by Southbank Old Boy » 23 Jul 2009 20:57
by Sun Tzu » 23 Jul 2009 20:59
Southbank Old Boy I still dont think we have gone from making a decent profit one year to wages being greater than income (even excluding incoming transfer fees)
by Arch » 23 Jul 2009 21:03
Southbank Old Boy We made a pretty decent profit last year, so revenue falling at a greater rate than the wage bill (within reason) shouldnt be too much of an issue really
Yes, the club should be budgetting to keep the wage bill in check for the next few years, but thats what the big incoming transfer fees will be going towards covering
I still dont think we have gone from making a decent profit one year to wages being greater than income (even excluding incoming transfer fees)
by Southbank Old Boy » 23 Jul 2009 21:08
ArchSouthbank Old Boy We made a pretty decent profit last year, so revenue falling at a greater rate than the wage bill (within reason) shouldnt be too much of an issue really
Yes, the club should be budgetting to keep the wage bill in check for the next few years, but thats what the big incoming transfer fees will be going towards covering
I still dont think we have gone from making a decent profit one year to wages being greater than income (even excluding incoming transfer fees)
The "decent profit" was on the back of Premiership money and player sales. Neither of those can be counted on in the long run. My point was it's not a sustainable model because those are one time payments not regular projectible income. We didn't break even on regular income/outlay when we were in the Championship before and it's unlikely that we will now that our wagebill is higher.
by Ian Royal » 24 Jul 2009 12:34
by Ian Royal » 24 Jul 2009 12:37
Southbank Old BoyArchSouthbank Old Boy We made a pretty decent profit last year, so revenue falling at a greater rate than the wage bill (within reason) shouldnt be too much of an issue really
Yes, the club should be budgetting to keep the wage bill in check for the next few years, but thats what the big incoming transfer fees will be going towards covering
I still dont think we have gone from making a decent profit one year to wages being greater than income (even excluding incoming transfer fees)
The "decent profit" was on the back of Premiership money and player sales. Neither of those can be counted on in the long run. My point was it's not a sustainable model because those are one time payments not regular projectible income. We didn't break even on regular income/outlay when we were in the Championship before and it's unlikely that we will now that our wagebill is higher.
What player sales in the Premiership when we were really making money (I actually meant in the Premiership season as opposed to the season just ended because I dont think those accounts have been issued yet)?
Your right we cant count on incoming transfer fees in the long term, I totally agree on that
I dont agree that our current income/wages model is that unsustainable though
At the end of the day, not many clubs at this level will be living within their means
by Thaumagurist* » 24 Jul 2009 12:39
warrppThaumagurist* I would imagine that Reading's wage bill is in excess of something like £3m
i hope that was a typo
accounts apparently showed wage bill in premiership was around the £32 million mark
alledged to have halved on return to championship...so roughly £16 million a season now
by Sun Tzu » 24 Jul 2009 12:44
RoyalBlue IIRC Birmingham were pretty active this time last year and look what happened to them!
by W&E Royal » 24 Jul 2009 12:50
by Vision » 24 Jul 2009 12:56
by Vision » 24 Jul 2009 13:03
W&E Royal I was told that our wage bill last season was £18million, Burnleys on the other hand was £8million. Getting rid of Murts, USA, Leroy, Dubes and Doyle will have massively brought this down, also once we get rid of Huntys reported £30k and perhaps Bikeys then our wage bill will be a lot healthier.
by Royal Rother » 24 Jul 2009 13:06
by Vision » 24 Jul 2009 13:17
Royal Rother Vision this was the thread...
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=82605&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&hilit=parachute
and this one...
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=82605&start=140#p2220450
by papereyes » 24 Jul 2009 13:42
Thaumagurist*FiNeRaInThaumagurist* You conveniently forget the wages. We need to budget for that and that does seriously bite into the income the club receives.
Not really, it peanuts comapred to what the clubs made in the last 3 years- absolute peanuts.
Are you really sure about that? Are you really an expert on Reading's finances - do you really know how much profit Reading makes? I would imagine that Reading's wage bill is in excess of something like £3m. And that's not peanuts. And even with Doyle, Hahnemann, Murty and a few others having left, the wage bill is still not peanuts.
by Woodcote Royal » 24 Jul 2009 14:31
Vision This season is a great opportunity to see some return for the 10 years of solid investment (easily forgotten about it would seem) in the Academy and a team run by a new management team (bought on a not inconsiderable compensation package by the way).That in itself marks considerable progress for this football club as far as I'm concerned and as long as those players continue to progress and have a season of consolidation then with the finances back on an even keel it will afford us the opportunity to really have go at promotion in the seasons following.
The long term signs are really good but if some people simply want to beat themselves and the club up simply because we haven't bought a player in July then thats their choice i guess.
by Vision » 24 Jul 2009 14:32
papereyes in 05/06 it was £14.2 million.
.
by Vision » 24 Jul 2009 14:34
Woodcote RoyalVision This season is a great opportunity to see some return for the 10 years of solid investment (easily forgotten about it would seem) in the Academy and a team run by a new management team (bought on a not inconsiderable compensation package by the way).That in itself marks considerable progress for this football club as far as I'm concerned and as long as those players continue to progress and have a season of consolidation then with the finances back on an even keel it will afford us the opportunity to really have go at promotion in the seasons following.
The long term signs are really good but if some people simply want to beat themselves and the club up simply because we haven't bought a player in July then thats their choice i guess.
Apart from the fact that I believe promotion remains a distinct possibility in this campaign, I completely agree.................and I'm looking forward to it so much more than the last 2 seasons.
by papereyes » 24 Jul 2009 14:43
Visionpapereyes in 05/06 it was £14.2 million.
.
Thanks for that. Thats actually a little higher than I would have thought.
by Vision » 24 Jul 2009 14:55
papereyesVisionpapereyes in 05/06 it was £14.2 million.
.
Thanks for that. Thats actually a little higher than I would have thought.
The deloitte stats for 05/06, 06/07 and 07/08 are readily available.
I think you can quite easily get last seasons as well.
In 05/06, we weren't the biggest spenders in the league - Sheffield United were on £15.2 million - but we were in and around the playoff places.
by brendywendy » 24 Jul 2009 14:57
Southbank Old Boy We made a pretty decent profit last year, so revenue falling at a greater rate than the wage bill (within reason) shouldnt be too much of an issue really
Yes, the club should be budgetting to keep the wage bill in check for the next few years, but thats what the big incoming transfer fees will be going towards covering
I still dont think we have gone from making a decent profit one year to wages being greater than income (even excluding incoming transfer fees)
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