AC Milan sold in biggest Chinese investment in a European club
FORMER Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi finalized his troubled sale of soccer club AC Milan to a Chinese-led consortium yesterday, a 740-million-euro (US$788 million) deal that tightens China’s grip on the game in Italy.
The deal, the biggest Chinese investment in a European club, follows retail giant Suning Commerce Group’s purchase of rival Internazionale FC last year. A Chinese firm also underwrites the media rights to the top league, Serie A.
In a joint statement, Berlusconi’s Fininvest said it has sold its entire 99.93 percent stake in the club to Luxembourg-based Rossoneri Sport Investment Lux, a company controlled by investor Li Yonghong which replaced the original Chinese bid vehicle.
The 740-million-euro price tag includes 220 million euros in debt. The buyers, who paid a final tranche of 370 million euros yesterday, committed to a significant recapitalization and financial strengthening of the club, the statement said.
Berlusconi, 80, is selling after three decades in control of the former European champions because he was unwilling to pump the extra money required for the team to compete with the continent’s top clubs, many now bankrolled by wealthy Gulf and Asian owners.
He had agreed the deal to sell AC Milan last August, but the transaction ran into trouble and took longer than expected to complete as China cracked down on non-strategic foreign acquisitions, especially vanity deals in the sports industry.
US private equity fund Elliott came to the deal’s rescue at the 11th hour last month, agreeing to lend money to Rossoneri Sport Investment.
The vehicle got 180 million euros from Elliott and another 140 million euros from China’s Huarong, said a source familiar with the transactions.
A further 50 million were paid by Li, the source added.
The consortium’s full membership has not been made public.
AC Milan is second only to Real Madrid in the list of winners of Europe’s top club competition, but it has failed to win any major silverware in the past five years and is lying sixth in Italy’s Serie A top division.
The club, which reported a loss of 93.5 million euros in 2015, needs to fund the purchase of match-winning players as well as invest in its brand at home and abroad.
It has not yet disclosed its 2016 accounts, but a source familiar with its finances said it lost 70-80 million euros.
AC Milan’s new owners offered Berlusconi the chance to stay involved in his cherished club as honorary president but he declined.
Elliott’s financing deal totals 300 million euros, including a cash injection into AC Milan itself, and carries an average interest rate of under 10 percent.
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