Manchester United plans to score IPO goal in US
MANCHESTER United plans to go public. In the United States, to boot.
The record 19-time English champions filed a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday to hold an initial public offering of stock and become a listed company on the New York Stock Exchange. The deal could ease pressure on the club's cash flow as it tries to keep and acquire players in an attempt to regain English and European titles.
While the stock price and the number of shares were not listed, the registration statement said the club hoped to raise a maximum of US$100 million - a place-holding figure that could change before the offering becomes effective.
"We intend to use all of our net proceeds from this offering to reduce our indebtedness," the team's filing said.
The Glazer family, which bought the club in 2005, would retain control through Class B shares, which would have 10 times the voting power of the stock that would be sold to the public.
Under the reorganization, the team would become a wholly owned subsidiary of Manchester United Ltd, a newly formed holding company based in the Cayman Islands.
The team was listed on the London Stock Exchange from 1991 until June 2005, when Glazers completed a leveraged buyout valued at US$1.47 billion. The Glazers also own the NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
United has been looking to raise funds to help reduce debt from the 2005 takeover that was 423 million pounds (US$663 million) as of March 31, much of it with interest rates of 8 3/8 and 8 3/4 percent. A US$1 billion offering on the Singapore stock market was pursued last year, but the plans were halted due to volatile global markets.
The team, European champions in 1968, 1999 and 2008, has been valued at US$2.24 billion by Forbes magazine, ranking it as soccer's most valuable club for the eighth year in a row.
The record 19-time English champions filed a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday to hold an initial public offering of stock and become a listed company on the New York Stock Exchange. The deal could ease pressure on the club's cash flow as it tries to keep and acquire players in an attempt to regain English and European titles.
While the stock price and the number of shares were not listed, the registration statement said the club hoped to raise a maximum of US$100 million - a place-holding figure that could change before the offering becomes effective.
"We intend to use all of our net proceeds from this offering to reduce our indebtedness," the team's filing said.
The Glazer family, which bought the club in 2005, would retain control through Class B shares, which would have 10 times the voting power of the stock that would be sold to the public.
Under the reorganization, the team would become a wholly owned subsidiary of Manchester United Ltd, a newly formed holding company based in the Cayman Islands.
The team was listed on the London Stock Exchange from 1991 until June 2005, when Glazers completed a leveraged buyout valued at US$1.47 billion. The Glazers also own the NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
United has been looking to raise funds to help reduce debt from the 2005 takeover that was 423 million pounds (US$663 million) as of March 31, much of it with interest rates of 8 3/8 and 8 3/4 percent. A US$1 billion offering on the Singapore stock market was pursued last year, but the plans were halted due to volatile global markets.
The team, European champions in 1968, 1999 and 2008, has been valued at US$2.24 billion by Forbes magazine, ranking it as soccer's most valuable club for the eighth year in a row.
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