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    Battle for Manchester United heats up ahead of deadline for improved bids

    Synopsis

    Qatari banker Sheikh Jassim Bin Hamad Al Thani and British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe have rival bids on the table. There are reported to be several other groups whose interest in United has remained private throughout a bidding war which has intensified this week.

    Battle for Manchester United Heats Up Ahead of Deadline for Improved BidsAgencies
    The initial offers for United last month were believed to have been worth around £4.5 billion.
    The race to buy Manchester United enters a crucial stage on Wednesday as bidders face a deadline to submit improved offers for the Premier League giants.

    Qatari banker Sheikh Jassim Bin Hamad Al Thani and British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe have rival bids on the table.

    There are reported to be several other groups whose interest in United has remained private throughout a bidding war which has intensified this week.

    Elliott Investment Management reportedly made it through to the second stage of the process, although the firm is believed to be offering funding to United owners, the Glazer family, rather than a takeover.

    Those who want to buy United have to declare their offer to Raine, the merchant bank brought in to assist the club, by 2100 GMT on Wednesday.

    At least six bids, possibly rising to eight, are expected to be submitted, with those comprised of offers for full control as well as smaller stakes in United.

    The Glazers have reportedly set a £6 billion ($7.3 billion) figure for their valuation of a club they bought for £750 million in a highly-leveraged deal in 2005.

    The initial offers for United last month were believed to have been worth around £4.5 billion. That would surpass the Premier League record £4.25 billion paid for Chelsea by a consortium fronted by American Todd Boehly last year.

    Sheikh Jassim is reported to be ready to submit a second indicative bid before the cut-off.

    But INEOS chemical company founder Ratcliffe, a boyhood United fan, has been more circumspect in his assessment of the process, insisting he will not pay a "stupid" price as the bidding war for one of football's most iconic clubs increases.

    "How do you decide the price of a painting? How do you decide the price of a house? It's not related to how much it cost to build or how much it cost to paint," Ratcliffe told the Wall Street Journal this week. "What you don't want to do is pay stupid prices for things because then you regret it subsequently."

    Ratcliffe, who already owns French club Nice and Swiss side Lausanne-Sport, said his interest in United would be "purely in winning things", calling the club a "community asset".


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    Subscribe to The Economic Times Prime and read the ET ePaper online.

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