RedBird IMI has agreed a mortgage package deal with the Barclay household that will let it take management of the Telegraph newspaper and Spectator journal, a prospect that’s sparked concern amongst Conservative lawmakers due to the fund’s ties to Abu Dhabi.
The media funding car, which is a three way partnership between RedBird Capital Partners and the United Arab Emirates-based International Media Investments, mentioned in a press release Monday that it had agreed to lend the Barclay household £600 million ($750 million), secured towards the politically influential titles.
“Under the terms of this agreement, RedBird IMI has an option to convert the loan secured against the Telegraph and Spectator into equity, and intends to exercise this option at an early opportunity,” the funding car mentioned in a press release.
Lloyds Banking Group Plc seized the Telegraph titles together with the Spectator journal from the Barclay household in June to claw again money owed, eradicating Barclay relations from their director positions and inserting the companies in receivership. The RedBird IMI mortgage will assist the Barclay household to repay the debt owed to Lloyds.
Separately, IMI will lend an extra £600 million secured towards different Barclay household companies and industrial pursuits. IMI is a non-public funding car for Sheikh Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, in keeping with a spokesman for RedBird IMI, whose assertion emphasised IMI’s involvement can be passive.
“Following transfer of ownership, RedBird Capital alone will take over management and operational responsibility for the titles under the leadership of RedBird IMI Chief Executive Jeff Zucker,” the assertion mentioned, referring to the previous president of CNN. “International Media Investments will be a passive investor only.”
Still, RedBird IMI’s assertion will seemingly heighten concern amongst Conservative lawmakers, who’re pushing the UK authorities to scrutinize the UAE’s involvement. Lawmakers have described any attainable affect of the UAE royal household over the Telegraph as “a risk to our national security,” citing its document on press freedom and place on Israel.
The prospect of overseas affect on the title has already raised issues amongst senior ministers together with Kemi Badenoch and Tom Tugendhat, Bloomberg News reported Saturday.
“Any transfer of ownership will of course be subject to regulatory review,” RedBird IMI mentioned in its assertion, which pledged to keep up the present editorial workforce of the publications. “We will continue to cooperate fully with the government and the regulator.”
Even earlier than that, UK Culture Secretary Luzy Frazer might challenge a so-called Public Interest Intervention Notice. That would launch a examine of the deal by British regulators. She might additionally freeze the transaction whereas that occurs, if she chooses. The antitrust watchdog – the CMA – and media regulator Ofcom will report findings on antitrust and media points respectively, to tell Frazer’s remaining determination, which might see her clear the deal, block it, or impose circumstances.