2 points:
1. i don't think there's any question of us going into administration, is there? i'm no lawyer, so possibly someone who is will correct me, but as far as i remember administration is gone into at the directors' request, in order to protect a company from its creditors. for it to be necessary, our creditors (overwhelmingly RBS) would have to be of a mind to apply for a winding-up order in order to recover their money, and THEN the club's directors would apply for administration to give us 'breathing space' for a period, protecting its assets while some firm of accountants try to keep us running.
since there's no indication that RBS would want to start the process of liquidation (reputationally damaging, not forgetting that for the time being they stand every chance of collecting mounting interest charges, ie profit), we're left with 2 possibilities. firstly, refinancing. secondly, and again i'm not 100% sure about this, they may have the power to repossess the club and sell it themselves.
2. the loans and interest payments to H&G are surely just bullshit aren't they? they're just clever accounting techniques, because H&G own the club and the debt, so they owe the money to themselves. i don't think there's any way they can insist on this money back from any new purchaser of the club.
let's say the club is valued at £400m on sale: this is the maximum anyone will pay for the shares. if the club owes £300m to the banks and £150m to H&G, then all that will happen is that either the club is not sold, or H&G have to write-off £50m of what they say they're owed by the club. what i'm trying to get at is that it's the shares of the club, representing the underlying business and assets, which determine what someone pays for it, not the club's debt.
1. i don't think there's any question of us going into administration, is there? i'm no lawyer, so possibly someone who is will correct me, but as far as i remember administration is gone into at the directors' request, in order to protect a company from its creditors. for it to be necessary, our creditors (overwhelmingly RBS) would have to be of a mind to apply for a winding-up order in order to recover their money, and THEN the club's directors would apply for administration to give us 'breathing space' for a period, protecting its assets while some firm of accountants try to keep us running.
since there's no indication that RBS would want to start the process of liquidation (reputationally damaging, not forgetting that for the time being they stand every chance of collecting mounting interest charges, ie profit), we're left with 2 possibilities. firstly, refinancing. secondly, and again i'm not 100% sure about this, they may have the power to repossess the club and sell it themselves.
2. the loans and interest payments to H&G are surely just bullshit aren't they? they're just clever accounting techniques, because H&G own the club and the debt, so they owe the money to themselves. i don't think there's any way they can insist on this money back from any new purchaser of the club.
let's say the club is valued at £400m on sale: this is the maximum anyone will pay for the shares. if the club owes £300m to the banks and £150m to H&G, then all that will happen is that either the club is not sold, or H&G have to write-off £50m of what they say they're owed by the club. what i'm trying to get at is that it's the shares of the club, representing the underlying business and assets, which determine what someone pays for it, not the club's debt.