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Bayern Munich planning to talk with Manchester United for Bruno Fernandes

Bayern Munich planning to talk with Manchester United for Bruno Fernandes

Yahoo25-05-2025

Manchester United fans are eager to discover the club's plans for Bruno Fernandes following the Europa League final debacle.
INEOS have said every player is for sale for the right price, including the club captain, despite his importance to the squad.
Al-Hilal have reportedly already submitted a gigantic offer and have given the Portuguese ace three days to decide on his next course of action.
Ruben Amorim once again made it clear that the 30-year-old is not for sale, but INEOS are reportedly willing to let him leave should any club offer them over £100 million.
As relayed by The Peoples Person, Fernandes has no intention of leaving Europe at this stage of his career, and Real Madrid could revisit their interest.
Now, Teamtalk have revealed that Bayern Munich are ready to open talks with the Portugal international having identified him as the perfect alternative for Florian Wirtz, who seems destined for Liverpool.
The Bavarians are planning to sit down with United officials to try and figure out a way forward but whether they can afford United's asking price remains to be seen.
'Bayern Munich have lost out to Liverpool in the race to sign Florian Wirtz and could launch a blockbuster move for Manchester United captain Bruno Fernandes as an alternative, TEAMtalk understands.
'TEAMtalk understands that Bayern are keen to sit down and have a conversation with Man Utd's representatives over a potential deal for Fernandes.
'However, Man Utd have no intention of letting Fernandes go on the cheap. Sources state that it would take a bid of over £100m for them to consider a sale.'
Bayern were ready to spend big on the Bayer Leverkusen ace but whether they will be willing to splurge on someone who is eight years his senior remains to be seen.
Fans will be left distraught if Bruno Fernandes leaves in the summer, given he is the only world-class superstar in the squad currently.
Feature image Juan Manuel Serrano Arce via Getty Images
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Depending on the circumstances, banks can look for other assets, whether securities, real estate, cash, or even alternative assets like art. If an executive is caught on a margin call from borrowing, where the equity of the stock pledge is worth less than a set baseline, the person will have to pony up more cash, offer alternative assets, or sell off additional shares to cover the balance. This can happen when a stock's price drops. Tesla has seen downward pressures on its shares. As Yahoo Finance reported, Tesla electric vehicle registrations (a proxy for sales) were down 49% year-over-year in Europe even as overall EV registrations were up 34.1%. Citi Analyst Jeff Chung noted that recent sales in China were down about 16% year over year, as Barron's reported. Shares did jump on Tuesday, May 27, on Musk saying that he would return to the office rather than spending more time in politics. In 2022, Forbes reported that out of the Forbes 400 list of 2021, 32 billionaires pledged shares of public companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq where they were either directors or significant shareholders (at least 5% of total shares of a company). Musk reportedly pledged a greater amount than the other 31 billionaires combined. He was fueling business deals like the Twitter takeover. According to that Forbes report, he pledged $62.5 billion in Tesla stock as collateral for margin loans of $12.5 billion. In the 2022 proxy statement, the board wrote that it limited loans with stock collateral to 25% of the pledged stocks. 'We believe this cap places sufficient limitation on any potential risk attendant to pledging stock, while still allowing flexibility in the use of equity awards to promote long-termism and ownership culture,' they wrote at the time. Also, the statement noted that a proxy advisory firm had 'concerns about the Board's risk oversight with respect to Tesla's policy regarding pledging of shares by directors and officers.' The proxy advisory was also concerned over 'hypotheticals of increasing share pledges.' In 2023, the board added the $3.5 billion cap to Musk's borrowing. Whether that applied in retrospect is unclear. If so, it would suggest that Musk had to repay a massive sum to keep within the new bounds. There seems to be nothing to indicate that his previous borrowing was grandfathered. If it were, there should be some documentation to that effect. Had he repaid that money, it would seem unlikely that vast number of shares would still be pledged. If he did repay the previous amounts, then under the Board's rules, the value of the shares to the maximum he could borrow, $3.5 billion, would be a roughly 23-times collateral coverage. According to Santangelo, that would signal that the lender saw an extreme risk in the pledged shares. What is clear is that in 2023, Musk had 238,441,261 shares pledged — 2,442,540 shares more than in 2024. That was a big jump from 2022, when Musk had pledged 92,331,125 shares, just under 39% of the 2023 figure. Also, the total shares he had in 2022 was 172,608,251, 21.2% of the total shares. There a large increase in the total number of shares as well, from 1,033,507,611 in 2022 to 3,164,102,701 in 2023. 'The whole point of caring about how much stock the executives and directors have is so investors can assess how well the interests of insiders align with theirs,' Minow says. 'Using stock as collateral arguably provides even more of an incentive to keep the price up, unless, as apparent in the Twitter purchase, the board is willing to open the spigot to make up for any squeezes.'

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