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Dublin: 14 °C Thursday 20 June, 2013

Manchester United slashes price for US IPO

The move comes amid doubts about the team’s ability to boost profits as long as it carries a hefty debt burden.

Image: Dave Thompson/PA Archive/Press Association Images

BRITAIN’S WORLD RENOWNED football club Manchester United slashed the price of its US share launch, cutting the amount it was raising in Friday’s Initial Public Offering (IPO) to $233 million from a hoped-for $300 million or more.

The fabled team, mired in debt since 2005 after a heavily leveraged takeover by the Glazer family of Miami-based investors, lowered its price for the 16.7 million shares on offer to $14 late Thursday from the originally planned $16-20 range.

The company gave no reason for cutting the price, but the IPO has come amid some doubts about the team’s ability to boost profits as long as it carries a hefty debt burden — Morningstar analysts estimated a fair price for the shares at just $10.

Investors have also become wary about aggressively priced initial public offerings after the much-promoted Facebook launch soured, with the social networking giant’s shares sinking to nearly half of the launch price just two months after the May 18 issue.

Critics had assailed the Glazers’ plan to allocate just half the IPO receipts to reducing the team’s current 423-million-pound ($660 million) debt burden.

The other half will go to the Glazers themselves, who are contributing 8.33 million shares to the IPO.

In addition, despite putting 10 percent of the shares of Manchester United Ltd. on sale, the Glazers will retain about 97 percent voting control of the listed company via their lock on “B” shares, which have ten times the voting power of the “A” shares being sold to the public.

That arrangement reportedly caused regulators in Hong Kong and Singapore to balk at a listing in their markets, where the club had hoped to tap the interest of tens of millions of Asian ManU fans.

The price still left the legendary football franchise valued at $2.3 billion, well above any of its rivals, including Real Madrid, which sports much larger profits.

Home to stars like Wayne Rooney and Rio Ferdinand, United is the most successful club in English football history with a massive global fan base, especially in Asia.

But it has struggled with the debt loaded onto the team’s books since the tycoon Malcolm Glazer and his family of investors in sports teams and real estate took over in 2005.

The debts, critics say, have steadily eroded its ability to compete for top talent in an ever-spiraling player transfer market.

But debt has been pared in the past two years to the current level, and profits rebounded with the team’s narrow loss of the Premier League title to cross-town rivals Manchester City this year.

According to the prospectus, profits for the nine months to March 31 were 38 million pounds, nearly triple a year earlier.

But that adds up to just 24 pence per share for the nine months, giving the company a rich price-to-earnings ratio usually reserved for high-growth technology firms.

The shares were due to hit the market sometime during Friday’s session, trading under the MANU symbol.

The owners hope the value in the club’s global popularity will translate into strong investor support.

“For 134 years now we’ve been one of the most successful and iconic sports teams in the world,” executive vice chairman Ed Woodward said in an IPO presentation.

“We generate inherently compelling content; we’ve developed into the global brand in sports. And as a result of that we have a whole line of partners knocking on our door and trying to partner up with us.”

But British supporters have strongly criticized the share sale.

“The IPO is a huge wasted opportunity to stop this enormous outflow of money from Manchester United,” said Andy Green, author of the Andersred blog, which focuses on management of the team.

The Manchester United Supporters’ Trust, which advocates for fan ownership of the team, called the share sale a “bad deal for fans, investors and the club.”

“For the club, this is a bad deal because more than half of the funds raised will now be paid direct to the Glazer family.”

“For fans, it is a bad deal because it is a missed opportunity for more equitable ownership of our club, with proper distribution of voting rights,” the group added.

“By floating shares at this inflated price, it provides a poisoned pill which might deter any more enlightened owners from buying the club in future.”

- © AFP, 2012

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Comments (19 Comments)

  • Prifteering by the Glazers, after saddling the club with massive debts. Gordon Gecko must be one of the Glazers heroes…”Greed is Good” to them

    Reply
    • “Profiteering” even…Doh..!!!

      Reply
    • And you are surprised, why? They put their money into the club and now want to see a return on investment. If along the way they can get a bunch of moron’s to buy shares, reduce their (Glazer) debt and pay the Glazers for it and leave the Glazer’s with 97% voting control then even better! The Glazer’s are business people who don’t give a crap about Man U and are in it to make money. There is no room for sentiment in business as the old saying go’s. If the fans have a problem with this they should have come up with the money to have bought the club when they has a chance but they didn’t.

      Reply
    • Brian, the Glazers have never invested a penny of their own money into United, it was a leveraged buy out. Also, MUST and previously shareholders united have impressive memberships in comparison to 99.99% of supporters trusts, but to raise £800m from ordinary fans, pull the other one, they were doing exceptionally well at the time to have approx. 10% of the club.

      Reply
    • Also anyone who buys these shares is a moron, as a fan you don’t get that all important influence through equitable voting rights and as an investor you don’t get dividends and they are vastly over priced, let’s hope this show of outrageous greed blows up in the faces of our parasites!

      Reply
    • Niall 10/08/12 #

      @brian, the fans never had a chance to buy the club. Get your facts in order.

      Reply
    • @Niall, it is you who should get their facts in order. Man Utd were listed on the London Stock Exchange between 1991 and 2005. In that time Shareholders United owned 15% but couldn’t mount a challenge to the Glazer’s bid of £800 million. So lets look at the facts that you allege that I haven’t got in order.

      1. As the club was listed on the LSE anyone, fan or not, had the ability to trade in these shares. This is contrary to your assertion that ” the fans never had a chance to buy the club”.

      2. There are 33 million registered fans on Man U fan clubs around the world. I make that £25 a fan to make up £825million, unleverged to challenge the Glazers.

      Reply
    • Oh and I nearly forgot. The Shareholders United 15% was owned by 175,000 fans http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manchester_United_Supporters’_Trust which is about 0.5% of all the people professing to be fans. The rest couldn’t be arsed investing in “their club” half the price of a jersey or even the price of a pair of away shorts. http://store.manutd.com/stores/manutd/default.aspx

      If I have any of these facts wrong don’t hesitate to let me know.

      Reply
    • Brian, 15% and 175,000 people is mighty impressive, can you imagine any other club worldwide that could have that amount of fans actively engaging as shareholders? Also, as you well know there ate very few enlightened football fans any club, most could not care less as long as their club is doing well.

      Reply
    • I don’t need to imagine Joesph. Bayern Munich is 80% owned by 150,000+ fans of the club. In 2011 it was the 4th richest club in the world and the 5th most popular club in Europe. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FC_Bayern_Munich#Organization_and_finance

      Which begs the question, if Bayern fans can do it why couldn’t Man u fans do it. I think that you have already answered this in saying that in any club there are a few enlightened fans (although investing in football clubs is tricky http://www.footballeconomy.com/stats/stats_turnover_09.htm ). The rest are just hangers on who will ditch the club the moment it starts going downhill. The way that the Glazer’s are going they won’t have long to wait and then they will jump ship to whoever is on the up.

      Reply
    • Niall 10/08/12 #

      Poor Brian. All that googling and Wiki searching and the point missed again. I was clearly referring to post 2005 as before then despite being on the stock exchange united fans had no cause to worry that a crowd of leeches would invade and rape the club of its finances. Top players were bought and paid for and the ship was a steady one. We were privately owned for our entire history pre 91 without worry also which is also why united fans didn’t rush out and buy a pointless share or two. But I’m glad I wasted a nice chunk of your time.

      Reply
    • Nice try there Niall but you clearly are having to backtrack big time. You see when I made my comments they were based on research that I had done ages ago when I did a course on the Stock Market so it took me about 5 minutes to find the relevant information and stick it down. It was actually quite good to refresh one’s memory about the Stock Market and if you ever want to know how it works I would be glad to point you in the right direction.

      As for missing the point of your one line comment ” the fans never had a chance to buy the club. Get your facts in order” Could you point out to me where you were ” clearly referring to post 2005″. I have looked at that one line now 2 or 3 times and I can’t see “post 2005″ anywhere. I do take your point that Man U fans sat on their collective arse’s post-1991 and couldn’t be bothered buying “a pointless share or two” ( you words). Of course if they had they might actually have stopped the Glazer’s.

      But hey don’t let me stop you crying into your pint as ” your club” (which you don’t own) is run into the ground and plundered for everything that it’s got. All you and the rest of the so called “fan’s” who never bought a share in their life can do is make stupid comment’s that you can’t back up, accuse other people of being a “moron” and then come back for more by pretending that you actually know what you are talking about!

      I actually feel sorry for people who did put their money where their mouth is and then got ridden by the Glazer’s. At least they were enlightened and loyal. The rest of the hangers on will see Man Utd start to crumble around 2015 when the various PIK loans and bonds kick in. That should give you plenty of time to read up on the subject and look as though you know what you are talking about.

      Reply
    • Munich have 80% fan ownership, wow!! Was that always the case it have they managed that in modern times, if that’s the later that’s very impressive because even pre-Glazer I’d have been delighted if we only had the 26% required to block a leveraged takeover!!

      Niall I’m sorry you seem to mean well but Brian is right, after we managed to fight off Murdoch in 1999 it was obvious that as a listed company that we were wide open to an unwanted takeover, it was the reason I had a very modest, couldn’t afford more was a skint student at the time, in shareholders united.

      Reply
  • Predict the share price to be about $3 by December. Another Google!

    Reply
  • Begrudgy 10/08/12 #

    Long live the Glaziers. I think they are not being compensated enough for what they’re doing at Man U. They deserve a massive payrise and an extra bonus to the tune of millions. Then all they would have to do is Sack Fergie and hire Steve Kean and they will be legends.

    Reply
  • Rangers pt2

    Reply

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