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Speculation continues over bids for Liverpool

  • Source: Global Times
  • [00:18 February 10 2010]
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India's wealthiest man Mukesh Ambani yesterday denied a British newspaper report that he was in a race to take over English Premier League club Liverpool.

But another Indian businessman reportedly in the running for the Merseyside club appeared more circumspect.

The Times of London reported that Ambani, the world's seventh-richest man, was one of two tycoons from the subcontinent competing to purchase a stake in Liverpool.

The paper said Ambani's Reliance Industries and Sahara Group chairman Subrata Roy had each tendered similar bids to pay off Liverpool's 237 million pound ($370 million) debts in return for a 51 percent stake in the club.

"There is no truth to the report. We deny it completely," Reliance spokeswoman Sudeep Purkayastha told the press.

Ambani is worth $19.5 billion from his investment in Reliance Industries, a petrochemical giant, according to Forbes business magazine.

The Times said Liverpool chief executive Christian Purslow had denied knowledge of either bid, but reported that approaches began as early as November and that some preliminary talks had taken place.

Pressure has been mounting on Liverpool's feuding owners, US businessmen Tom Hicks and George Gillett Jr, to cut a deal to sell the Anfield club.

The Times quoted an unnamed source as saying that Liverpool's banker, the state-backed Royal Bank of Scotland, is stipulating that the pair must pay off 100 million pounds ($155,980,000) of debt and inject tens of millions of pounds into the club.

The paper identified a number of other potential bidders, including a Saudi Arabian consortium and a US-based buyer, who is prepared to pay the 100 million pounds in exchange for 40 percent of the club.

But it quoted a source close to Hicks and Gillett as saying the duo would reject any bid that left them with less than 50 percent of the club's shares, unless it involved either of them selling out entirely.

Agencies