BILLIONAIRE money manager George Soros reported a nearly 2 per cent stake in Manchester United Plc this week, in one of the first revelations by investors in the British soccer club’s controversial initial public offering earlier this month.
The veteran investor’s eponymous hedge fund, Soros Fund Management LLC, owns 7.85 per cent of Manchester United’s Class A shares, or about 1.9 per cent of the entire club, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
Manchester United, which went public on August 9th, priced below its expected range amid broad scepticism about the valuation the club’s owners wanted. This made the identity of the eventual shareholders a matter of interest for other institutional investors.
The club is owned by the Glazer family, which has interests ranging from shopping malls to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers American football team.
Mr Soros is one of the closely watched investors in the $2 trillion hedge fund industry. He oversees about $25 billion in assets, even after returning money to outside investors and converting his fund into a family office last summer. The firm now mainly manages money for Mr Soros, his family and his foundation.
This is not the first time the 82-year-old has taken interest in a soccer club. In 2008, he eyed a takeover of Italian club AS Roma as the team struggled with debt issues, but later decided against it.
Mr Soros was likely drawn to United because of the team’s lucrative media rights deals, said Philip Hall, a partner at New York-based investment bank Inner Circle Sports which has advised on high-profile English Premier League takeovers including Fenway Sports Group’s acquisition of Liverpool.
“This could be a play by Soros on the strength of Manchester United’s brand and the English Premier League’s growing media rights,” Hall said. “The domestic rights are set to increase 70 per cent for the season and the international media rights, set to be announced in late October or early November, are also expected to come in at a very robust uplift.” - (Reuters)