Manchester
United has become the first sports team in the world to be valued at more than
$3bn. A surge in the club’s shares after a poor start when they were offered on
the New York Stock Exchange in August has seen the overall value of United rise
to $3.3bn (£2.1bn).
According
to Forbes, United are comfortably ahead of the world’s second-most valuable
sports team, the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, worth $2.1bn (£1.4bn).
The United
shares were initially offered to the public at $14 and are now worth just under
$17. It means a huge increase in the overall wealth of the Glazer family, who
have a controlling interest in United, and the billionaire investor George
Soros – the 22nd richest person in the world – who bought a 7.5% stake in the
club.
The
Glazers sold 10% of their shares in the initial public offering sale in August
but United’s vice-chairman, Ed Woodward, insisted in October the family will
not sell the club for “many, many years” despite ongoing interest.
Woodward
said they had no interest in cashing in the rest of their holding.
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