Weather Tonight: 4°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 8°c Cloudy

News

Saint in a sandwich: Stern John gets caught between Cardiff's Steven McPhail, left, and Glenn Loovens during Southampton's 1-0 win on Saturday
Saint in a sandwich: Stern John gets caught between Cardiff's Steven McPhail, left, and Glenn Loovens during Southampton's 1-0 win on Saturday

Saints are the goal for secretive hedge fund

Robert Lea, Evening Standard
24 Oct 2007


The mystery bidder for Southampton Football Club can be named today as Mayfair hedge fund Sisu Capital.

If the deal goes ahead, Southampton, currently mid-table in the Championship would become the first British football club to fall under the control of a hedge fund.

The Evening Standard can reveal that Sisu Capital, a firm that has been criticised in the High Court and which is said to be one of London's most aggressive traders in debt-laden businesses, is the unnamed "investment company" which has made an on-the-cheap bid for Saints' quoted parent Southampton Leisure.

Southampton has told investors the bidder is making "a long-term commitment" and will be a "strong and supportive shareholder." It has also said it would be "injecting a substantial sum".

Sisu aims to take at least 55% control of Southampton through the placing of 30 million new shares.

But the placing is priced at 40p a share, a discount of more than 20% to last Friday's closing price, raising just £12 million for a loss-making club that is £24 million in debt.

The offer has been agreed by Saints' chairman Ken Dulieu and chief executive Jim Hone with the backing of 29% shareholder and former chairman Rupert Lowe, who is likely to sell some of his stake to Sisu.

However, Sisu's offer compares poorly with the 65p a share put on the table by Microsoft tycoon Paul Allen in the spring.

Allen was prepared to make a major investment to get Saints into the Premiership, but walked away after witnessing the internecine war on Southampton's board and among major shareholders.

The Standard can further reveal that Sisu has won the agreement of the Southampton management team led by Hone after offering a bonus of £300,000 for doing the deal, the promise of further bonuses and "significant" increases in salary as well as seats on the new board.

The offer for Southampton is Sisu's third attempt to take over an English football club, having failed to land Derby and then being outbid by ex-Thai Premier Thaksin Shinawatra last summer for Manchester City.

On each occasion the Sisu offer was fronted by Ray Ranson, the ex-Manchester City full back-turned-businessman who Sisu is proposing to put on the Southempton board.

Sisu will also demand a seat for its director masterminding the deal, the Swiss-educated Nigerian Onye Igwe, a sometime accountant and commodities trader.

Sisu keeps a determinedly low profile but was catapulted into the limelight two years ago when its chief executive Joy Seppala, a 46-year-old Finnish-American, was accused of lying in a High Court wrangle over bust electricity company TXU.

Seppala who is described by rivals as having "balls of steel", was criticised by the trial judge over her "distorted recollection of events" and for being "prone to exaggerate".

Since then Sisu has emerged as an aggressive punter in takeover situations, taking positions in the battle for the London Stock Exchange and most recently in Burren Energy.

Reader views (1)

 Add your view

They sound a dodgy outfit to take over a football club - this is likely to end in tears for the Saints.

- John, Southampton, 24/10/2007 19:09
Report abuse


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • MPs spend £400,000 of taxpayers' cash on 12 fig trees for their offices Fig Trees EXCLUSIVE: Taxpayers are footing a bill of almost £400,000 to rent 12 fig trees to shade MPs in the glass-roofed atrium of their...
  • 10 million Tube passengers fail to claim money back for delays Tube train More than 10 million Tube users are missing out on refunds worth more than £20 million when their trains are delayed
  • The final reckoning: how Boris and Ken measure up in election battle Ken Boris split London goes to the polls on May 3 with the election battle between Boris Johnson and Ken Livingstone set to be the capital's closest mayoral...
  • Commuters' favourite swaps busking for the big time with recording deal Tristan Mackay Busker Tristan Mackay has hit the jackpot after landing a record deal with an award-winning producer
  • What a smoothie! Eight-year-old Valentine gives Kate roses and a heart-shaped cupcake Kate Smoothie The Duchess of Cambridge's first Valentine's Day as a married woman was marked with roses, a card and a cupcake - but not from Prince...
  • Kercher family launch appeal over decision to clear Knox of murder Meredith Kercher Meredith Kercher's family today launched an appeal to overturn the decision to clear Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito of her murder
  • PM urged to deport Qatada as he hides in north London safe house Abu Qatada David Cameron was under pressure today to defy European judges by ordering the deportation of extremist cleric Abu Qatada as he holed up in...
  • Now jailed Dizaei could be forced to repay his £1million legal aid bill Ali Dizaei Met commander Ali Dizaei is facing the prospect of paying back tens of thousand of pounds of legal aid as Scotland Yard prepared to sack him...
  • Osborne defends his cuts strategy as inflation falls George Osborne Chancellor George Osborne defended his economic strategy as a fall in inflation finally brought mild relief to some from the tight squeeze...
  • Royal College students to receive scholarships courtesy of Burberry Rosie Huntington-Whitely At the luxury brand Burberry, Christopher Bailey has transformed a designer classic into must-have cool, as epitomised by the models Rosie...
  •  

    Don't Miss