Home / Royal Mail / West Ham in talks with Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky over £150m stake that could lead to January spending

West Ham in talks with Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky over £150m stake that could lead to January spending

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Czech billionaire is in advanced talks with West Ham over a deal to buy a minority stake in the club, which could help alleviate the Hammers’ debt and pave the way for January spending.

West Ham co-owners David Sullivan and David Gold have been looking for investment in the club and are discussing a £150million deal which would see Daniel Kretinsky buy a stake of around 27 per cent.

The deal would value West Ham at between £600m and £700m – around six times the price paid by Sullivan and Gold in 2010, when they inherited debts of £110m – and has raised the possibility of a full takeover by Kretinsky in future.

Known as the “Czech sphinx” for the dispassionate way he runs his business empire, the 46-year-old is the co-owner and president of Czech club Sparta Prague, and has a number of other investments, including stakes in Royal Mail, Sainsbury’s and France’s Le Monde newspaper. The qualified lawyer’s fortune is valued at £2.9billion, according to Forbes.

In the past 12 months, Sullivan and Gold have rejected two offers to sell outright from PAI Capital, a private equity firm headed by Nasib Piriyev, and turned down offers from a US consortium last year.

Kretinsky’s investment is expected to be warmly welcomed by supporters and raises the possibility of funds for manager David Moyes to spend in the January transfer window and beyond.

The club was hit hard by the pandemic, posting losses of £65m in the 12 months to May 2020, and a cash injection would also help alleviate West Ham’s debt, which Sullivan said stood at £150m in September.

While there have been suggestions that Kretinsky’s deal could lead to an immediate buyout of Sullivan and Gold, the pair are expected to retain a majority stake until at least March 2023, when they would no longer be liable to pay any share of the profits from any sale to the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC), which owns the London Stadium.


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