SISU open a potential can of worms (11 Viewers)

Sub

Well-Known Member
SISU Open A Potential Can Of Worms Over Coventry City & State Aid



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Apr 23, 2013 // Ian // Clubs In Crisis, Latest // 0 // 408 Views

It was a rumour that had been circulating for some considerable time, with little substantiation, that Coventry City’s dispute with the owners of their stadium, ACL, had little to do with the fairness or otherwise of the amount of money that the club was paying in rent for its use of The Ricoh Arena. Some had suggested that, with this rent money providing the lion’s share of ACL’s income, the true motive of SISU, the hedge fund owners of the club, may trying to starve its owners into administration in order to purchase a very valuable asset on the cheap. This morning’s news that the owners are to take the matter of a bail-out that was made by Coventry City Council to ACL in January to the High Court over a matter of illegal state aid leaves onlookers with little option but to believe that this may indeed have been the aim all along.

It was in January that councillors unanimously agreed the highly confidential deal – to bail out the part council-owned stadium management company ACL by buying out its outstanding mortgage loan with Yorkshire Bank, which allowed ACL to continue to trade when it had looked as if insolvency might become a serious issue to the company, which is half owned by Coventry City Council and half owned by The Alan Higgs Trust charity. After the deal was agreed on the fifteenth of January, council leader John Mutton stated that the council had been ‘forced’ to protect a public asset, not only for the people Coventry, but also to cover tax-payer investment in the construction of the stadium, which opened in 2005.

This action is the latest in a series of legal sidesteps that SISU have put forward over the last few weeks and months. One arm of the club’s business, Coventry City Football Club Limited, was placed in administration last month by the SISU-related Cayman Islands-based hedge fund Arvo Master Fund – less than hours before ACL sought to enforce administration in the High Court. The club sought to argue that CCFC Ltd was just a holding company that responsible for management of – and rent for – The Ricoh Arena alone, but the Football League saw it differently and effectively ended the club’s season by docking it ten points at a time when a place in the League One play-offs seemed a distinct possibility.

CCFC Ltd is, therefore, currently now in administration under the SISU-appointed administrator Paul Appleton with ACL understood to be watching the administration process like hawks. Meanwhile, both ACL and the council are believed to be in favour of a potential takeover of the club and half the stadium company by former directors Joe Elliott and Gary Hoffman, with the possible financial backing of an American property investor, Preston Haskell IV, although Hoffman is understood to be set to become the new chairman of the Premier League, and how that might affect his involvement is, at the time of writing, unknown. Of course, a threat of legal action and renewed uncertainty over whether the club can even continue to play in the city of Coventry or not can only make the company a less attractive proposition than it might otherwise be considered to be. Whether this is part of any SISU plan or not is unclear.

A statement from CCFC (Holdings) Ltd yesterday confirmed it has submitted an application to the High Court in order to ‘determine whether the council acted unlawfully in its use of public funds to financially support ACL and in its actions towards Coventry City Football Club in relation to the dispute with ACL.’In the meantime,’ it continued, ‘we are committed to reaching a negotiated solution to the dispute with ACL. If ACL were prepared to meet with us, we would retain hope of reaching an agreement that will allow the club to continue playing at the Ricoh.’ A spokesman for Coventry City Council replied by stating that, ‘The council has been served with Judicial Review proceedings. Our position is that we have acted lawfully in all respects.’
But what is this concept of State Aid, and why is it becoming such an issue right now? State Aid is a European Commission (EC) term which refers to forms of public assistance, given to undertakings on a discretionary basis, which has the potential to distort competition and affect trade between Member States of the European Union.

The State aid rules are set by the EC and comprise various articles of the Treaty, Regulations, Frameworks and Guidelines – which set out what aid can be given and under which circumstances. The EC governs Member States’ compliance with these rules and many aid measures must be notified to the Commission for approval. Ignoring the rules can result in the Commission viewing aid as unlawful and possibly subject to repayment – by the aid recipient. In order to be considered State Aid, four tests – although this number will alter according to interpretation of the statute, which in itself gives some idea of how byzantine these rules can be – are applied, and all four have to be met in order to qualify as State Aid and, therefore, for prior notification and approval by the Commission itself.

These are, briefly, as follows:
1. Was it made with state resources?
Support can be direct financial payments like a development grant, or publicly funded support, like free or subsidised consultancy. Definitions of what counts as public rather than private support revolve around the level of government influence.

2. Does it favour a particular undertaking or the production of certain goods?
Definitions of what constitutes an economic undertaking are broad. Social enterprises are clearly included, as are any elements of charities or other regeneration organisations that are involved in trading activity. The key is the nature of the activity rather than the form of the organisation. What a business does with its profits – whether it distributes them to shareholders, uses them for social aims, or ploughs them back into the company, makes no difference in state aid terms. It is very unlikely that regeneration based support can be shown to be open to all undertakings throughout the country, as there are usually geographical and sectoral targets to public regeneration support.

3. Does it distort or threaten to distort competition?
Although the temptation to define activity as non-economic in many areas is clear, there are substantial limits to what constitutes non-economic activity. All statutory services, including national education, national security and social security are all defined as non-economic, as are the non-economic activities of charities and relief aid organisations – but when such organisations do engage in economic activities the rules do apply, so this cannot be considered a generic opt-out clause. However, it should be remembered that public purchasing of activity or services at commercial rates do not constitute state aid, as the market has not been distorted. So, for example, Service Level Agreements with a local authority are not state aid. It is important that a tendering or other such process can be shown to have delivered an agreement at commercial rates.

4. Does it affect Intra-Community trade?
In other words, does it affect trade between European Union member states – which the majority of regeneration activity would not be expected to do. However, this is not the case – as it has only to be shown that there is the potential to affect trade, rather than it actually being likely.
State Aid is likely to become a serious issue for the whole of European football over the coming years. The European Commission confirmed at the end of last month that it was considering whether to open a formal inquiry into a 2011 property deal between Real Madrid and Madrid City Council, and this followed an earlier announcement that it was investigating five local authorities in the Netherlands for providing illegal state aid to Dutch clubs, including PSV Eindhoven. Since that warning, the commission has started proceedings in the Netherlands and is believed to also be looking at a number of Spanish clubs that have run up huge tax bills or been propped up by soft loans from publicly owned banks. And in addition to this, any claim of illegal state aid can be investigated for a period of up to ten years after the event, so there may well be plenty of other cases that are waiting to rear their heads as well.
All of this raises considerably more questions for Coventry City than it answers. The fact that ACL didn’t strictly enforce the club’s non-payment of its rent at the Ricoh Arena might also be considered State Aid, for example, and it may also now be necessary to revisit the specifics of the deal that built the stadium in the first place, as this also falls within the last ten years. In both cases, the club – or one of the legal entities associated with it – might well find that it is considered the beneficiaries and might yet find itself having to repay money that it wasn’t expecting to have to repay. It’s too early to say, but by invoking this area of European law, which has only previously been touched upon in relation to the professional game, a can of worms could be set to be opened which may affect not just Coventry City Football Club, but a good number of other clubs as well.
 

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Sub

Well-Known Member
One of the key points about complaints about State Aid is that matters that might otherwise go unnoticed only usually get referred as being potentially illegal should complaints be made about them. We do not know how many incidents of illegal State Aid may have occurred at football clubs over the last ten years, but what we can say with a degree of certainty is that if individuals, companies and rivals feel that they can use it to create problems for rivals in the tribalistic world of professional football, the chances are that they will try. We can also say that any case regarding Coventry City and State Aid will be unlikely to be quickly resolved, especially if the High Court does decide to refer the matter to the European Commission, and that predicting what the result of it will be with any degree of confidence would be foolish. We can, however, say that SISU are invoking the fury of their supporters at a time when season ticket renewals have just come around, and without some sort of revocation of the now increasingly widely-held suspicion that they are deliberately seeking to weaken ACL for their own gain, they may well find that The Ricoh Arena, even if the club does get to start next season there, could be even more empty next season than it was this time around.
 

Snozz_is_god

New Member
I think we ought to call you "Super Sub" for that.

I know one thing...... SISU aren't going to get any of my money, I voted with my feet a while ago. Once they have gone, I'll be back.
 

skyblueinBaku

Well-Known Member
Nice one, Sub. Obviously, this could get really messy and drag on for a long time. It has the potential to become a problem for a lot of clubs. I wonder if the dolts at Sisu realise what they have started.
 

davebart

Active Member
I have not been to the Ricoh since SISU took over. I said at the time no good would come of it and sadly I have been proved right.

As shown here a hedge fund will use any means at its disposal to get what it wants. That is what they do - look for legal loop holes. I expect there is some chap at HQ now lapping up the champagne in self-congratulation.
 

oldskyblue58

CCFC Finance Director
Good find Sub ...... a good article
 

grego_gee

New Member
I am not sure the EC regulations will be the brunt of the issue, the one quote I have seen does not appear to use the term "State aid", it quotes "public funds". I think there is enough in English law and govenment rules and regulations to mount the action. Although the two terms can be viewed as synonymous the use of one or other will give a clue to the area of law they are going down. It would be ironic if it turns out that they hadn't considered EC "state aid" regulation and your post has effectively given them another avenue to explore.

:pimp:
 
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grego_gee

New Member
We can, however, say that SISU are invoking the fury of their supporters at a time when season ticket renewals have just come around, and without some sort of revocation of the now increasingly widely-held suspicion that they are deliberately seeking to weaken ACL for their own gain, they may well find that The Ricoh Arena, even if the club does get to start next season there, could be even more empty next season than it was this time around.
Whether Sub or 200% or one and the same, I think the original author of the article perhaps meant to say "provoking" rather than "invoking" - (invoking roughly means using where provoking means causing and that changes the meaning of the last sentance). Either way, I personally think any owner is going to focus on money first, rather than emotion and I don't think Haskell for example could be expected to really be any different to SISU! (or has he got sky blue blood already?)

:pimp:
 
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James Smith

Well-Known Member
Given a large number of clubs play at council owned stadias and as Grendel says may have had 'better deals' than we've got, this action may cause them problems too. Could say the Doncaster long lease on the Keepmoat be called in for scrutiny? The financial & other terms of their deal have now been made public by CCFC/Sisu so they're there for all to see. Nottingham Forrest had a loan from from Prudential M&G that they got guaranteed by Nottingham City Council which would also possibly fall foul of this. Especially as they managed to default on a payment and the council had to make the payment for them, and could have ended up liable for the entire loan plus remaining interest as this internal council report on the situation makes plain. I wonder how many other clubs are not paying market rates for their stadium and/or getting an effective subsidised rent.
 

Ashdown1

New Member
Football is a money spinner for any town or City. It brings large numbers of 'tourists' into your area every two weeks or so for 9 months of the year. It is in any local authorities interest to do everything possible to help promote the home team. That goes for all sorts of sports, look what the race track does for Cheltenham or Twickenham for SW London etc.
 

RPHunt

New Member
Rotherham's new ground was built with a £5m loan from the council and £4m ERDF grant and there are probably many more examples. Any ruling against Coventry City Council would probably leave these deals open to challenge, so I am hopeful that common sense will prevail and there will be no judgement requiring any of these deals to be unravelled.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
Rotherham's new ground was built with a £5m loan from the council and £4m ERDF grant and there are probably many more examples. Any ruling against Coventry City Council would probably leave these deals open to challenge, so I am hopeful that common sense will prevail and there will be no judgement requiring any of these deals to be unravelled.

You're comparing different things, the council has loaned the money to regenerate an area in that case, it's entitled to do that.

In the ACL case, the Council have lent money at a better than market rate, something which wouldn't be available to competing companies, it has distorted the market.
 

James Smith

Well-Known Member
You're comparing different things, the council has loaned the money to regenerate an area in that case, it's entitled to do that.

In the ACL case, the Council have lent money at a better than market rate, something which wouldn't be available to competing companies, it has distorted the market.
And how many competing 32,000 seater stadiums with exhibition halls do you know in Coventry?
 

James Smith

Well-Known Member
Not many. In Rotherham however, there was Millmoor but the owners of this didn't complain about market distortion.

Ah okay. Still worried SISU might have opened a Pandora like box that ends up affecting lots clubs, not just us.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
Fern would you prefer SISU to stay or go?

Go. I think the relationship between SISU and the fans, ACL, the City Council is untenable.

However, I'm only talking about the potential reason for the court action and why it could be justified (if you look at the case objectively).
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
Dongo, look at the exchanges on Twitter between Maton and Les Reid. Very interesting.
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
Summed up nicely by ChiefDave on another thread:

For those of you not on twitter Les Reid and Cllr Kevin Maton were sending each other yesterday, got a bit heated but a couple of interesting points came out:

The money has come from public funds and to date no loan has been taken to cover the payment. Maton said that was a cashflow issue, Reid said they council had misled tax payers about this, I think he's right on this one, we were led to belive no public funds had been used when clearly they have. Even if that was only the intention in the short term it should have been made clear, by not doing that they make it look like they are trying to hide something.

It appears that prior to taking out the loan no independent valuation was carried out. Maton wouldn't answer the question which to me is the same as confiming it didn't happen. If SISU have anything to indicate Yorkshire Bank would have sold the loan to them for less than £14m the council could have a problem.

Maton was saying it was not a bail out, but a loan swap. Reid says he has seen private papers which show "advice to cllrs was #acl needed finance support to prevent insolvency". That sounds like a bail out to me.

Think SISU will argue the fact that the money has come from taxpayers funds and they have paid over market value which is distorting the market. The question is what happens if SISU win, presumably ACL would have to pay back the council but I can't imagine Yorkshire Bank are going to get involved so ACL will need to cover the £14m from another sounce. As it seems they were close to insolvency I can see any offer of finance being at a much higher rate than before if they can even get finance.


What did it say?.................yes I am too inept to find it myself!
 

dongonzalos

Well-Known Member
If and it is a very big if in my book SISU's last kick was a powerful one. Could ACL not source the money when Haskell buys half of them?
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
True. But Maton seems mouthy at the best of times. He's already said that the Club - whoever is in charge - should never own part of the Ricoh.

Yes interesting he should stay off twitter and leave the lawyers to answer! :)
 

skybluericoh

Well-Known Member
Rotherham's new ground was built with a £5m loan from the council and £4m ERDF grant and there are probably many more examples. Any ruling against Coventry City Council would probably leave these deals open to challenge, so I am hopeful that common sense will prevail and there will be no judgement requiring any of these deals to be unravelled.

I wonder if SISU have approached CCC for any aid in building their new ground that they they say they have identified suitable locations for within Coventry:facepalm:
 

James Smith

Well-Known Member
It isn't about the property, it's about the company running it. The club could argue that they could run the stadium better, but they haven't been assisted by a £14m loan.
I can't wait to see them try, they've done so well running the football club thus far. :facepalm:
 

James Smith

Well-Known Member
If and it is a very big if in my book SISU's last kick was a powerful one. Could ACL not source the money when Haskell buys half of them?
Yeah PH4 could fund the loan to ACL and they could get him in that way. Then when the administrator eventually gets round to selling the club (as we all now know that ltd is the club) he could buy that on the cheap. although I'd stake money on it not being anything like that simple.
 

WillieStanley

New Member
I can't wait to see them try, they've done so well running the football club thus far. :facepalm:

But they do have other ventures that are successful. Possibly with more of a similarity to The Ricoh than a football club.

SISU have recruited wrong and made appauling descisions, but they no nothing about running a football club. They do, however, know a lot about running other businesses and I believe they have quite a few complexes with conference/function/entertainment facilities without a massive green thing in the middle on their books.
 

Bluegloucester

New Member
But they do have other ventures that are successful. Possibly with more of a similarity to The Ricoh than a football club.

SISU have recruited wrong and made appauling descisions, but they no nothing about running a football club. They do, however, know a lot about running other businesses and I believe they have quite a few complexes with conference/function/entertainment facilities without a massive green thing in the middle on their books.
Where did you get this from? It is incorrect. What other venues do they own?
 

James Smith

Well-Known Member
But they do have other ventures that are successful. Possibly with more of a similarity to The Ricoh than a football club.

SISU have recruited wrong and made appauling descisions, but they no nothing about running a football club. They do, however, know a lot about running other businesses and I believe they have quite a few complexes with conference/function/entertainment facilities without a massive green thing in the middle on their books.
Do you have any evidence to back this up?
 

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