by One8Seven1* » 28 Nov 2016 12:50
by George_ » 28 Nov 2016 12:56
by tee peg » 28 Nov 2016 12:56
by kwik-silva » 28 Nov 2016 12:59
the takeover is reported to have fallen through following the Premier League’s fit and proper persons’ checks on members of their consortium
by yuomi » 28 Nov 2016 13:02
by genome » 28 Nov 2016 13:08
Having agreed a £130m deal with the Tigers - the takeover is reported to have fallen through following the Premier League’s fit and proper persons’ checks on members of their consortium.
by genome » 28 Nov 2016 13:11
The daughter-in-law of Zeng Qinghong, (former vice-president of the Chinese regime), Jiang Mei, was reported by overseas Chinese media as working with Dai Yongge, to launder billions of yuan overseas for corrupt officials.
by Silver Fox » 28 Nov 2016 13:13
by genome » 28 Nov 2016 13:15
Silver Fox Does anyone know if they've tried to buy another club previously but the takeover fell through for some reason?
Having agreed a £130m deal with the Tigers - the takeover is reported to have fallen through following the Premier League’s fit and proper persons’ checks on members of their consortium.
by TBM » 28 Nov 2016 13:17
by blueroyals » 28 Nov 2016 13:21
by kwik-silva » 28 Nov 2016 13:33
by winchester_royal » 28 Nov 2016 13:40
blueroyals They came in, sold the land surrounding the stadium (worth £millions) to "RFC PLOT 1, 2, 3 LTD" (which they own) for a nominal fee and then sold the club on minus the land. They'll probably now sell the land on for a tidy profit (with PP). We've essentially been asset stripped.
by Hitchytwo » 28 Nov 2016 13:54
by NewCorkSeth » 28 Nov 2016 13:54
winchester_royalblueroyals They came in, sold the land surrounding the stadium (worth £millions) to "RFC PLOT 1, 2, 3 LTD" (which they own) for a nominal fee and then sold the club on minus the land. They'll probably now sell the land on for a tidy profit (with PP). We've essentially been asset stripped.
This isn't true though is it
by tidus_mi2 » 28 Nov 2016 13:55
by Maneki Neko » 28 Nov 2016 13:55
genome Also:The daughter-in-law of Zeng Qinghong, (former vice-president of the Chinese regime), Jiang Mei, was reported by overseas Chinese media as working with Dai Yongge, to launder billions of yuan overseas for corrupt officials.
http://www.chinauncensored.com/index.ph ... s-billions
by genome » 28 Nov 2016 13:58
by winchester_royal » 28 Nov 2016 14:01
NewCorkSethwinchester_royalblueroyals They came in, sold the land surrounding the stadium (worth £millions) to "RFC PLOT 1, 2, 3 LTD" (which they own) for a nominal fee and then sold the club on minus the land. They'll probably now sell the land on for a tidy profit (with PP). We've essentially been asset stripped.
This isn't true though is it
That part might well be true..
by Sutekh » 28 Nov 2016 14:13
GetReading Reading FC are in talks over a potential takeover led by a Chinese brother and sister .
getreading understands negotiations are at an advanced stage which could see the current Thai owners sell a majority of their shares in the club.
The sibling pair behind the takeover attempt are Dai Yongge and his sister Dai Xiu Li - reported to be one of China’s wealthiest women.
Talks haver progressed relatively quickly during the last few weeks amid strong rival interest from at least one other Chinese group, as well as an American consortium - all of which remain interested.
Dai Yongge and Dai Xiu Li - whose property empire in Hong Kong is known as Rehne Commercial - attempted to buy Hull City during the summer but the deal collapsed.
Having agreed a £130m deal with the Tigers - the takeover is reported to have fallen through following the Premier League’s fit and proper persons’ checks on members of their consortium.
After the deal’s collapse Li claimed she and her brother remained interested in investing in an English club, saying the family ‘had a love for the game’ and wanted to ‘learn about European football'.
And they have now turned their attentions to Reading - having entered into talks with the club around three weeks ago.
The pair own Chinese football club Beijing Renhe FC, who were relegated from the Super League last season into China League One.
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