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Manchester United deal: Is Jim Ratcliffe the white knight?

March 2, 2023

The Manchester United takeover saga has taken its biggest step forward for a while, with self-made billionaire Jim Ratcliffe buying 25% of the club. For Ratcliffe, it is the latest chapter in a remarkable success story.

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A picture of Ineos owner Jim Ratcliffe
Will Manchester United improve under Jim Ratcliffe?Image: Martin Rickett/PA/IMAGO

Ineos Group chairman Sir Jim Ratcliffe has agreed to buy a 25% stake in Premier League side Manchester United and will inject around €272 million ($300 million) into the club, the Red Devils announced on December 24.

"Manchester United announces that it has entered into an agreement under which chairman of Ineos, Sir Jim Ratcliffe, will acquire 25% of Manchester United's Class B shares and up to 25% of Manchester United's Class A shares and provide an additional $300 million intended to enable future investment into Old Trafford[ the club stadium]," the statement read.

"As part of the transaction, Ineos has accepted a request by the board to be delegated responsibility for the management of the club's football operations. This will include all aspects of the men's and women's football operations and academies, alongside two seats on the Manchester United PLC board and the Manchester United Football Club

Ratcliffe may be a charismatic man admired for his remarkable success in business, but he is also a lot more controversial than perhaps first meets the eye.

Making a fortune in chemicals

There's little doubt that he is the popular choice among Manchester United fans to buy the club. Current owners the American Glazer family, who retain control despite this development, are extremely unpopular while polls suggest far more fans wanted Ratcliffe to buy the club than a rival bid from the Qatari royal family, which collapsed earlier in 2023.

But who is Jim Ratcliffe? The 70-year-old Englishman is the founder, majority owner and chairman of Ineos. According to the US trade magazine Chemical & Engineering News, it is the sixth-largest chemicals company in the world as of 2022.

Ineos comprises dozens of standalone businesses in the chemicals sector, producing many of the raw materials which go into a vast array of everyday products from plastics and medicines to paint and petrol.

Ratcliffe himself was estimated to have a net worth of close to $25.6 billion (€24 billion at today's rate) in 2018 although that has fallen in recent years. Forbes estimated his personal worth at $15.2 billion as of February 2023.

He only became an entrepreneur at the age of 40 when he staked everything he had on one monumental bet.

After studying chemical engineering, he worked for Esso for a few years before an MBA took him into the world of private equity. He was working with the firm Advent International when, in 1992, he decided he wanted to do something "for myself."

Along with a colleague, he convinced banks to give him £40 million ($47 million; €45 million) to buy one of BP's specialty chemicals businesses. He mortgaged his house and used his entire life savings to fund the deal. With two young sons at the time, it was a huge risk. "I was 40 years old. It is a very critical part of your career path," he told the Financial Times in 2014. "If it goes wrong you've lost all your money and completely screwed up your career."

The move was the birth of his company Inspec, which morphed into Ineos in 1998. The company expanded quickly through a series of smart acquisitions, typically buying undervalued chemicals divisions from larger companies such as BASF and BP, and then rapidly cutting costs to help finance more deals and make the enterprises profitable.

There has been plenty of turbulence. The financial crisis hit the company hard, with its debt pile a huge burden. A dispute with the UK government over a temporary deferral of VAT (value-added tax) payments led Ratcliffe to move Ineos from the UK to Switzerland in 2010, before he eventually moved it back six years later.

A truck passing the headquarters of Ineos in Grangemouth
Ineos is currently ranked as the sixth-largest chemicals company in the worldImage: Andrew Milligan/PA/picture alliance

Courting controversy

Then there was the event in 2013 which really thrust Ratcliffe into the spotlight in the UK, an industrial clash between Ineos and a trade union over wages and pensions for workers at the Grangemouth oil refinery in Scotland.

Ratcliffe insisted cuts were needed to keep the plant going. Ten years on, Grangemouth is still open but his reputation took a hit during the bitter dispute as a result of what were perceived as his hard-line tactics.

Another controversial point was his support for Brexit. However, his enthusiasm for the UK leaving the EU did not stop him from choosing France over the UK as the place in which he wants Ineos to build its first flagship car.

Ratcliffe's "Grenadier," labelled as a successor to the Land Rover Defender, was due to be built in Wales. But in December 2020, he confirmed the car would be built in the French town of Hambach, near the Franco-German border, after he bought a Mercedes plant there.

He has said his "thick Mancunian skin" helps him deal with the criticism his career brings and he certainly wasn't born into privilege. He was raised in a council house in Manchester until the age of 10 when the family moved to Yorkshire. His father worked as a joiner before eventually running a factory which made furniture. 

In a BBC profile of Ratcliffe in 2013, Jim's brother Bob gave an insight into their father's "tough love" when he described what it was like working beside him in the factory. When a worker asked Ratcliffe Senior to give Bob a ride home in the car, rather than make him cycle, he replied: "He isn't sugar, he won't melt." 

Sports loving or sportswashing?

In recent years, Ineos and Jim Ratcliffe have become arguably better known for their involvement in sports than chemicals. Ineos bought the French Ligue 1 side OGC Nice in 2019 and also owns Swiss side Lausanne-Sport.

It also runs the Tour de France-winning cycling group formerly known as Team Sky, now known as the Ineos Grenadiers. It funds the UK's America's Cup sailing team and sponsors the Mercedes Formula One team.

Ratcliffe himself says he is a sports fan and that motivates the moves. He is an avid cyclist, marathon runner and mountaineer and is one of the few people on the planet to have been to both the North Pole and the South Pole.

But critics say Ratcliffe is engaged in a form of "sportswashing", using sports to distract from Ineos' serious environmental issues and his own long-established support for fracking.

A corner flag with the Manchester United logo on it
A takeover bid for Manchester United has been brewing for some timeImage: Phil Noble/Pool/AP/picture alliance

Ineos is a major fossil fuels user and has been involved in several environmental controversies over the years, from an oil leak in Norway to chemical leaks in France to a release of toxic gas which led to workers being hospitalized in Belgium.

Whatever the motivations, Ineos is now a serious player in the global sports business. And even though he's 70, Ratcliffe clearly still feels like he is only getting started. He dismisses talk of retirement.

Ineos director Tom Crotty gave an insight into what drives Ratcliffe in an interview with the Financial Times back in 2020.

"Jim has a philosophy which says you want to try and make as many days of your life as memorable as you can, which is why he personally goes on all these adventures. The same is true in business."

Edited by: Rob Mudge.

This story was amended on December 24, 2023 to include Ratcliffe's share purchase on the same day.

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Arthur Sullivan
Arthur Sullivan Reporter and senior editor focused on global economic stories with a geopolitical angle.@drumloman86