Real Madrid, Barcelona propose alternative to CVC investment

The top Spanish football clubs have proposed a 2 billion euro ($2.26 billion) bank credit to finance La Liga in a bid to derail an approved cash injection offered by private equity fund CVC.

Published : Dec 03, 2021 14:56 IST , MADRID

Top Spanish football clubs Real Madrid and Barcelona have proposed a 2 billion euro ($2.26 billion) bank credit to finance the country's top football league in a bid to derail an approved cash injection offered by private equity fund CVC. (Representative Image)
Top Spanish football clubs Real Madrid and Barcelona have proposed a 2 billion euro ($2.26 billion) bank credit to finance the country's top football league in a bid to derail an approved cash injection offered by private equity fund CVC. (Representative Image)
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Top Spanish football clubs Real Madrid and Barcelona have proposed a 2 billion euro ($2.26 billion) bank credit to finance the country's top football league in a bid to derail an approved cash injection offered by private equity fund CVC. (Representative Image)

Top Spanish football clubs Real Madrid and Barcelona have proposed a 2 billion euro ($2.26 billion) bank credit to finance the country's top football league in a bid to derail an approved cash injection offered by private equity fund CVC.

The CVC deal is due to receive final approval on December 10 and was approved by 38 of the 42 clubs comprising La Liga in a first round.

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The alternative proposal from Spain's two largest clubs together with smaller Athletic Bilbao would see JPMorgan , Bank of America and HSBC jointly lend 2 billion euros in exchange for an fixed annual payment of 115 million euros for 25 years, a document seen by Reuters showed, confirming a report by the Financial Times.

The CVC deal would see the fund receive 11 per cent of the league's television rights over the next 50 years in exchange for a one-off payment of 2.7 billion euros.

Real Madrid, Barcelona and Athletic Bilbao opted out, saying the terms were too generous to CVC. Second-division Real Oviedo also rejected the deal.

In response to their alternative proposal, La Liga's management said the CVC deal was not just about financing the league but also aimed at making it more competitive and improving its businesses.

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