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Guest firetotheworks

Am sure when Ashley was buying the club the papers mentions a massive war chest. 

Spent a canny wedge that first summer, didn't we? Ashley was scarred by the failure of that summer

Nah we barely spent anything, and net it was almost identical.

 

Edit: The season after. First transfer window was about £10m net.

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Am sure when Ashley was buying the club the papers mentions a massive war chest. 

 

One thing at a time as far as I'm concerned. I'll believe in the massive war chest when we start spending it. That said, I can't imagine anyone buying a club like Newcastle and not wanting to go for glory. If you wanted to skimp, why not just buy a smaller club?

 

 

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Wtf is the "data room stage" the Chronicle is talking about? I'm sure they are just making things up now.

 

A Due Diligence Data Room is the place where the company places copies of the financial, legal and business documents that define the history and future of the company for prospective investors to review prior to submitting a formal offer.

 

http://www.duediligencedataroom.com/What-is-a-Data-Room.html

 

I've been involved in a few company takeover processes myself (was a member of the executive management team in a company put up for sale). My experience is that 80% of initial interested parties pulls out before entering the data room stage.

 

O0  :frantic:  :frantic:  :frantic:

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Wtf is the "data room stage" the Chronicle is talking about? I'm sure they are just making things up now.

 

A Due Diligence Data Room is the place where the company places copies of the financial, legal and business documents that define the history and future of the company for prospective investors to review prior to submitting a formal offer.

 

http://www.duediligencedataroom.com/What-is-a-Data-Room.html

 

I've been involved in a few company takeover processes myself (was a member of the executive management team in a company put up for sale). My experience is that 80% of initial interested parties pulls out before entering the data room stage.

So in your view/experience, would getting to this stage indicate that both parties have or are close to an agreed buying/selling price?
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Wtf is the "data room stage" the Chronicle is talking about? I'm sure they are just making things up now.

 

A Due Diligence Data Room is the place where the company places copies of the financial, legal and business documents that define the history and future of the company for prospective investors to review prior to submitting a formal offer.

 

http://www.duediligencedataroom.com/What-is-a-Data-Room.html

 

I've been involved in a few company takeover processes myself (was a member of the executive management team in a company put up for sale). My experience is that 80% of initial interested parties pulls out before entering the data room stage.

So in your view/experience, would getting to this stage indicate that both parties have or are close to an agreed buying/selling price?

 

Normally not, but I have heard of processes where a price has been agreed before the data room stage and then being formalized when they have gone through all the documents. But I don't think that is the common way.

 

Anyway, when entering the data room process it's pretty safe to assume that they will come up with a bid in the end unless they find unexpected surprises in the data room documents. The big, big question mark is how far off it will be from Ashley's valuation of course.

 

In my case we had 10 interested parties. At first they were all on separate two days session where they met with the management and got an extensive company presentation and a tour of our facilities. Before being invited, our owners (a private equity company) assured through a 3rd party broker that interested parties had sufficient funds for a potential takeover (only 10 qualified although more than that marked their interest). After the two days sessions 8 of the 10 pulled out of the process of various reasons. The last two entered the data room process, and ended up having bids way below asking price rejected. When I quit the company was still up for sale.

 

By the way, a data room normally contains thousands of documents with tens of thousands of pages. Interested parties normally hires third party accountants and lawyers to help them with this massive process. When done properly, this will take weeks.

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Guest neesy111

For a more realistic target, we should go for Giroud in January if we get taken over

 

 

I'm sure I've read his missus won't move away from London.

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In my case we had 10 interested parties. At first they were all on separate two days session where they met with the management and got an extensive company presentation and a tour of our facilities. Before being invited, our owners (a private equity company) assured through a 3rd party broker that interested parties had sufficient funds for a potential takeover (only 10 qualified although more than that marked their interest). After the two days sessions 8 of the 10 pulled out of the process of various reasons. The last two entered the data room process, and ended up having bids way below asking price rejected. When I quit the company was still up for sale.

 

Same happened at my last company, I wasn't anything like senior enough to know the full details but we were basically told that the two parties (rival companies that were direct competitors) that had gone through our books and remained interested enough to make an offer had very different ideas. One was to offer way below the asking price, the other was to openly admit they just wanted our contracts and they'd essentially make everyone redundant. Both were rejected by our holding company and ultimately we were kept within the group.

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Wtf is the "data room stage" the Chronicle is talking about? I'm sure they are just making things up now.

 

A Due Diligence Data Room is the place where the company places copies of the financial, legal and business documents that define the history and future of the company for prospective investors to review prior to submitting a formal offer.

 

http://www.duediligencedataroom.com/What-is-a-Data-Room.html

 

I've been involved in a few company takeover processes myself (was a member of the executive management team in a company put up for sale). My experience is that 80% of initial interested parties pulls out before entering the data room stage.

 

Cheers for explaining :thup:

 

So I think we can be safe to assume they are actually seriously interested then.

 

100%  agree with Milburn. Data room will have everything. They’ll probably call the groups for offers in 3-4 weeks. Run a 2nd round if close and then award deal. I’m hopeful that purchase and sale contract markup will be part of this too to speed it up.

 

In these big scale deals you don’t give NDAs or allow access unless it’s credible buyers who’ve already shown they are capable buyers and have the cash to get it done.

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Guest neesy111

Absolutely nothing to say they'll offer what Ashley wants though.

 

This is what people are missing, they'll only have a figure they want to offer after due diligence and seeing what the club is currently earning etc.

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