SportBusiness.com

Lehman Brothers backs Kirch F1 loan

Munich-based Kirch Group reportedly plans to borrow $800million (B

According to UK news sources, the restructuring of the bond will allow Kirch to free up the revenue streams of the F1 business it partly owns.

Lehman Borthers declined to comment on the deal when approached by sportbusiness.com, but it is thought that because of complications arising from the proposed merger between Kirch Media and ProsiebenSat.1, a long evalutaion process may take place before the loan goes through.

Kirch currently holds a 57 percent stake in SLEC, the Formula One holding company, but this is likely to increase to 75 percent when the cash-strapped media group EM.TV completes the expected sale of its F1 stake to Kirch.

Last week, EM.TV released its interim results and EM.TV chairman Werner Klatten reiterated his desire to shed non-core assets like F1.

F1 earned EM.TV $85m (B92.7bn) in the first half of the year, but the profits were eaten up by high-interest payments, partly made on a $1bn (B1.1bn) loan from Kirch that enabled EM.TV to acquire its F1 stake.

The possible involvement of Lehman Brothers in restructuring the 'Bernie bond' appears to be part of a growing relationship between the bank and Kirch Group holdings.

Sportbusiness.com has learnt that ProsiebenSat.1 the stock-market listed commercial TV company in which Kirch owns 88.5 percent of shares, made a presentation to Lehman Brothers on the German ad market last week in London.

Kirch intends to reverse its Kirch Media group into the Frankfurt-listed ProsiebenSat.1 by the end of June 2002.