The Guardian

Everton bidder 777 Partners gets more time to repay loan

- Simon Goodley

The proposed takeover of Everton has moved into added time after the bidder 777 Partners was granted a last-minute extension to repay a £160m loan.

The latest missed deadline drags the takeover saga past the sevenmonth mark since Farhad Moshiri agreed to sell his shareholdi­ng in the club to 777, an American investment firm that has faced months of scrutiny about its ability to raise the funds to complete the deal. Last month Moshiri assured supporters that the deal was in the “home straight”.

One source told the Guardian that a deal had been agreed over money owed by the club to a consortium made up of another US investment firm, MSP Capital, as well as the businessme­n Andy Bell and George Downing. The length of extension granted was said to be “weeks not months”, and repayment of the debt is a condition of 777 taking over.

MSP, Bell and Downing hold security over the new stadium developmen­t at Bramley-Moore Dock, as well as a charge over just over half of Moshiri’s 94% stake in the club, according to corporate documents filed in the Isle of Man. They could have chosen to have taken control of Everton themselves on Monday, but instead have granted 777 more time to repay the debt.

The length of time it has taken 777 to raise the money has left some observers questionin­g whether the club may end up filing for administra­tion. Such a move would likely mean a further points deduction for a team already docked eight points this season and in another fight to retain their Premier League status.

Everton, who remain two points above the relegation zone after Monday’s 6-0 defeat at Chelsea, are appealing against their latest twopoint penalty.

The club have had to borrow hundreds of millions of pounds over the past two years to fund their operations, with debts to third-party lenders thought to total about £550m.

Last week the Guardian revealed how Everton have paid about £30m in interest charges to an opaque lender associated with the tax exile Michael Tabor, according to corporate records. The charges appear to have reached about £438,000 a week, according to the troubled club’s most recent set of accounts, a figure more than three times the reported wages of the Everton and England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford.

Everton and a spokespers­on for Moshiri declined to comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom