Qatar Sheikh, Billionaire Ratcliffe Enters Bids For Man Utd Owner

Man United
Man United
Man United
Man United

Sheikh Jassim Bin Hamad Al Thani “today confirmed his submission of a bid for 100 percent of Manchester United Football Club”, his press release said ahead of Friday’s “soft” deadline for bidders.

A consortium led by a Qatari banker announced Friday it had submitted an offer to take full control of Manchester United, with British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe also reported to have lodged a bid.

Sheikh Jassim Bin Hamad Al Thani “today confirmed his submission of a bid for 100 percent of Manchester United Football Club”, his press release said ahead of Friday’s “soft” deadline for bidders.

Ratcliffe’s company Ineos is the only other bidder to have officially declared an interest, keen to expand a sporting portfolio that already includes French side Nice and Swiss team FC Lausanne-Sport, as well as the cycling team Ineos Grenadiers, formerly Team Sky.

The Daily Telegraph reported late Friday he had told Raine Group, the US merchant bank conducting the sale, that he could be the club’s “long-term custodian”.

A BBC report said Ratcliffe had submitted a bid before the 2200 GMT deadline.

A bid from Saudi Arabia had also been expected.

The statement from Sheikh Jassim, chairman of Qatar Islamic Bank (QIB), did not give any details on the amount proposed in the bid for United.

However, the price could reach a record $6 billion, according to reports.

The bid announced Friday will be “completely debt free” via Sheikh Jassim’s Nine Two Foundation, which will “look to invest in the football teams, the training centre, the stadium and wider infrastructure, the fan experience and the communities the club supports”.

The club’s current owners, the US-based Glazer family, announced in November they were open to a sale of or investment in the record 20-time English champions, prompting talk of a bidding war between Qatari and Saudi Arabian interests.

But with United’s shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), brokers acting for the club will be obliged to consider offers even after Friday’s “soft” deadline.

United shares rose by close to two percent in after-hours trading following the Qatari bid announcement. They had closed down 1.9 percent on Friday.

Both Ratcliffe and 41-year-old Sheikh Jassim, educated at Britain’s elite Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst, claim to be boyhood United fans.

A takeover by either could raise questions of competition given the Brit’s ownership of Nice and Qatar’s control of French champions Paris Saint-Germain.