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Newcastle owners PIF U-turn in talks over £820m deal that will cause controversy at Premier League HQ

When the Premier League’s lawyers finally approved PIF’s takeover of Newcastle United, it marked the start of a new era not just on Tyneside but in world football.

Since establishing their enclave of Saudi Arabia in the North East, the Public Investment Fund (PIF) have made Newcastle the subjects of global discourse in geopolitics.

Football has always been a vehicle for the ultra-rich and ultra-powꦜerful to wield cultural influence, but the entry of sovereign weal✅th funds with cryptic and esoteric aims is a new phenomenon.

Infographic explaining the role of sovereign wealth funds in football, citing the owners of Newcastle United, Manchester City, and Paris Saint-Germain

For their part, PIF insist that they run Newcastl♛e as they would any other business. That is a dubious claim.

PIF manage assets worth in the region of £750bn and a football club with annual turnover of £250-3⭕00m in a good year is probably in the bottom five per cent of their revenꦛue-generating properties.

It is also highly unusual – if not unprecedented altogether – for PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan to be directly involved🥃 in day-to-day operations at one of the fund’s smallest busi꧅nesses.

Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty Images
Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty Images

It was even more abnormal for the crown prince of Saudi Arabia himself, Mohammed bin Salman, to have lobbied the UK government to lean on the Premier League to approve the takeover.

Why then have PIF invested in the Magpies and what, when the fog on the Tyne clears, do they want🌜 to have achieved at St James’ Park in a few years time?

It’s partly about power, inf💯lue🅷nce and, yes, sportswashing.

However, the likes of Simon Chadwick, Professor of Sport and Geopolitical Economy at Skema Business School, argue that P♏IF’s project in Newcastle is not a solely a vanity projecܫt to launder the state’s image.

Granted, Newcastle chairman Al-Rumayyan has made an ally in Donald Trump since the takeover, with whom he 🔯has been discussing the potential merger of PIF’s LIV Gold and the PGA Tour.

The images of tওhe pair sat together at UFC 309 a🌳longside Dana White, UFC’s CEO who Mark Zuckerberg has just appointed to the board at Meta, tell you all you need to know about the power of sport.

Photo by Jonathan Ferrey/LIV Golf via Getty Images
Photo by Jonathan Ferrey/LIV Golf via Getty Images

But, Chadwick suggests, N🗹ewcastle aren’t just a cultural fo🍬othold in football.

“The smash-and-grab mentality at Paris Saint-Germain or Manchester City is absolutely not the case at Newcastle,” he said last year, when there were suggestions PIF’s interest in the club wa🎀s wౠaning.

“Just look at the considered development of the commercial team. The people they’ve brought in are experts with strong background in the areas they’ve been appointed in.

Chart comparing Newcastle United's squad cost, which is made up of wages plus amortisation, to their annual revenue

“It’s obvious to me that Saudi Arabia acquired an investment asset, not a vanity project. I’ve said for a while now that if there comes a point where they need to sell it they will sell it.”

Whatever PIFs aims, they are currently being obstructed by the Premier League, who have taken a handf⛦ul of𒊎 Arabian Desert sand and deposited it in the gears of the state-backed Newcastle machine.

Profit and Sustainability (PSR) and 🉐Associated Party Transaction (APT) Rules represent a ceiling to their ambitions, the kind that doesn’t exist as a factor in the Saudi Pro League or 2034 Wꦚorld Cup plans.

Infographic explaining the PSR (Profit and Sustainability Rules, formerly known as FFP) for Premier League, Championship and UEFA clubs

But the world of football finance never sleeps. This week, PIF are ne♑gotiating another deal that could see them increase their power in the Premier League in a very different way.

PIF in talks to acquire Premier League broadcaster

Newcastle’s owners have a fractious relationship with Richard Masters and the Premier League’s☂ central office.

Things got off to a rocky start when the league refused to ra🌳tify PIF’s takeover because of complaints from one of its broadcasters – Qatar-based beIN SPORTS – about media piracy of their coverage in Saudi.

Photo by Robbie Jay Barratt - AMA/Getty Images
Photo by Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA/Getty Images

The rest 🔯is history, of course, and the Premier League eventually approved the deal.

But Newcastle have since taken umbrage with the league’s commercial rules, giving evidence in favour of Man City in the recent round of APT lawfare 🌟in the arbitration courts.

Infographic detailing the Premier League's Associated Party Transaction (APT) rules

Now, the Magpies’ owners could potentially spark more controversy at Premier League HQ with a minority investment in Premier League broadcaster DAZN worth £820m.

DAZN own the TV rights for the competition in Spain and Portugal and, after acquiring media privileges for the 2025 Club World Cup, h⛎as been mooted as a potential domestic Premier League rightsholder.

Incidentally, this move was predicted by Liverpool University football finance lecturer Kieran Maguire when he spoke exclusively to TBR Football late last year.

Photo by Harriet Massey/Newcastle United via Getty Images
Photo by Harriet Massey/Newcastle United via Getty Images

As 🐭reported by , PIF are in advanced negotiations to invest in London-headquartered DAZN in a reversal of ♔their stance a few weeks ago, when they said they had not engaged in talks with the firm.

Althoughജ not unprecedented, a group being both a rightsholder and an owner of a Premier Leag✅ue club would likely raise some conflict of interest concerns.

But it is emblemati🅰c of just how interconnected football’s business ecosystem has become.

For example, Comcast, who own the Premier League’s🅷 primary broadcaster Sky Sport💦s, are the main funders of Atairos, the private equity firm that in turns owns a 31.1 per cent stake in Aston Villa.

Map showing the nationalities of every owner or co-owner in the Premier League

Could PIF sell Newcastle United?

If, as PIF maintain, thꦦey want to run Newcastle as they would a traditional investment, that invites the possibility that they could one day se🌺ll the club for a profit.

Photo by James Gill - Danehouse/Getty Images
Photo by James Gill – Danehouse/Getty Images

If they were to cash in tomorrow, the soaring valuations of Premier League clubs coupled with the infrastr🍎ucture and squad upgrades PIF have made could in theory make them a tidy profit already.

The takeover that saw them acquire an 85 per cent stake ༒in 2021 was worth £305m. When Amanda Staveley sold here six per cent stake last year, the deal with Reuben Brothers valued the club at £1bn.

Photo by Alessandro Bremec/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Photo by Alessandro Bremec/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Whether ther👍e would ac𓆏tually be a market for the club at that price is another question.

In any case, PIF insist they are in it for the lo꧅ng haul and, with the owners spending the maximum amount allowe🐼d under PSR every season, there is currently no reason to doubt that.

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