I'm confused with the part that the buyers would take on the stadium debt, so it's added to the overall package of the price of the club, I had been thinking the more the present owners of the club has paid off of that debt, the less debt the new owners would have to take over, but now it's meaning in my mind that it doesn't make any difference because if more debt is paid off by the present owners, it adds to the non-debt value, and the less debt they pay off adds to the added debt value to be part of any sale.The debt carries a fixed interest cost of circa 2.8% and average repayment of 20 years.
So enic has no incentive to pay it off early - impossible to get cheaper debt and they get a better return on money they could have used to pay off debt.
Same for buyers of Spurs - they would want to keep debt for as long a they could
So the present owners may as well just say in any circumstance, the club has the same value regardless of how much of the debt we have paid off, because a buyer will have to pay off the remaining debt plus the part of the debt that has already been paid.
In effect it seems to me that a buyer will actually be paying the price of the stadium, including the part of the debt the present owners have already paid off, plus any remaining debt. So the new owners will effectively be buying the stadium twice, once for the actual stadium structure, and again by paying off the entire debt that ENIC took out to erect it,
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