Liverpool not for sale insist owners FSG after £2bn takeover bid from Manchester City owner's cousin

Details have emerged of a proposal from Abu Dhabi-based Sheik Khaled Bin Zayed Al Nehayan which was swiftly rebuffed

Carl Markham
Friday 24 August 2018 09:46 BST
Comments
Jurgen Klopp on Virgil van Dijk

Liverpool's owners remain steadfast in their stance that the club is not for sale - but are still open to new outside investment.

Details have emerged of a proposed £2billion takeover bid from Abu Dhabi-based Sheik Khaled Bin Zayed Al Nehayan, the cousin of Manchester City owner Sheik Mansour.

However, it is understood that interest - one of a number of approaches Fenway Sports Group have received in recent years - did not get past the vetting stage because it was deemed neither credible nor worthy of being put to the ownership.

"FSG have been clear and consistent: the club is not for sale," said a club statement.

"But what the ownership has said, again clearly and consistently, is that under the right terms and conditions we would consider taking on a minority investor, if such a partnership was to further our commercial interests in specific market places and in line with the continued development and growth of the club and the team."

FSG have seen how Premier League rivals Manchester City, despite the backing of billionaire owner Sheikh Mansour, opened themselves up to beneficial investment opportunities after they sold a 13 per cent stake to a Chinese consortium in 2015 for £265million.

Liverpool's owners are adamant they will not sell
Liverpool's owners are adamant they will not sell (Liverpool FC via Getty Images)

They use the services of New York-based investment bank Allen & Company to vet and filter any interest they receive and this approach was no different.

However, it became apparent the interest was not viable as proof of funds were not forthcoming, meaning the approach never got past the discussion stage with the bank and the proposals were not put forward to FSG's principal owner John Henry and other key figures Tom Werner, Liverpool's chairman, and FSG president Mike Gordon.

FSG have invested significantly in the club since their £300m purchase in October 2010 with the £115m redevelopment of Anfield's Main Stand, a £50m commitment to build a new training ground, securing manager Jurgen Klopp on a six-year contract in 2016 and this summer alone spending £170m on transfers.

FSG are committed to the club long-term
FSG are committed to the club long-term (Getty)

It is not the first time that FSG have been forced to rebuff interest in the club.

In October of last year Werner dismissed suggestions that financier Amanda Staveley had been close to a takeover deal before shifting her interest to Newcastle.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in