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Serie A Champions Under Threat Over Debt

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Inter Milan could change hands days after being crowned Italian champions as yesterday’s deadline for a near 400 million-euro debt repayment reared into view.
Simone Inzaghi’s Inter team held aloft the Serie A trophy after Sunday’s meaningless 1-1 draw with Lazio having already secured the league title with five matches to spare last month.
But a planned weekend of celebrations was overshadowed by the prospect of one of Europe’s biggest clubs being taken over by US investment fund Oaktree, who are waiting on 395 million euros ($429 million) from Inter’s Chinese owners Suning.
Suning borrowed 275 million euros at over 12 percent interest three years ago to pay staff and players as the Covid-19 pandemic ravaged the finances of clubs across Europe.
Inter were put up as collateral against that debt and Oaktree could decide to claim control of the club when the debt matures, with a source familiar with the matter telling our source that Oaktree had not yet received a single euro.
Inter posted losses of 85 million euros in the 2022/23 season, following even heavier losses of 140 million euros and 245.6 million euros in the previous two seasons as stadiums were partially or fully closed due to the pandemic.
Last Saturday, Inter president Steven Zhang, the son of Suning founder Zhang Jindong, had claimed that Oaktree, who manage $192 billion in assets, were jeopardising the club’s financial stability with unspecified legal threats.
Zhang, who has not been to Italy over a year and lost a court case with China Construction Bank over personal debts of 320 million euros, claimed that Oaktree had been actively obstructing negotiations for full repayment.
He had been widely reported as negotiating a further 430 million euro loan with another US fund, Pimco, to pay off Oaktree.
But the source disclosed that no documents had been exchanged that suggest Suning had found either a credible buyer for Inter or a refinancing partner.
As a result, Inter are increasingly likely to end up in the hands of Oaktree in manner similar to the way another US fund, Elliott Management, took control of their local rivals AC Milan in 2018.
Elliott became Milan’s owners when Chinese businessman Li Yonghong was unable to repay a loan he had taken out when he bought the club from the late Silvio Berlusconi’s Fininvest the previous year.
An announcement was not expected on yesterday, but if repayment is not made and Oaktree decide to take control of Inter, the source said, the takeover process will not be lengthy.

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