Manchester United 'receive a second Qatari bid to buy the club'

Manchester United's Old Trafford stadium Credit: PA Images

Manchester United have received a second Qatari bid to buy the Old Trafford club.

Sheikh Jassim, the chairman of Qatar Islamic Bank and the son of a former Qatari prime minister, placed his second-round offer overnight.

A source close to the bid says the Qataris remain confident of completing a takeover despite rival interest from Sir Jim Ratcliffe and Finnish businessman Thomas Zilliacus.

A deadline for offers had been set for 9pm on Wednesday 22 March, but that was extended.

The first round of bidding took place in February 2023, and it has been reported there are as many as eight separate potential investors.

No figures have been revealed, but one or more of the initial bids were reportedly in the region of £4.5billion.

The Glazers acquired the club for £750million in a highly-leveraged deal in 2005.

After a controversial reign, they announced last year they were seeking "strategic alternatives" that could include a sale.

Ratcliffe, who made an unsuccessful bid to buy Chelsea in 2022 and already owns French club Nice, visited Old Trafford last week.

Sir Jim at Old Trafford Credit: PA images

The 70-year-old was born in the Manchester area and is a boyhood United fan. He is one of the richest people in Britain with an estimated personal fortune of £6 billion.

Sheikh Jassim has said his interest is a private initiative through his Nine Two Foundation and is not connected to the Qatari state.

His representatives also visited Old Trafford last week for talks, which were understood to be positive and constructive.

Finnish businessman Zilliacus confirmed earlier this week that he has also submitted a bid.

Zilliacus, founder and chairman of investment company Mobile FutureWorks, wants to buy United in a 50-50 partnership with their fans, who will have a say in the decision-making process at the Premier League club.

Until now, little or nothing is known of other potential bidders, while it has been reported that US hedge fund Elliott Management has made a proposal that would involve offering finance to either new bidders or the Glazers.