
I mean is it impossible that this is just private wealth? Maybe I’m being idealistic, but both options seem as unlikely as each other.
Also just because his wealth isn’t known to Forbes/The Times doesn’t mean his wealth is unknown to the appropriate people in Qatar, that seems a bit of a stretch.
How fecking awesome of all you sane and knowledgeable posters! Thanks!
Sane Plant! I said sane!