Dangote Cannot Afford to Buy Arsenal Football Club - Etcetera
You have sold
some shares and you’ve got some money to spend. Now you want the
ultimate: Your own football club. Hold on there, are you sure?
Football clubs
are a nightmare to run. In fact, almost two-thirds of premiership clubs
have been in receivership at some point. Remember Portsmouth FC ploughed
through four owners some seasons back and landed itself a debt of £60m
and relegation in the Championship. Think of Leeds United’s tragicomic
collapse; the balls-up at Cambridge United; Rotherham going into
receivership in 2006 and 2008; Southampton’s sorry saga. And, of course,
Crawley Town getting a winding up order years back. So, what do we
know?
Don’t buy a football club for the glory. So, before Dangote aspires to join Abrahamovic,
Glazers and Al Mansours, he should make sure he knows his stuff.
But does Dangote know how much these football clubs really cost?
It is often
mistaken that these clubs go for a quid. For instance, Swansea City was
bought by investors for £100, and sold four years later for a £1. But
beware: underneath those figures lies a pile of debt.
Does Dangote have the cash, can he do an Abramovich?
No, he can’t.
New UEFA Club Licensing and Financial Fair Play Regulations already in
place, require clubs to balance their income and expenses. Dangote
cannot operate under such rules. The premiership is too organised and
transparent for any businessman to easily manipulate. The wage structure
of footballers is too large for a businessman like Dangote to take on.
Let us forget
that those goons at Forbes have told us that Dangote is Africa’s richest
man. As it stands, he cannot afford the outright purchase of a big
football club like Arsenal. It is as simple as that. He will go broke.
It is a possibility if we are talking about a club in the coast of West
Africa. Dangote has most of his wealth in shares and physical assets and
the football business requires liquid cash to sustain.
Have we all
forgotten that the same Dangote got a 3G licence and sold it to
Etisalat? He is a very smart businessman who knows how to pick his areas
of investments.
Can he get Bank backing?
Unlikely! No
serious private equity firm would get involved with a football club.
They are not proper businesses. Too much politics, too many egos. And
there’s no proper exit route – the history of football clubs on the
stock market is chequered, to say the least. They are rich men’s toys,
great for entertaining your mates, and that’s about it. I don’t think
Dangote can afford such an expensive toy.
A lot of people
think it is relatively easy to make a million pounds by being the owner
of a football club. That all you have to do is put in that first two
million pounds. But these people should also know that since the English
Premier League was formed in 1992, football finances have dried up to
the extent that making a million pound profit is no longer a walk in the
park.
It is also the
case that buying a football club is unlikely to yield that much of a
return. Despite the significant TV and other commercial revenues,
football clubs in England’s top flight still struggle to break even.
This is ironic, given the goal of setting up the Premier League was to
stabilise club finances.
Is Dangote putting his heart over his head?
Yes I think so.
Simon Jordan, in his autobiography, tells the story of how owning a
football club can go terribly wrong. Jordan amassed a fortune of £75m in
the early days of the mobile phone revolution. In 2000, he paid £10m to
take control of South London football team Crystal Palace, becoming the
youngest football club chairman at the age of 32. He was warned by many
not to do it, but having watched the club since his childhood, he could
not resist.
Fast-forward 10
years and the club was in administration and Jordan’s personal wealth
largely wiped out. It is reported that Roman Abramovich, the Russian
owner of Chelsea, has written off more than one billion pounds he
ploughed into the club since acquiring it in 2003. Catching him up fast
is Sheikh Mansour from Abu Dhabi, who has invested close to one billion
pounds in Manchester City since 2008. Can Dangote write off such a huge
amount of money?
It is in fact
the amount of money he borrows to invest in businesses. But again, I
think Dangote is just trying to hype himself. Most of the serious money
flowing into football recently has come from the Middle East. The Qatar
Investment Authority (the country’s sovereign wealth fund) bought the
French Ligue 1 side Paris St Germain in 2011 and has gone about
transforming them in the same way Sheikh Mansour has Manchester City.
Forget those guys at Forbes, Dangote is not in the same league as these
guys.
The Glazer
Family bought Manchester United in 2006, recognising the immense value
of its global brand as a cash generator and the opportunities to enhance
it even further. The cost of buying the club was loaded on to the club
itself, with the revenues it generates used to pay the debt and interest
that the Glazers undertook to buy the club. Eventually, the hope is
that the club will essentially pay for itself leaving its American
owners in possession of a multi-billion pound asset but till date, the
Glazers are still gnashing their teeth and are still neck deep in debt.
When it was
speculated that a Middle East consortium was willing to pay £1.5bn for
Arsenal Football Club, it was stated that Stan Kroenke, the American who
owns about 63 per cent of the shares in the club, would have made just
£400m on his shares. So, given the appalling financial returns, why do
people buy football clubs?
Who can buy Arsenal football club?
Anyone can buy
Arsenal football club, but that anyone doesn’t include anyone who
obtains bank loans to fund a business. Sir John Madejski, chairman of
Reading Football Club, describes the ideal football club owner as having
deep pockets, mercurial, and not faint-hearted
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