Exiled wrote:So each share has 1/10th of the voting rights compared to Glazer's shares.
No dividend until debt is cleared or at least much more manageable.
Investors to consider the ROI in future years rather than the dividend itself.
Will the TV revenue bubble burst? Can it get much higher?
Fergie is their key asset who will be retiring in a year or two.
Struggling to compete for the best players around.
If I was a potential investor I would be very hesitant about going near these shares.
Florida Blue wrote:I personally will be shorting the stock the minute it goes public. Nothing like a sinking ship to make money off of greedy reds.
Dameerto wrote:Exiled wrote:So each share has 1/10th of the voting rights compared to Glazer's shares.
No dividend until debt is cleared or at least much more manageable.
Investors to consider the ROI in future years rather than the dividend itself.
Will the TV revenue bubble burst? Can it get much higher?
Fergie is their key asset who will be retiring in a year or two.
Struggling to compete for the best players around.
If I was a potential investor I would be very hesitant about going near these shares.
It's more aimed at the 'sentimental investor' in the form of their global following than as an actual serious level headed investment opportunity. Basically it's another way to fleece the (armchair) fans.
Ted Hughes wrote:To any of you stock market types; would I be correct in reading this particular move as having a hint of desperation about it ?
Ted Hughes wrote:To any of you stock market types; would I be correct in reading this particular move as having a hint of desperation about it ?
zuricity wrote:is the P/E rate fixed
john68 wrote:What do you mean by "SHORTING THE MARKET" ?
Scatman wrote:Do they pay any corporation tax in the UK? I would have thought all of those interest payments would pretty much wipe out any profits they had in the first place (and also the possibility that the interest payments were designed in such a way as to help them reduce profits low enough to not pay and UK corporation tax anyway).
Beefymcfc wrote:Scatman wrote:Do they pay any corporation tax in the UK? I would have thought all of those interest payments would pretty much wipe out any profits they had in the first place (and also the possibility that the interest payments were designed in such a way as to help them reduce profits low enough to not pay and UK corporation tax anyway).
I read somewhere that it is approx 8% higher in the US, ours approx 28%, which begs the question, why?
It's clear that it's aimed at fans rather than investors yet they choose to float in the US. It's all about the type of share they want issuing as they can't do the same in the UK as the US. In the UK the shares would have to have equal voting rights rather than in the US where they can change the rights to suit their needs, ie. a diminshed voting right (only 10%) on the shares issued compared to the ones they own. Basically, if one person bought the full shares they would still only have 0.7% voting rights compared to the Glazer's 99.3%.
Ted Hughes wrote:Beefymcfc wrote:Scatman wrote:Do they pay any corporation tax in the UK? I would have thought all of those interest payments would pretty much wipe out any profits they had in the first place (and also the possibility that the interest payments were designed in such a way as to help them reduce profits low enough to not pay and UK corporation tax anyway).
I read somewhere that it is approx 8% higher in the US, ours approx 28%, which begs the question, why?
It's clear that it's aimed at fans rather than investors yet they choose to float in the US. It's all about the type of share they want issuing as they can't do the same in the UK as the US. In the UK the shares would have to have equal voting rights rather than in the US where they can change the rights to suit their needs, ie. a diminshed voting right (only 10%) on the shares issued compared to the ones they own. Basically, if one person bought the full shares they would still only have 0.7% voting rights compared to the Glazer's 99.3%.
So they could sell Rooney's hair but not the rest of him ?
Beefymcfc wrote:On a sidenote what's happening behind the scenes. Just read that Fryers could be off the Spurs and with them losing Pogba and Morrison from their up and coming there seems to be an air of 'Sinking Ship' going on. Seems nobody wants to take up their offers.
Manchester United defender Ezekiel Fryers is on the verge of completing his move to Tottenham after deciding not to sign a new deal with the Champions League side.
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