Sarah StarUkebrendywendy id prefer he coverted loans to shares though
surely everyone would
loans involve him taking cash out of the club on a regular basis
the other involves him turning it into shares in a football club he already owns, only to be converted to cash upon selling up.
which depends totally on our continued success
if we were to be relegated this season those shares would be worth little
im unsure as to why anyone would frown on this
but then i have no idea why people frown on him wanting to recoup his losses at all on here
very strange attitude to have.
They also somehow have convinced themselves that the Abramoviches, Glazers, the Gilletts and the Dubai Royal family are all investing solely to give money away with no return on investment too!
How does that work then? How do they get a return on their investments when the club is debt to the tune of hundreds of millions of pounds? I just assumed football clubs were a rich man's play thing and they just recouped their money when they sold up, not before.
I don't doubt you, btw. I just don't know how these things work.
There's all sorts of speculation about their motives. Some say they're playing the long game, to a time when there is no relegation from the PL and so their investment is a lot safer. Also possibilities of European or world leagues, and some kind of salary-capping (which would require agreement between clubs) but would mean massive profits could be made. Of course, the whole business of foreign matches abroad also dovetails with this as a way to increase revenue.
Also - and for legal reasons - I must state that this refers to none of those mentioned above - it has been pointed out that if someone wanted to "launder" large quantities of dirty money then owning a PL football club would be a near-perfect way to do it, and the returns offered this way would be much better than the conventional methods for cleaning such money.