As the owner of Anfield and founder of Liverpool, John Houlding was the club's first chairman, a position he held from its
founding in 1892 until 1904. John McKenna took over as chairman after Houlding's
departure. McKenna subsequently became President of
the Football League.The chairmanship changed hands many times before John
Smith, whose father was a shareholder of the club, took up the role in 1973.
He
oversaw the most successful period in Liverpool's history before stepping down
in 1990. In August 1991 David Moores, whose family had owned the club for more than 50 years became
Chairman. His uncle John Moores was also a shareholder at
Liverpool and was chairman of Everton from 1961 to 1973. Moores owned
51 percent of the club, and in 2004 expressed his willingness to consider
a bid for his shares in Liverpool.
Moores eventually sold the club to American
businessmen George Gillett and Tom Hicks
on 6 February 2007. The deal valued the club and its outstanding debts at
£218.9 million. The pair paid £5,000 per share, or £174.1m for the total
shareholding and £44.8m to cover the club's debts. Disagreements between
Gillett and Hicks, and the fans' lack of support for them, resulted in the pair
looking to sell the club. Martin Broughton was appointed chairman of the club on 16 April 2010 to oversee
its sale. In May 2010, accounts were released showing the holding company of
the club to be £350m in debt (due to leveraged takeover) with losses of £55m,
causing auditor KPMG to qualify its audit opinion. The group's creditors, including the Royal Bank of Scotland, took Gillett and
Hicks to court to force them to allow the board to proceed with the sale of the
club, the major asset of the holding company. A High Court judge, Mr. Justice Floyd, ruled in favour of the creditors and paved the way for the
sale of the club to Fenway Sports Group (formerly New England
Sports Ventures), although Gillett and Hicks still had the option to appeal.
Liverpool was sold to Fenway Sports Group on 15 October 2010 for £300m.
Liverpool has been described as a global brand; a
2010 report valued the club's trademarks and associated intellectual property
at £141m, an increase of £5m on the previous year. Liverpool was given a brand
rating of AA (Very Strong). In April 2010 business magazine Forbes ranked
Liverpool as the sixth most valuable football team in the world, behind
Manchester United, Real Madrid, Arsenal, Barcelona
and Bayern Munich; they valued the club at
$822m (£532m), excluding debt.
Accountants Deloitte
ranked Liverpool eighth in the Deloitte Football Money League,
which ranks the world's football clubs in terms of revenue. Liverpool's income
in the 2009–10 season was €225.3m.
Liverpool reported a £49.4m annual loss in 2011,
although this figure does not include a new £25m kit deal with Warrior Sports.
In the 2010/2011 season it spent €142 Mio on wages, nearly the same amount as Bayern Munchen, and 2.5 times the amount of Borrusia Dortmund.
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