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    DIC plan Liverpool cash whirlwind after takeover.

    Dubai International Capital will push through plans for a new stadium as soon as their £170 million takeover of Liverpool is complete.

    DIC is an arm of Dubai Holdings owned by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai, whose personal wealth is £7 billion and family fortune £14 billion. Only four men on earth are richer; only 11, like he, could buy and sell Roman Abramovich.

    It would cost the sheikh £170m to acquire Liverpool, in which Moores, whose family have been owners for 50 years, has a 51.7% holding. Debts of £80m and the club's commitment to a new stadium could lift the price as high as £500m. DIC can pay cash.

    "We'll build the stadium pronto and invest in players, though there'll be no blank cheques," a source at DIC told the Sunday Times. "We're serious investors looking for returns. Liverpool won't turn into Chelsea, but it will become closer to Manchester United."

    A leading football analyst was less cautious: "This will catapult Liverpool into the Abramovich league."

    A senior figure inside Anfield also said: "This is not a shotgun wedding.

    "They've looked hard at us, but we've also looked hard at them. DIC understand the values and traditions of the club, that's what they're buying into. Remember, the most important value in Liverpool's heritage has always been winning. The old Shankly adage, first is first and second is nowhere, fits perfectly with the philosophy of the sheikhs.

    "An Abramovich would be wrong for us. It wouldn't be our style or fit with our fans. Liverpool are about winning - but getting there through hard work.

    "We know for DIC this is not about having a trophy asset which wins a couple of titles."
    Just believe and you never know what will happen.

    According to Benitez it's important not simply to go out to win but to go out prepared to win, which means players have to put in the same level of work on a daily basis. Anything else is unacceptable.

    #2
    Can you imagine them really saying "We'll build the stadium pronto"

    Sorry but that article is just plain made up.

    Comment


      #3
      All these articles are from bull****ters like Profressor Tom Cannon. I doubt DIC will have said anything, the Arabs have always been discreet in their business dealings.

      Comment


        #4
        "We'll build the stadium pronto."

        "This will catapult Liverpool into the Abramovich league."

        "This is not a shotgun wedding."





        What a bizarre collection of quotes.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by Redlife View Post
          "We'll build the stadium pronto."

          "This will catapult Liverpool into the Abramovich league."

          "This is not a shotgun wedding."





          What a bizarre collection of quotes.
          Probably a succinct resume of what was said.

          Comment


            #6
            is it a tribal football special?

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Rocket View Post
              is it a tribal football special?
              More to do with poor journalism i think.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Rocket View Post
                is it a tribal football special?
                It's tribalfootball who have quoted Sunday Times as you can see in the article.
                Just believe and you never know what will happen.

                According to Benitez it's important not simply to go out to win but to go out prepared to win, which means players have to put in the same level of work on a daily basis. Anything else is unacceptable.

                Comment


                  #9
                  a **** article being quoted by a **** website, thanks

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Something like that
                    Just believe and you never know what will happen.

                    According to Benitez it's important not simply to go out to win but to go out prepared to win, which means players have to put in the same level of work on a daily basis. Anything else is unacceptable.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Rocket View Post
                      a **** article being quoted by a **** website, thanks
                      Another succinct analysis.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by Red_Al_77 View Post
                        Can you imagine them really saying "We'll build the stadium pronto"

                        Sorry but that article is just plain made up.
                        I'll only believe it when it's all done and dusted.
                        But one thing though, I know that over the past few years in Dubai there has been a lot of developments going up and they build buildings "Pronto" no hanging about there.


                        "Who's your Daddy now?"

                        LFC Champions one season someday
                        Jurgen Klopp is just boss
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                        Comment


                          #13
                          I think I read in an article on News Now regarding the DIC involvement that currently there is approx £10 Billion worth of development going on along the beachfronts in Dubai so these guys know a thing or two about building!

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Sunday, 10 December 2006
                            Moores stands in way of Liverpool FC bid
                            by Frank Kane



                            Dubai International Capital, one of the investment vehicles of the
                            Dubai government, is leading the race to buy Britain’s Liverpool
                            Football Club – but several problems could yet stall the deal.

                            DIC executives travelled to Britain last week to meet with their
                            Liverpool counterparts and advisers to try to resolve the tricky
                            position of David Moores, the Liverpool chairman, who has a 51%
                            shareholding.

                            Both Liverpool, controlled for decades by the Moores family, and DIC
                            confirmed last week they were in exclusive talks about a financial
                            package to take control of the debt-laden club, which is still
                            regarded as one of the great brand names in international sport.

                            DIC chief executive Sameer Al-Ansari said: “We will be commencing due
                            diligence in the coming days and continuing discussions with Liverpool
                            which may or may not lead to a formal offer.

                            “We are supporters – of the game and of the club,” he added.
                            “Liverpool’s investment requirements have been well-publicised and we
                            hope we can agree a deal that will provide the club with the funds it
                            needs, both on and off the pitch.”

                            The prospects of a deal were also talked up by Liverpool chief
                            executive Rick Parry: “This is the latest step on the road of finding
                            the long-term investment that the club needs,” he said. “This is very
                            important in terms of the proposed new stadium, which is key to plans
                            for the regeneration of the local community.

                            “On the pitch, Liverpool remains focused on winning and, here again,
                            this is all about doing a deal that gives us the long-term resources
                            to do that,” Parry added. But sources close to the negotiations
                            between the two sides do not think a deal is close to being tied up,
                            and suggest it may take until next year to complete the due diligence
                            process.

                            The Reds’ cash needs are urgent and apparent. With some US$157m of
                            bank debt and another US$393m the estimated cost of a new stadium, the
                            club needs a financial injection to allow it to compete at the top
                            level of the European game. It has been noticeably falling behind
                            well-financed clubs like Chelsea and Manchester United in recent
                            years.

                            DIC is willing to invest around US$884m, but advisers believe there is
                            as yet no agreement on a central issue, which could still derail the
                            deal: the value put on his controlling 51% per cent stake by chairman
                            David Moores.

                            Liverpool shares are not traded on an official stock market, but the
                            most recent transactions have valued them at US$6485 each, valuing the
                            clubs share capital at around US$226m.

                            Moores is thought to have asked DIC for at least US$8845 a share, to
                            reflect a takeover premium for his stake. Dubai's DIC believes this
                            money would be better spent on investment in the new stadium and
                            players.
                            “It is an issue which will have to be successfully negotiated,” said a
                            Dubai adviser. “If he [Moores] holds out for too much he might just
                            negate the benefits of the deal.” Also under discussion are the other
                            major shareholders in the club. Businessman Steve Morgan – who has
                            been critical of the Moores regime in the past – has around 10%, while
                            broadcaster ITV has a similar stake, inherited from the old Granada
                            television group.

                            Moores’ uncompromising stand on price has been a stumbling block in
                            the past. George Gillett, owner of the Montreal Canadiens ice-hockey
                            team, proposed a similar deal to DIC’s earlier this year, only to have
                            it knocked back by Moores' determination to get full value for his
                            shares.

                            One possible compromise would see DIC buying a minority, but
                            controlling, stake and investing capital directly into the new
                            stadium. Moores would remain a shareholder, possibly with an honourary
                            position at the club.

                            “If he stays on it might make Liverpudlians more comfortable about the
                            new owners,” said one adviser. However, this arrangement is unlikely
                            to comfort DIC, which has a track record of seeking full control for
                            most of its other investments, like the Tussauds waxworks tourist
                            attraction and the Travelodge hotel chain.
                            http://www.retroreds.co.uk/

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by lfc4ever View Post
                              But sources close to the negotiations
                              between the two sides do not think a deal is close to being tied up,
                              and suggest it may take until next year to complete the due diligence
                              process.

                              Jeebus wept
                              Originally posted by Gordon Brown
                              (1995)
                              "A weak currency is the sign of a weak economy,which is the sign of a weak government"

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