double d Snowflake Royal People have got to stop thinking in transfer fees when it comes to FFP, it's wages that are most important.
With your seemingly deep and in the know football knowledgeable brain because you clearly work in the game, tell us how you know this is even the case?
Firstly, I have no particular deep, specialist knowledge or expertise of football or its finance, nor have I ever claimed such. What I do have, is a borderline unhealthy obsession with RFC, mild intelligence and the free time and inclination to actually read articles on football finance, glance over our published accounts and listen to the views of people with far greater knowledge and expertise than me in these areas. As opposed to gathering my view from attention seeking oxf*rd on twitter and barely numerate, half-witted pundits on Sky with a vested interest in things continuing to spiral ever higher and higher in the cause of sensationalism and appetite for the spectacle their channel promotes.
It only takes a cursory check of the various articles on finance and our accounts (which are always posted up on here and commented on by people who actually work in accounting), to see what the reality is.
Take our transfer spending this summer. It was reportedly in the region of £10m (adding together the various reported transfer fees). Now that has been denied by the club as a hugely inflated figure, and even if it were true it would be a headline and potentially include all sorts of add ons that won't necessarily be triggered, and certainly not this year. On top of that, transfer fees are amortised over the length of the contract for the player for accounting purposes, so for FFP purposes, our spending in the summer was almost certainly a lot less than £4m on transfer fees.
Our accounts for 2014-15 and 2015-16 (2016-17 yet to be released - about July maybe?) show the following (remember these include parachute payments we no longer receive):
2014-15
Turnover: £35m
Pre-tax profit: £2.6m
Staff costs: £33.3m
wages to turnover ration: 95%
Debt: - (not included in the article I checked)
2015-16
Turnover: £25.8m
Pre-tax loss: £15m
Staff costs: £30.8m
Wage to turnover ratio: 119%
Debt: ~£51m
Based on the parachute's going and our transfers for last season, I'd make a not particularly reliable estimate for 2016-17 of:
Turnover: £18m
Pre-tax loss: £12m
Staff costs: £27m
wages to turnover ratio: 150%
By comparison, Wolves (who may have just about still been receiving parachute payments for these years):
2014-15
Turnover: £26.4m
Pre-tax profit: £0.7m
Staff costs: £17.7m
wages to turnover ratio: 67%
2015-16
Turnover: 27.2m
Pre-tax profit: £5.8m
Staff costs: 18.2m
Wages to turnover ratio: 67%
So Wolves are fine to spend big, because for two of the last three years they've made profit and their wages are extremely healthy in comparison to their income. Whereas our wages are batshit mental for our income and two years ago we made a huge loss, with probably similar last year.
TL:DR
It's all in the wages and our wages are sky high.
https://www.insidermedia.com/insider/national/football-finance-championship-club-by-club-2015-16