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  1. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    Haha, this is probably a wind-up but on the off chance it isn't, so if you were asked to invest £1000 in a property deal, you would consider doing so without knowing what the property is valued at? That's just nonsense. Back to the real world...
  2. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    Agreed it's not a valuation exercise, it is about new investment but if that investment comes in the form of equity (particularly if it's from an outside investor) there has to be a valuation at which that investment takes place (whoever is putting that money in has to know what they're getting...
  3. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    Very possible, could well be Doug but strange to change MO.
  4. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    Not an expert on PSR but think that restricts losses (not amount of debt). Interest free loans have no impact on P&L (losses).
  5. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    Yes could be Doug, fully agree but why issue new shares when the previous new money (£30m+) that Doug has invested post acquisition has come from interest free loans? If you own 100% you don't need to issue new shares (unless for specific reasons like tax which isn't my area) as dilution isn't...
  6. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    That's the definition of the equity value. We may not agree that it is a rationale valuation by normal metrics but a willing buyer has paid that to a willing seller, hence fair market value. The number of shares multiplied by the price per share is the equity value.
  7. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    It's £15m for a 10% stake (calculation above).
  8. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    It more than implies, it's a factual calculation.
  9. P

    Investment? £15m nominal value

    Looks like an external investor has invested £15m and now owns 10% of the club. The calculation is 11,000,000 original shares + 1,222,222 newly issued shares =12,222,222 total shares. 1,222,222 shares therefore equates to 10%. The £15m looks like it has gone into the company (rather than out...
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