Court Match Thread (2 Viewers)

martcov

Well-Known Member
Consultants at work spring to mind. One place I used to be at many years ago, was having a big reorganisation, changing how we were constituted, and consultants wrote us a report saying this was the best way forward. TPTB then changed their minds, so we had some new consultants who, amazingly enough, ended up with a report telling us that no no no, we should stay as we were!

To lay person ;) it's the same with valuations and, tbf, signing accounts off as going concerns. 'Corrupt' is too strong as it's the general process, but you can't help but feel there are certain box ticking exercises. Of course the total, total basket cases would never get through as people have to justify themselves if it all goes pear shaped, but it's probably safe to say the extreme outliers can be pushed to the client's advantage.

Wasps (and SISU, for that matter!) know how to play the game.

Does SISU know how to play that game? They valued the share at nothing, but were prepared to give Higgs money as it was a charity. Who valued the share for them? Were there consultants involved or did they just make that up?
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
According to Tony's link lawyers have duties to third parties and the public interest as well as their clients. And yes, it does seem as if he is making it up as he goes along.
In JR1 they found a judge who thought they might have a case. So that one is covered. It might have lasted a few years but it is still one case.

If they find a judge who thinks that they have a case in JR2 they are covered again.
 

NorthernWisdom

Well-Known Member
Does SISU know how to play that game? They valued the share at nothing, but were prepared to give Higgs money as it was a charity. Who valued the share for them? Were there consultants involved or did they just make that up?
I think they do.

From a financial POV, their administration was beautifully planned, and like it or not they came up with a solution to break the rental agreement. Their trying to conjure up a value to something which has no value and, given the tools they had, I think on a purely financially speculative level (note the caveats people ;)) they do a good job in trying to play what hand they have. That certain things haven't come off doesn't mean the play hasn't been worth making from their POV.
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
Does SISU know how to play that game? They valued the share at nothing, but were prepared to give Higgs money as it was a charity. Who valued the share for them? Were there consultants involved or did they just make that up?
Of course they know how to play the game. Look how long the litigation has lasted without having a valid case.
 

NorthernWisdom

Well-Known Member
In JR1 they found a judge who thought they might have a case. So that one is covered. It might have lasted a few years but it is still one case.

If they find a judge who thinks that they have a case in JR2 they are covered again.
Yup. JR1 had an argument a judge thought was worth making. That it was thrown out didn't affect that. So the only question mark is JR2, and I'd assume it's harder to make a case it's malicious on just one case too, if it ends up thrown out... although I'm no lawyer, and my CCFC-training on law is less than that on accountancy ;)
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
I'm thinking that's an awfully high interest rate, but I won't say that until you give me the evidence

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Did he join because of his love of CCFC or did he see an earner?
 

NorthernWisdom

Well-Known Member
Did he join because of his love of CCFC or did he see an earner?
I got it wrong with my memory ref: Ranson and Cardiff so I have to apologise. The interest rate on £2.5mil was a mere 50%...

. @CardiffCityFC owner Vincent Tan consolidates control of club #ccfc

As an aside, interesting that Wales Online go further than just clarifying Player Finance Fund was introduced by Ranson, but add any company Ranson has owned. Again, is this a beautiful piece of semantics? The Guardian article referenced above states Sport Asset Capital is 'controlled' by Ranson.

Not owned, controlled.

Wonder if CCFC are owned or controlled by Seppala...
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
Wonder if CCFC are owned or controlled by Seppala...
We are controlled by SISU.

We are owned by......well......nobody has a clue other than SISU and those it involves. Could be SISU. Could be partly SISU.
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
Actually CCFC do not know who controls Otium according to Companies House

View attachment 7769

Similarly with SBS&L

View attachment 7770

Wasps holdings
View attachment 7771
What I don't understand is you are only able to have an interest in one football club in the same country. Yet we don't know who has an interest in our club. So there is the chance that someone who has an interest in our club could have an interest in another club. Yet the FL does nothing.
 

martcov

Well-Known Member
I think they do.

From a financial POV, their administration was beautifully planned, and like it or not they came up with a solution to break the rental agreement. Their trying to conjure up a value to something which has no value and, given the tools they had, I think on a purely financially speculative level (note the caveats people ;)) they do a good job in trying to play what hand they have. That certain things haven't come off doesn't mean the play hasn't been worth making from their POV.

I was talking about consultants and valuations as opposed to administration and having covered all angles there to the point of conveniently losing the golden share. Yes debt is their game, but valuations and running a football club seem to be in a different league.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
What I don't understand is you are only able to have an interest in one football club in the same country. Yet we don't know who has an interest in our club. So there is the chance that someone who has an interest in our club could have an interest in another club. Yet the FL does nothing.
Isn't there a rule that you only have to declare above a certain percentage of ownership?
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
Isn't there a rule that you only have to declare above a certain percentage of ownership?
Over 12% IIRC.

We have no declared owners. So we either have at least 10 owners or something isn't being declared. But as you don't have to declare anything up to what I remember as 12% there is nothing to stop people from having multiple interests.
 

shy_tall_knight

Well-Known Member
No the shareholder valuation is £5.5. million. The loan is irrelevant in terms of valuation it is a charge to the business.

The commercial value of the transaction is what it cost WASPS ie £19million,I think you are missing the point as SISU quote this isn't that the true price as surely if they thought that the real transaction price of getting a stadium on a 240 yer lease was as low as £5.5m they would have quoted that as the lower the cost the more it would suit their argument.
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
The commercial value of the transaction is what it cost WASPS ie £19million,I think you are missing the point as SISU quote this isn't that the true price as surely if they thought that the real transaction price of getting a stadium on a 240 yer lease was as low as £5.5m they would have quoted that as the lower the cost the more it would suit their argument.
ACL cost them about 5.5m....this was with taking the debt secured on the stadium on. But taking on the debt wasn't part of the purchase price. The lease extension cost them 1m. So they paid 6.5m.

Yes they then paid the debt off. But they paid the debt off with more debt secured on the arena. They also paid off the 6.5m with debt secured on the arena. Richardson also got 10m of the money owed to him from Wasps which is secured as debt on the arena. And the first few interest payments was paid for as debt on the arena. So you could say that they have paid for nothing yet :wacky:
 

shy_tall_knight

Well-Known Member
ACL cost them about 5.5m....this was with taking the debt secured on the stadium on. But taking on the debt wasn't part of the purchase price. The lease extension cost them 1m. So they paid 6.5m.

Yes they then paid the debt off. But they paid the debt off with more debt secured on the arena. They also paid off the 6.5m with debt secured on the arena. Richardson also got 10m of the money owed to him from Wasps which is secured as debt on the arena. And the first few interest payments was paid for as debt on the arena. So you could say that they have paid for nothing yet :wacky:

So if we were a sporting franchise and were looking for a stadium, what cost would you have calculated for the Ricoh, ie if you wanted the owners to give you the cash would you have said £6.5m gets you a stadium on a 240 year lease
 

Captain Dart

Well-Known Member
So if we were a sporting franchise and were looking for a stadium, what cost would you have calculated for the Ricoh, ie if you wanted the owners to give you the cash would you have said £6.5m gets you a stadium on a 240 year lease

* Comes with added multi million pound debt.
 

Astute

Well-Known Member
So if we were a sporting franchise and were looking for a stadium, what cost would you have calculated for the Ricoh, ie if you wanted the owners to give you the cash would you have said £6.5m gets you a stadium on a 240 year lease
I didn't make the valuation. It also came with debt attached though.

Why is it that when I state the facts as I see them people think that I agree with it all?

Did Wasps move well away from their supporters when they could have found similar closer to home?
 

dongonzalos

Well-Known Member
Unfortunately it's now quite clear as some always believed. SISU needed the football club to pay for itself. Unfortunately for us fans division four was always going to be the place where this club would end up under such a policy.
The club needed to pay for itself Whilst initially SISU attempted to break ACL as a business via the rental strike, prolonged negotiations and the move to Northampton.
It then needed to pay for itself whilst legal action was taken against the council. With the aim of winning and recovering compensation. Also the hope that whilst this dragged on ACL would go out of business or be sold cheaply to SISU due to the pressure of the legal action and a poor business model with CCFC either paying non or minimum rent if we returned.
JR1 in most sensible people's opinion had no chance. So we had to sit and wait for it to end whilst the club is not funded and relegation happened.
The hope was once it was over we may get owners who want to fund the club.
Now we have JR2 in my opinion. The aim of this was to win and hopefully force Wasps to sell ACL.
Again whilst it drags on we pay minimal rent and hope Wasps business plan is unsustainable.

JR1 and that plan was a complete failure left us with no possibly of buying ACL and created the atmosphere that in the eyes of the council justified them selling out to a franchise. (Total failure)

JR2 is the first part of it is in its first steps to failure (winning the legal action to break Wasps financially)
Part 2 paying minimal rent so Wasps business plan fails whilst CCFC pays for itself. Is also about to fail. They will demand a rent from us that works for them.
If we leave again we will not be sustainable like were not first time round when we left.

Next summer if JR2 has concluded by then I expect SISU to walk.

They desperately wanted to win both legal actions.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Unfortunately it's now quite clear as some always believed. SISU needed the football club to pay for itself. Unfortunately for us fans division four was always going to be the place where this club would end up under such a policy.
The club needed to pay for itself Whilst initially SISU attempted to break ACL as a business via the rental strike, prolonged negotiations and the move to Northampton.
It then needed to pay for itself whilst legal action was taken against the council. With the aim of winning and recovering compensation. Also the hope that whilst this dragged on ACL would go out of business or be sold cheaply to SISU due to the pressure of the legal action and a poor business model with CCFC either paying non or minimum rent if we returned.
JR1 in most sensible people's opinion had no chance. So we had to sit and wait for it to end whilst the club is not funded and relegation happened.
The hope was once it was over we may get owners who want to fund the club.
Now we have JR2 in my opinion. The aim of this was to win and hopefully force Wasps to sell ACL.
Again whilst it drags on we pay minimal rent and hope Wasps business plan is unsustainable.

JR1 and that plan was a complete failure left us with no possibly of buying ACL and created the atmosphere that in the eyes of the council justified them selling out to a franchise. (Total failure)

JR2 is the first part of it is in its first steps to failure (winning the legal action to break Wasps financially)
Part 2 paying minimal rent so Wasps business plan fails whilst CCFC pays for itself. Is also about to fail. They will demand a rent from us that works for them.
If we leave again we will not be sustainable like were not first time round when we left.

Next summer if JR2 has concluded by then I expect SISU to walk.

They desperately wanted to win both legal actions.

Do you work in a laundrette? Rinse and repeat.
 

dongonzalos

Well-Known Member
Do you work in a laundrette? Rinse and repeat.

If I did and I rented my business premises and it was the only suitable business premises with 30 miles and my customers were all local and mostly not prepared to travel.
I wouldn't withhold my rent. Then sue my landlord. Then hope try to get a long term rental with him whilst still suing him.
I know how that would end.
 

oucho

Well-Known Member
I'm looking forward to the day when we can all feel like this whole affair is over and done with for good. I want to go back to supporting the club without all the question marks hanging over us such as where we'll be playing in 5 years etc, and not supporting/opposing the various parties in a multi-faceted, increasingly spurious-looking, litigation.
 

Brylowes

Well-Known Member
I'm looking forward to the day when we can all feel like this whole affair is over and done with for good. I want to go back to supporting the club without all the question marks hanging over us such as where we'll be playing in 5 years etc, and not supporting/opposing the various parties in a multi-faceted, increasingly spurious-looking, litigation.
So say all of us, but I honestly can't see this Club ever making a full recovery, the damage
Is to severe and the wounds are too deep :emoji_frowning2:
 

oucho

Well-Known Member
So say all of us, but I honestly can't see this Club ever making a full recovery, the damage
Is to severe and the wounds are too deep :emoji_frowning2:
Big city like Cov, new owners winning cooperation and goodwill from others such as Wasps/council, leading to progress on the pitch and an enthused supporter-base, could be the start of the upward spiral. The current owners are the stumbling block to that, and that's been the case for a few years now - once new owners are running the club, we'll have a great opportunity for a fresh start with a much wider set of possibilities.
 

John_Silletts_Nose

Well-Known Member
It's Friday, so it's time for an appeal to the court decision of 7 days ago.

In unrelated news I see that Joy's friend Jon Huntsman has been made the US ambassador to Russia.
 

James Smith

Well-Known Member
Who said they are making money?

Rich? It isn't their money they have been losing.

I have said that they have made the situation worse. But it is not all down to them. We were losing over half a million a month when they took over. It was never going to be easy.

The division between the supporters isn't the worse thing they have done. To me it is losing the chance of ownership of the Ricoh. If they hadn't tried to get it for next to nothing to maximise their profits it could now be with our club. But you can't guarantee that.

We weren't in great financial shape and something had to be done. I've said before that the first thing they should have done (before pissing anyone off) was reunited the club with the share of ACL. The Higgs would have likely sold us the share for the option price (or whatever it was called) without thinking twice. We could have then stopped the council from doing anything with their share that we didn't like (selling to Wasps etc.) We could have looked at the books of ACL from the inside and seen whether we were being ripped off or not. Given how much Sisu have spent just on lawyers it's amazing to think what they could have spent the money on and what we think they should have spent it on. I realise that the team were probably the last thing on their list recently if we even made the list but still better than lawyers and court cases.
 
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