Tottenham Hotspur, the Ryan Mason variant

The Club has completed on an institutional fund raising of £250m, with an average tenure of over 20 years and an average interest rate of circa 2.8%. The debt stack includes a new 30-year tranche, with a bullet repayment in 2051 and is a unique financing for any sports entity with the long-term institutional debt markets.

The funds have been used to repay the £175m CCFF funding from the Bank of England, which was used to address some of the shortfall in income caused by the pandemic and will also partially repay a bank loan held by the Bank of America which had a shorter term, moving it to fixed rate 15-year money, locking in low interest rates and extending the tenure of the debt.

Chairman Daniel Levy: “The long-term sustainability of the Club is paramount and the replacement of short-term debt with long-term financing means we are in a secure financial position.

“The Club’s ability to manage effectively throughout the Covid period led to discussions with the same institutions that supported the Club in 2019 to refinance stadium funding. Our institutional investors and banks have been supportive and positive throughout the pandemic despite the uncertainty in the economy and the lack of fans at the stadium for the past two seasons, for which we are very grateful.

“I should also like to take this opportunity to thank all our partners who have continued to support us, in particular our long-term partner AIA. During these challenging times, they have worked alongside us on new ways to activate and engage. We never underestimate the immense contribution this partnership makes to our resilience as a Club.”

Elliott McCabe, Bank of America: “We are very pleased with the overall results and strong support from the existing investors and banks. Once again, Tottenham Hotspur Football Club (THFC) achieved “firsts” in the Direct Private Placement market for Sports, with the long dated bullets topping the 25 years achieved initially with a new 30-year tranche. The results underscore the high confidence in ownership, management and THFC long term.”

That reads like an Irish government statement prior to the Troika rolling round the corner.

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Translation:

“We’re fucked”

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Levy badly needs Kane to stick away a few penalties to get his transfer fee up.

They’ll be in League 1 in 5 years

Do you have a background in finance? I thought you were a forklift driver?

Yes to both.

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A real Leeds job.

Borrowing more money to pay off money they borrowed.

They are utterly fucked.

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But their pints fill from the bottom of the glass. That clearly means more.

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We’ve spent 1 season outside the top flight in the last 71, back I n 1977/78. We’ll probably just about manage to hang onto a top flight place, no matter how bad things are.

I don’t doubt you will for a while. Levy is a classic example of a man that’s a reputation for a worker so can stay in bed all day. He got great deals back in the day but he’s living on them

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Sky Sports reporting that Manchester City made a £100 million, plus player bid for Harry Kane today.

Would you take Laporte, Sterling and Jesus at the Lane in exchange for Golden Boot Harry?

Give it to Ryan Mason says Andros Townsend. Sure what could go wrong there?

That Jesus fellow has looked a bit windy just about anytime I’ve seen him play.

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I’d say Spurs new stadium business plan has been decimated with Covid. Nearly sure they were planning a couple of nfl games very year. Whatever about the self pouring pints, they have a food court behind the south stand (which has a protected terrace) that is off the richter. They must have 11-12 different types of food offerings and a great set up to eat. It is a top top stadium in fairness

Reports in Italy say Spurs are close to signing Tomiyasu from Bologna. €15m plus add ons.