Column New Allotments of Shares totals £101M in cash investment Recent filings at Companies House signal two more tranches of additional investment in Everton Football Club, totalling £101M since August Michael Kenrick 7 October 2025 3comments (last) Recent filings at Companies House signal two more tranches of additional investment in Everton Football Club, following the resolutions that were approved in August, allowing over 1 million new shares to be issued as required to secure additional equity in the club. A return filed on 10 September 2025 shows a second Allotment of Shares was made on 28 August 2025, indicating that 57,143 new shares have been issued – presumably to Roundhouse Capital, which is The Friedkin Group's holding company for Everton Football Club. The amount paid for each share is £175, representing an additional investment or cash injection of £10M. And this was followed by another return filed on 3 October 2025 showing a third Allotment of Shares was made on 28 September 2025, indicating that 257,142 new shares have been issued – presumably also to Roundhouse Capital. The amount paid for each share is £175, representing a further investment or cash injection of £45M. This brings the total amount of new investment in the club since August to £101M. This amount is likely required to fund ongoing operations, including the substantial outgoings incurred during the transfer window, which has seen a net spend of £120M. The injection of cash also helps to ensure that Everton stay on the right side of the PSR threshold in terms of anticipated losses during the current financial year, 2025-26. These additional allotments brings the total number of Everton shares outstanding to 2,198,935, and would nominally value the club at £385M, with the minority shareholders continuing to hold 7,969 shares in a dwindling proportion that represents just 0.36% of the overall stake in the club — down from 0.49% after TFG recapitalised the club following their takeover in December 2024. Reader Comments (3) Note: the following content is not moderated or vetted by the site owners at the time of submission. Comments are the responsibility of the poster. Disclaimer () Michael Kenrick 1 Posted 07/10/2025 at 22:52:53 It seems this injection of cash into the club goes on the bottom line, and thus enables the purchase of new players we have seen this season. The inflow of money has to be seen as income, which obviously is set against any losses, and thus directly counters any PSR issues or concerns. Which makes me wonder about Newcastle's well-publicised PSR bind. Why didn't the PIF or whoever just throw money at the Toon in exchange for newly printed shares? Or perhaps it's just not that simple...??? Derek Thomas 2 Posted 07/10/2025 at 22:56:24 £175! If you have one, frame it and hang it on the wall as an interesting curio from a by-gone age...and maybe a lesson to the fact that, as is said; Shares can go up or down and past performance is no guarantee etc, etc.As limited edition of 7,969 curio, I might be in for one myself. I hearby bid for 1 @£180 - any takers? Dennis Stevens 3 Posted 07/10/2025 at 22:59:34 If I had one, that's where it'd be, Derek. I doubt many folks have them as an investment - maybe only TFG? Add Your Comments In order to post a comment, you need to be logged in as a registered user of the site. » Log in now Or Sign up as a ToffeeWeb Member — it's free, takes just a few minutes and will allow you to post your comments on articles and Talking Points submissions across the site. How to get rid of these ads and support TW © ToffeeWeb