It was sincere when I posted it after reading that it maybe isn't now  Try reading it again & this time focus on the word 'leveraged'  Oh & btw no-one else mis-understood that point   Cheers
		
		
	 
  Even if I accepted your scenario that still doesn't address point A from my post. Regardless this plan might not warrant this in-depth an analysis but since you asked: I understand what you think leveraged means and I still disagree with you ... here's why ... 
A leveraged buyout is not magic. If we accept the notion that BK and company would sell for 25m I'm pretty sure they are going to want to get 25m in actual money. So where does that money come from? Everton doesn't have 25m in cash reserves so the 25m will be a liability on Everton's books in name only -- the 25m in real money is still coming out of that person's pocket. If you are hoping the banks will help out I'm sure they'd be thrilled to hear about how this person is planning on paying back the loan by deliberately reducing the team's competitive ability and jeopardizing its PL status ... you know seeing as how they already hold 50m odd of our debt which would be impossible to pay back if we were a Championship team. 
No investor in their right mind will want to touch junk bonds of a team which just sold for 25m which has (now) 75m in debt and the plan for recouping the cost is a firesale of assets. I don't believe the banks or investors will want to be involved (you'd have to offer such high interest that you'd be better off carrying it yourself) so the 25m IS indeed coming from that person's bank account (if only for a month or two in a best case scenario) meaning my point about better things to do with 25m still holds true. If you think the banks would help out then we'll have to agree to disagree and move on. 
I understand your plan involved having that paid off from player sales but there is time and cost involved in selling off players. If we assume the buyer gets the team in the summer and gets full ownership on day one of the window then maybe they can buy and sell all the players required in one window (although you wouldn't get close to fair market value once it became obvious what was going on). 
Also why are these cheaper replacement players wanting to play for a team which is clearly not worried about doing well? I'd suggest our replacement players would be quite low quality. 
I don't know the status of our player's contracts but sometimes players have a loyalty bonus -- if they aren't transfer listed by request then we owe them some amount of money. Throw in agent fees, bonuses and all the other costs involved (in both sales and the lower end replacement players we're buying) so you might need to get 60-65m in order to clear 50m. (Plus there is still an opportunity cost on what that 25m could be earning elsewhere.) 
Even if we don't get relegated we'd get a lot less from a lower league finish. We'd look like a team in free-fall. Then the banks come for a meeting about the 50m in debt and how, due to the lack of stability in the club, they are going to have to start calling in some of the debt. 
So ... why would anyone think that was a good way to make some quick cash? It would be a minor miracle to pull that off and retain PL status and operate at break-even financially ... turning a profit any time soon would be next to impossible (and if nobody wants to buy the club NOW they most certainly won't want to buy that Everton). 
Once again ... I can think of a thousand better plans for 25m (even if that 25m is only tied up for a month or two in a best case scenario) than that. So overall I'm not too worried about that scenario if the board lowered the asking price. 
... or am I still misunderstanding something?