by Rex » 22 Jan 2009 14:31
by 79Royal » 25 Jan 2009 15:34
Dirk Gently I hear from a journo this morning that there's a strong rumour that Barclays won't be able to afford to renew their £70M sponsorship of the PL when it runs out next year.
Not that it will make a great impact as it's relatively small compared with the total PL income, but it'll be an embarrassing blow for them.
by Whore Jackie » 13 Feb 2009 13:32
Premier League clubs will find out early next week about the financial health of one of the media groups that bankrolls them with Setanta due to lodge a seven-figure deposit to secure the live rights it won in last week's auction.
Setanta and Sky, which won five of the six packages of live matches on offer in last week's rights auction, are required to sign a binding agreement by today and lodge a deposit with the Premier League early next week in order to secure their contracts. Having narrowly lost out on the package of 23 Monday night games after submitting a bid around 20% lower than the amount it currently pays, Setanta has approached the Premier League to plead its case in the hope of regaining access to them.
Executives at the Irish broadcaster had hoped that Sky would entertain the idea of sublicensing the matches, given that only having four of six packages under the current deal has not hit its subscriber figures because it was still able to market itself as the home of the biggest clashes, but without them Setanta faces real questions about its future. Insiders have conceded that it will be forced into major cutbacks but have suggested it could refocus as a scaled-down operation, positioning itself as a good-value alternative to Sky.
While the company is engaged in talks with its investors and carries out a wide-ranging strategic review, executives plan to continue with business as usual and expect the deposit to be paid. However, they will have to convince their private equity bankers, who have sunk hundreds of millions of pounds into the business, that they will eventually be able to see a path to selling or floating the company and making a reasonable return.
Both the Premier League and Sky are believed to be implacably opposed to the idea of re-opening the auction or re-selling the matches to Setanta. Next week's deadline for lodging a deposit with the Premier League will send a clear signal about whether or not its investors believe it has a future.
According to sources, the deposit is typically set at or just below 5% of the final rights value. That would mean Setanta having to pay between £5m and £8m, followed by six equal tranches when the deal starts in 2010. It still has at least two instalments to pay on its existing £392m deal for 46 matches per season, which runs until the end of 2009-10. The payments, due before the season in question starts and halfway through, are equally divided and Setanta is effectively paid up until the end of this season.
Setanta has made overtures to the Premier League and plans to take its case to UK media watchdog Ofcom and competition authorities in Brussels. But Sky would argue that the margin by which it was defeated was so narrow, that Setanta's error was one of judgment rather than a result of unfair competition.
by T.R.O.L.I. » 13 Feb 2009 13:39
by Wycombe Royal » 13 Feb 2009 14:49
by Deathy » 13 Feb 2009 14:50
by Royal With Cheese » 13 Feb 2009 14:56
by Silver Fox » 13 Feb 2009 15:12
by Dirk Gently » 14 Feb 2009 13:21
Under proposals sent out to Leyton Orient shareholders (which include LOFT) on 27 January, the club would sell its home of over 70 years to Matchroom Sports Limited - the main trading company of the club's current chairman Barry Hearn - for £6m. However, £3.4m of this would immediately be used to clear Matchroom's loan to the club (the result of ongoing annual deficits at the football club), leaving £2.6m of "working capital".
Matchroom would then grant only a 20-year lease to the club, rent-free only for the first five years, then £180,000 a year for the next five years, and reviewed again (and no doubt increased) in years 10 and 15.
LOFT has taken legal advice on the proposal, and is continuing to do so. LOFT's view at present is that shareholders have not been sent enough information to come to a considered decision. The proposal refers to "advice from a leading firm of valuers" regarding the offer, but unlike a previous EGM no actual valuation has been provided to shareholders for consideration. Until the full text of a full and proper valuation is received, shareholders cannot possibly consider whether the proposal represents good value to Leyton Orient FC.
In the past four years, two Extraordinary General Meetings have been held to agree to selling off land around the ground to a consortium led by Hearn, yet for arguably a far more important decision shareholders are only being given 28 days to register a postal agreement to the proposal, with no opportunity for discussion at an EGM.
Without further information or discussion between the club, its shareholders or supporters, LOFT objects to the proposal on the following grounds:
- the proposal removes the link between the club and ownership of its ground. While Barry Hearn remains owner of Leyton Orient at the time of writing, any future sale of the club would place Orient in the same difficult situation that the likes of Crystal Palace or Oxford United have faced in recent years, where the previous owner holds an enormous - and usually negative - influence over the financial wellbeing of the football club;
- the proposal would leave Leyton Orient with no certainty as to its future in the London Borough of Waltham Forest, whereas at the moment it has over 990 years remaining on its current lease from the local council at an annual rent of just £1;
the proposal contains no information as to the financial sustainability of Leyton Orient as a Football League club once the £2.6m has been spent (which, based on the current annual deficit, would be in the next two to three years);
the proposal makes no reference to what plans, if any, the club has in place for relocating (either to an Olympic stadium or elsewhere), yet refers to "the sale" of the ground in the future;
- the proposal comes at a time when property prices are at a low at the beginning of a period of economic recession, with no indication as to the possible value of the land once any ground relocation takes place (say, in approximately five years time when a possible Olympic stadium move could take place, and when hopefully the property market has recovered). Given that the land in the four corners of the ground sold for £7.35M to Bellway Homes in 2003, and that Hearn's consortium paid £1.5m and £1.25m respectively for undercroft space in the West Stand (2005) and the land behind the North and South Stands (2006), a value of £6m for the entire ground seems incredibly low for what it could be worth for potential development;
- the proposal allows for 50% of the profit on "any future sale" of the ground during the term of the lease to come to Leyton Orient; if the ground remained in Leyton Orient's name, 100% of any future sale would come to the club and Matchroom's loan could be repaid from that.
by Dirk Gently » 14 Feb 2009 13:23
by Baines » 14 Feb 2009 14:24
by Ian Royal » 14 Feb 2009 14:28
Baines Dirk - do you know if the FA have ever given consideration to a requirement that, as a condition of membership of the Football League, a club own its ground?
by Baines » 14 Feb 2009 14:35
by Ian Royal » 14 Feb 2009 14:39
Baines I'm not sure how many clubs are in that position at the moment - you only tend to hear about it at a particular club after everything's gone tits up.
by Dirk Gently » 14 Feb 2009 19:40
Baines Dirk - do you know if the FA have ever given consideration to a requirement that, as a condition of membership of the Football League, a club own its ground?
by Baines » 14 Feb 2009 20:05
by Dirk Gently » 15 Feb 2009 13:38
by Dirk Gently » 25 Feb 2009 09:57
by Royal Rother » 25 Feb 2009 10:34
by TFF » 02 Jun 2009 09:40
SPORTS organisations including the Scottish Premier League may be forced to stomach deeper-than-expected cuts to their TV income after shareholders in Setanta failed to stump up enough cash to keep the broadcaster alive.
Setanta’s financial position was so parlous this weekend that it asked arch-rival BSkyB, which is 39.1% owned by News Corporation, parent company of The Sunday Times, for a £50m advance payment on a deal that would have seen Sky wholesale Setanta to its own Sky Sports subscribers.
The proposal of an interest-free loan, which was rejected, would have bridged the gap left by private-equity backers Doughty Hanson, Balderton Capital and Goldman Sachs, which have so far offered to inject £50m into the company.
Setanta, which has 1.2m customers, must now return for crunch talks with rights holders, including the PGA golf tour. After initially asking for a 15%-20% reduction in terms, the broadcaster is seeking to negotiate some of its rights deals down by 25%.
The company, which aired the FA Cup Final between Chelsea and Everton yesterday, got into trouble when it won the rights to screen only 23 Premier League fixtures per season from 2010, raising doubts over its future viability.
Refinancing negotiations are led by a new management team that includes chairman Sir Robin Miller, the Emap publishing veteran.
The stand-off between sports bodies and shareholders could yet force Setanta into administration. Insiders described talks with all parties as “fluid”. It has until June 15 to make a £35m payment to the Premier League. Deloitte is already advising the firm and would be appointed as administrator if required.
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