by Thaumagurist* » 07 Jun 2010 16:38
by leww_rfc » 07 Jun 2010 16:44
by Row Z Royal » 07 Jun 2010 16:48
Thaumagurist*That Friday Feeling Why?
They've had two decades of success, I want them to suffer now and maybe we'll see some other club dominate for a change.
by Thaumagurist* » 07 Jun 2010 16:52
by Row Z Royal » 07 Jun 2010 16:59
by Thaumagurist* » 07 Jun 2010 17:03
by TFF » 07 Jun 2010 17:09
Thaumagurist* Man Ure.
by Row Z Royal » 07 Jun 2010 17:18
Thaumagurist*Row Z Royal The debt currently being discussed it that of the Glazers, not of United. Correct? If the current situation (where the owners can still at least maintain the debt) then United will just continue in the same vein.
I think they've lumped the debt onto Man Ure.
by Row Z Royal » 07 Jun 2010 17:24
IdealRow Z Royal The debt is their's, secured against the club - like a mortgage. And like with a mortgage, if you can keep paying the interest, then there's no problem. And United run at an operating profit so they've mortgaged for the status, but it'll only actually cost them money if the club spends beyond it's income.
No, I think you have misunderstood. It is the club who are paying the interest on it. Where do you think the Ronaldo money went?
by Row Z Royal » 07 Jun 2010 17:32
by Dirk Gently » 07 Jun 2010 21:19
by Urinal Mint » 07 Jun 2010 21:34
Dirk Gently They also did it at the very worst time, just before the world credit market collapsed. So lots of the debts have been sold on willy nilly - some to some very dodgy companies.
Essentially, it's the difference between paying a mortgage and owning a house - Man Utd used to always make a healthy profit which was used to strengthen the team and, incidentally, to keep ticket prices low - they also had zero debt. Now they have masses of debt - yes they can service it, but it's £80M+ a year that they needn't be paying out. The club, the team or the supporters aren't any better off because of this - they're all definitely worse off.
Panorama tomorrow evening is to be recommended on this subject - it was due to be shown tonight but they hastily patched something together about the Cumbria gunman and moved the Football Finance one to tomorrow.
by Flyingkiwi » 07 Jun 2010 23:04
IdealThaumagurist* Please, I'd love to see Man Utd plummet down the leagues....
+1
by Barry the bird boggler » 08 Jun 2010 07:55
Urinal MintDirk Gently They also did it at the very worst time, just before the world credit market collapsed. So lots of the debts have been sold on willy nilly - some to some very dodgy companies.
Essentially, it's the difference between paying a mortgage and owning a house - Man Utd used to always make a healthy profit which was used to strengthen the team and, incidentally, to keep ticket prices low - they also had zero debt. Now they have masses of debt - yes they can service it, but it's £80M+ a year that they needn't be paying out. The club, the team or the supporters aren't any better off because of this - they're all definitely worse off.
Panorama tomorrow evening is to be recommended on this subject - it was due to be shown tonight but they hastily patched something together about the Cumbria gunman and moved the Football Finance one to tomorrow.
What channel and time? Thanks.
by PieEater » 08 Jun 2010 09:06
by TFF » 08 Jun 2010 09:25
Soaring wages are threatening the stability of Premier League clubs, a report into football finances has said.
Premier League clubs spent 67% of their revenues on player wages during the 2008/09 season, Deloitte said.
Chelsea again topped the wages bill, at £167m, while Manchester City's wage bill soared from £54m to £83m.
"For every £100 that comes into Premier League football clubs, £67 goes out on the wage bill - that's too high," said Deloitte's Dan Jones
The wage bills of Premier League clubs have recorded double-digit percentage growth for three years running. In 2008/09 they were up by £132m, or 11%, to £1.3bn.
Total wages have grown by 55%, or £474m, in that three-year period.
by Flyingkiwi » 08 Jun 2010 11:41
by TFF » 01 Jul 2010 12:23
by Dirk Gently » 01 Jul 2010 12:25
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