One month after a bread line of experts giving implied opinions on the sanity of potential MANU (stock symbol) buyers hasn’t stopped Manchester United from floating shares of the club on the New York Stock Exchange. The offering may have opened at a lowered price of $14 per share (when $16-20 had been speculated), but the price has held. As of this typing, MANU was trading at $14.02 (see it now) which would still value the club at the $2.3 billion Forbes magazine speculated when making its list of the most valuable sports teams in the world.
In the lead up to today’s IPO, I’d decided to be surprised if the stock didn’t tank. But I’m not. Perhaps that’s because I do things like decide when to be surprised, but that’s not important. What is (or, was) important is this stock gets you almost nothing. There are no plans for dividends, and the voting rights are diluted such that the Glazer family (current owners) can’t lose control of the club. While all those bitter blog posts about the inanity of this offering my have been fueled by bitter, jaded incredulity at some NFL types being able to use amoral U.S. finance to buy one of England’s storied clubs, they analysis was still right. Buying this stock is little more than handing the Glazers your money so they can pay down their debt. You’re giving them the money they used to buy Manchester United.
But I didn’t think out my decision to be surprised. I looked at it from my ivory tower of judgmental cynicism, not from the point of view of a United fan. For them, it’s $14 of deflated United States currency to be able to say “I own a piece of my favorite club.” Is it a significant piece? Is it something that is actually worth $14 in real terms? Doesn’t matter. Give a fan a chance to buy a piece of the club for a fraction of a ticket price and it sounds like a deal.
Fans buy tons of things that have little real world value. They buy subscriptions to websites, video channels, and fanzines. They buy commemorative programs, shirts, and scarves. They fly around the world to see their club. They call player signatures autographs want them on paper they’ll eventually lose, the material far less valuable then the memory of a player doing anything at their behest.
Compared to all these things, a sliver of ownership is a big deal. You get to say you own part of the club, which in the circles fans tend to run in has more cache than saying Jonny Evans signed your World Football Challenge ticket. The stock’s only meaningless to us that don’t care.
The Glazer family have offered a foolish investment, one that mocks its supporters while belittling their intelligence. But it doesn’t belittle their emotion – their blind devotion to crest and color. The Glazers have made them owners.
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- manunitedfaninmanchester - Aug 10, 2012 at 2:57 PM
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Excellent article save for your ridiculous assumption that a Manchester United fan would have been taken in by these people issuing worthless shares in the club they have been so disgracefully allowed by UK authorities to take over. Would The USA have allowed foreigners to take over such an iconic sports club (or “franchise” as you probably call them) on the basis these people have?.
Incidentally, only part of the proceeds of this (ahem) share issue go toward paying down their debt on the previously debt-free Manchester United. The rest they will presumably be using for their floundering US ventures or whatever other wonderful purposes they have in mind.
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- tylerbetts - Aug 10, 2012 at 3:10 PM
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Not just ManU fans, either. I’m a ManU Hater, and I’d think long and hard about buying a single share. It’s that unique of an opportunity, it’s that historic of a franchise, and it’d be that cool to have.
If I were a local soccer pub owner, there’d be no thining aout it – I’d already have one and it’d be in a frame on the wall by a scarf.
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- californiaredskins - Aug 10, 2012 at 4:17 PM
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Tough to say that anyone buying ManU stock is anything other than the dumb money
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- tpa43 - Aug 10, 2012 at 6:21 PM
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Now is your chance to own the Glazers debt as they run man U and the Bucs into the ground. They thank you for preventing their bankruptcy.