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The Friedkin Group reaches agreement to buy Everton

What do we reckon?

  • 👍

    Votes: 786 72.1%
  • 🤷 | 🧀🥪

    Votes: 264 24.2%
  • 👎

    Votes: 40 3.7%

  • Total voters
    1,090
Seems funny that the R and M loan stopped MSP from buying the club and now the 777 debt that ACAP have taken on is now the problem this time. I can see ACAP being an arse over the debt as they wanted to buy the club so I could well see them actively wanting to stop the sale.
 
Seems funny that the R and M loan stopped MSP from buying the club and now the 777 debt that ACAP have taken on is now the problem this time. I can see ACAP being an arse over the debt as they wanted to buy the club so I could well see them actively wanting to stop the sale.

It's more likely that ACap may be willing to restructure the debt with a potential buyer, but the fraud case is either preventing them from doing it or adding a layer of risk to any restructuring they agree to.
 



JPMorgan Acquires Loan Tied to Private-Equity Firm 777 Partners
Chase has become an unlikely participant in the unfolding saga surrounding a troubled Miami-based private-equity firm and its failed bid for a top-tier English soccer team.

Earlier this year, the megabank paid $88.5 million for a bond bearing the name 777-600. It acquired the asset from the Advantage Capital insurance group, which has been a major lender to 777 Partners and its 600 Partners affiliate.


777 spent much of the past year trying to close a deal for the English Premier League’s Everton soccer club. The pursuit, which was dropped in June, spurred broader scrutiny about 777’s business. Advantage Capital has been trying to pare its exposure to 777, under pressure from regulators and the industry’s rating firm.


JPMorgan bought the loan for face value on Jan. 1 from Haymarket, one of the five life insurance and annuity companies under Advantage Capital’s umbrella, according to Haymarket’s first-quarter filing with Utah’s Insurance Department. Advantage Capital, better known as A-CAP, had assets totaling $11.5 billion through its insurance carriers as of the end of last year.

The “777-600 Bridge Loan” is among the roughly $160 million in 777-related assets that A-CAP insurers have sold during the first three months of this year, according to the insurers’ financial filings.

The 777-600 loan has an 18%-interest rate, payable at maturity in October of this year, according to Haymarket.

Barron’s request for comment from JPMorgan was directed to a spokeswoman for the bank’s asset-management division. She declined to comment. 777 and A-CAP didn’t respond to messages.

JPMorgan could be interested in the collateral that 777 might have to surrender if it defaulted on the loan, says New York University finance professor David

“Bridge loans are usually backed by stuff,” Yu says. “So maybe they want the stuff underneath.”

777’s known holdings include European soccer teams, a film-finance business, and a sports-streaming app.

Barron’s wasn’t able to find information about the 777-600 loan beyond the details in the A-CAP financial filings. Disclosure rules don’t require JPMorgan to list every asset in its own public filings.

A-CAP was the focus of a focus of a Barron’s investigation last month, which found that the group’s insurers were heavily invested in businesses under their parent company’s control, raising potential conflicts of interest.

Concern over such conflicts have been raised by consumer advocates and retiree groups, since they potentially skew incentives for insurers tasked with investing policyholder premiums to finance future life-insurance and annuity-contract payouts.

Barron’s reporting also shed new light on A-CAP’s exposure to 777, whose financial struggles became increasingly clear last year during its ill-fated bid to buy the Everton soccer club.

The investigation found that loans from A-CAP supported nearly every aspect of 777’s business.

The 777-600 Bridge Loan, held jointly by Haymarket and other A-CAP insurers, was among the largest of those loans.

A-CAP’s exposure to 777 has been central to ongoing litigation with AM Best, the insurance industry’s dominant ratings firm.


In April, A-CAP insurers sued AM Best in U.S. District Court in New Jersey to stop the ratings firm from publishing a planned downgrade of the firm’s financial strength score.

In its complaint, A-CAP said AM Best’s evaluation of its insurers’ relationship with 777 was based on “flawed methods, improper assumptions, and demonstrably false data.” In response, AM Best said it “operated with the utmost integrity and fairness in this rating process.”

Deliberations in the case are currently on hold while the attorneys said in a court filing last month.

Also in April, regulators in Utah and South Carolina ordered A-CAP to reduce its investments with 777,

Since then, 777 has seen the collapse of its Australian budget airline Bonza and the widely-reported seizure of its soccer teams in Brazil and Belgium.

Restructuring specialists from the financial firm B Riley took over 777’s operations in May at A-CAP’s request to protect the insurance group’s investments, according to declarations filed as part of a fraud lawsuit.

That lawsuit, filed by London-based Leadenhall Capital Partners in U.S. District Court in New York, accuses 777 and the 600 Partners affiliate of pledging assets they “didn’t own, didn’t exist or were already promised to someone else” to secure a loan.

777 didn’t respond to a request for comment about the case.

Newly unsealed documents from unrelated litigation in New York’s Supreme Court show that 777’s financial issues aren’t new. As of the end of September 2022, the consolidated 777 and 600 partnerships had $196 million more in liabilities than assets, according to an unaudited financial statement filed as part of the case.

The partnerships reported a net loss of $563 million during the first nine months of 2022.

777 didn’t respond to a request for comment about the financial statement.

In Layman’s terms;

Everton owe 777 $200m.

777 owe A-CAP* $200m, funnelled through a bond called ‘777-600’.

A-CAP have sold the bond ‘777-600’ to JPMorgan for $88.5m.

Therefore, indirectly, Everton will now owe JPMorgan $200m.

JPMorgan could at any moment call that loan in, meaning whoever owns Everton will need to have $200m cash to pay this should JPMorgan demand it to be paid.

Unless Moshiri uses his own personal funds to pay the bill, asset stripping/administration would be likely.

*A-CAP were found to be almost the sole providers of funding for 777. American courts in Utah and South Carolina ordered a reduction in this funding due to conflict of interest, hence the quick dumping of the bond ‘777-600’ for a hefty loss.
 
They proved themselves to be inadequate to buy Everton. They knew all the pitfalls of buying Everton and thought that they'd get themselves some publicity and / or use it as leverage to get what they want in Italy. That'd be my guess.

If someone wants to own this club they now know what it's going to take...a hell of a lot of cash. Chancers like Friedkin were never going to be the owners of Everton. That's been borne out today.

The up-side is that we dont become embroiled as part of a stable of clubs and see our identity diluted.

They don't exist though. That's the issue. Unless it's Saudi oil money we're only left with billionaires who will do the same thing - leverage, loan, remortgage.

No one is willing to drop circa £600mill straight up just to buy and clear debt. It's always been the issue.
 
I think everybody should get in a line and think about how they're going to phrase their sincere apology to @davek who has proven yet again to be historically correct.

@davek Do you do private mentoring at all, bro?

What do I know? I'm not savvy about takeovers or corporate finances like the clever people who all assured us this was going through.

It's always best to listen to the clever people...apparently.

I called this lot out as chancers right from the off. Their record at Roma and the trajectory of it was alarming. Dangerous chancers that we're lucky to see the back of.

Our ownership will be sorted eventually. We''re football fans. Let's just settle down and watch the football. That'd be my advice to all normal fans - and the clever people who preach to us too.
 
They proved themselves to be inadequate to buy Everton. They knew all the pitfalls of buying Everton and thought that they'd get themselves some publicity and / or use it as leverage to get what they want in Italy. That'd be my guess.

If someone wants to own this club they now know what it's going to take...a hell of a lot of cash. Chancers like Friedkin were never going to be the owners of Everton. That's been borne out today.

The up-side is that we dont become embroiled as part of a stable of clubs and see our identity diluted.
Well said.
 

In Layman’s terms;

Everton owe 777 $200m.

777 owe A-CAP* $200m, funnelled through a bond called ‘777-600’.

A-CAP have sold the bond ‘777-600’ to JPMorgan for $88.5m.

Therefore, indirectly, Everton will now owe JPMorgan $200m.

JPMorgan could at any moment call that loan in, meaning whoever owns Everton will need to have $200m cash to pay this should JPMorgan demand it to be paid.

Unless Moshiri uses his own personal funds to pay the bill, asset stripping/administration would be likely.

*A-CAP were found to be almost the sole providers of funding for 777. American courts in Utah and South Carolina ordered a reduction in this funding due to conflict of interest, hence the quick dumping of the bond ‘777-600’ for a hefty loss.

Thanks

How likely is that/would it ever be in JPMorgan's interest?
 
In Layman’s terms;

Everton owe 777 $200m.

777 owe A-CAP* $200m, funnelled through a bond called ‘777-600’.

A-CAP have sold the bond ‘777-600’ to JPMorgan for $88.5m.

Therefore, indirectly, Everton will now owe JPMorgan $200m.

JPMorgan could at any moment call that loan in, meaning whoever owns Everton will need to have $200m cash to pay this should JPMorgan demand it to be paid.

Unless Moshiri uses his own personal funds to pay the bill, asset stripping/administration would be likely.

*A-CAP were found to be almost the sole providers of funding for 777. American courts in Utah and South Carolina ordered a reduction in this funding due to conflict of interest, hence the quick dumping of the bond ‘777-600’ for a hefty loss.

They cannot do that. They can only call it in under the terms of the loan agreement contract. Not "at any moment"
 
In Layman’s terms;

Everton owe 777 $200m.

777 owe A-CAP* $200m, funnelled through a bond called ‘777-600’.

A-CAP have sold the bond ‘777-600’ to JPMorgan for $88.5m.

Therefore, indirectly, Everton will now owe JPMorgan $200m.

JPMorgan could at any moment call that loan in, meaning whoever owns Everton will need to have $200m cash to pay this should JPMorgan demand it to be paid.

Unless Moshiri uses his own personal funds to pay the bill, asset stripping/administration would be likely.

*A-CAP were found to be almost the sole providers of funding for 777. American courts in Utah and South Carolina ordered a reduction in this funding due to conflict of interest, hence the quick dumping of the bond ‘777-600’ for a hefty loss.

I don't think this loan is related to Everton, or perhaps it's only part of the debt. JPM bought the debt at face value ($88.5 million) and it was done on January 1st.
 

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