Bayern don't really need him and Hoeness said there won't be anymore transfers during the winter break.Bulgarian international striker Valeri Bojinov looks set to leave Fiorentina.
The 19-year-old, who cost the Viola €13 million (£9 million) last January, has put clubs on red alert by revealing his unhappiness in Florence.
It is believed that Bayern Munich, Hamburg and Internazionale are on the trail of the young forward, with Munich being his preferred destination.
Bojinov revealed: "In the next two or three days I will join Bayern Munich, Inter Milan or Hamburg SV.
"My first choice would be to play for Bayern as that is the best place for me to play."
He added: "I am not angry with anyone here but my primary objective is to get into the first team, this will help me keep my place in the national team."
Bojinov has been left frustrated by his lack of first team opportunities, making only seven league starts, scoring two goals.
"I want to play regularly but the coach Cesare Prandelli has a different point of view."
and Sagnol has finally extended
Sagnol aims to end career in Munich
After keeping fans, reporters and officials guessing for months, although with increasingly less uncertainty in recent weeks, Willy Sagnol has officially announced his acceptance of a new deal keeping the crowd favourite at Bayern until 2010.
The worst-kept secret at the club effectively leaked out at the start of the Dubai training camp when general manager Uli Hoeneß told reporters he had an agreement with the player, but Sagnol remained tight-lipped until Monday,
"It was a difficult decision. I spent a long time thinking about it," the right-back declared. The first meeting between Hoeneß and the player took place last summer in France, and the board director had formally sat down with Sagnol on three further occasions since then. "My relationship with Uli Hoeneß and the fans was a vital factor in my decision," Willy announced. The Bayern faithful have become even more frenetic in their adoration as the months of uncertainty rolled by.
Sagnol was not short of lucrative offers from other big-name clubs. "You don't just ignore it when a club like Juventus say they're interested," the France star reported. His international team-mates at the serial Italian champions had tried hard to persuade him to join them, he revealed. "But I've been here nearly six years, and I'll soon be 29. It's not easy to start a new career in a new country." Willy switched to Munich from Monaco in 2000.
"I feel a little like I'm at home in Munich," he added. "I have a number of friends here at Bayern. That was also important." That circle of friends includes fellow-countrymen Bixente Lizarazu and Valerien Ismaël, who were consulted along with his family before the final choice. "But it's my career, so the decision was ultimately mine," Sagnol insisted.
He had made a final choice "a long time ago", he remarked, adding an explanation as to his continued silence even after Hoeneß had effectively lifted the lid on the new agreement. "I'm French, and I wanted to announce my decision in my home country first," he explained. The 28-year-old gave an interview to a trusted journalist which was broadcast on French TV last Sunday.
Sagnol finally brought the protracted speculation over his future to an end in Germany on Monday. It came as no surprise when he opened with the words: "I'm staying here until 2010." But a character like Sagnol would not be who he is if he had not added a flourish. "I want to end my career in Munich," he declared. "I believe the future at Bayern could be very interesting. Staying here is the best thing I can do for my career."