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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Business
Alex Lawson

Barclay family make last-ditch bid to keep control of Telegraph newspapers

The daily Telegraph newspaper
The Telegraph’s owners have launched a new bid to regain control of the newspaper after lenders appointed receivers. Photograph: Jim Wileman/Alamy

The former owners of the Daily and Sunday Telegraph have made an attempt to regain control of their media assets after they were put up for a sale in a bitter row with lenders.

The Barclay family has submitted an offer to Lloyds Banking Group that would reportedly allow them to write off some of the nearly £1bn in debts owed to the group’s subsidiary, Bank of Scotland.

It made the move on Wednesday, hours after Bank of Scotland appointed AlixPartners as receiver to the publisher’s holding company in a move to seize the shares owned by the Barclay family.

Bank of Scotland was frustrated at the lack of repayment of the loans, which Lloyds bought as part of its takeover of HBOS during the 2008 financial crisis.

The bank has rejected the latest in a series of proposals to restructure the debts, according to Sky News, which first reported the Barclays’ offer. Sources close to the developments, however, said talks were ongoing and that the Barclay family could still regain control.

Carlyle, a private equity firm which holds a portion of the debt in Barclay-backed companies including the online retail group Very, is also reportedly involved in the talks.

Bank of Scotland said on Wednesday that it had replaced board members appointed by the Barclay family with independent directors, and was moving to auction off the Telegraph titles and the Spectator magazine.

The twins David and Frederick Barclay bought the Telegraph Media Group, the parent of the newspapers, in a £665m sale in 2004. The Telegraph’s financial position has improved in recent years, building up its subscription base to more than 750,000. It reported profits of almost £30m last year.

Any deal is expected to value the media assets at about £600m, meaning about £400m of debts would remain outstanding even if the entire proceeds of any sale were used to repay the loan.

A string of potential suitors has been quickly linked to a possible deal, including DMGT – the owner of the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers, MailOnline, Metro and i – and Axel Springer, the German publisher of BildThe Belgian group Mediahuis has also been linked to a deal, along with Sir Paul Marshall, co-founder of the hedge fund Marshall Wace; Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the billionaire owner of Ineos and members of the Saudi and Qatari royal families.

Rupert Murdoch’s News UK has been mooted as a potential buyer for the Spectator.

Among the directors being removed from the Bermuda-based holding company, B.UK Limited, is Aidan Barclay, the chair of the newspaper group, who along with his brother, Howard, controls the family’s UK assets, which also include delivery company Yodel.

In 2020 the Barclay family sold the Ritz hotel in Mayfair to a Qatari investor. The brothers also attempted to take control of three prestigious Mayfair hotels, Claridge’s, the Berkeley and the Connaught, but abandoned that plan in 2015.

David Barclay died in 2021 unexpectedly after a short illness. Frederick is embroiled in a court battle over a £100m divorce settlement.

Bank of Scotland said on Wednesday that although it had appointed receivers because it had not been able to find a “consensual solution” to the dispute, it was “willing to continue discussions to find a suitable solution”. The lender declined to comment further.

The investment bank Lazard is advising Lloyds on its options, while Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan are reportedly seeking to land the job to sell the newspapers.

The Barclay family declined to comment on reports of a fresh offer. It said on Wednesday that conversations with the bank were ongoing. Carlyle did not respond to a request for comment.

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