Deloitte’s annual Football Money League has become essential reading, but it only ranks the world’s leading football clubs by revenue. The following thread adds details for expenses, profits and balance sheet for an “enhanced” version of the money league.
First, we will include some handy one-pagers that include the details for the Top 20 Money League clubs, both in Sterling and Euros. Then, we will drill into each of these in turn to highlight how each club has performed in various categories (only in Sterling).
The TLDR brigade could probably stop at this point, but if you want to see the top 20 clubs ranked in order for each of these categories in a neat graph, please carry on.
#FCBarcelona £741m have the highest revenue, ahead of Spanish rivals #RealMadrid £667m, and are the first club to break through the £700m barrier. Other clubs with revenue above £500m are #MUFC £627m, #FCBayern £582m, #PSG £560m, #MCFC £538m and #LFC £533m.
#FCBarcelona £140m and #RealMadrid £128m have the highest match day revenue, ahead of #MUFC £106m and #PSG £102m. The lowest was reported by #SSCNapoli £14m and #EFC £15m.
Even though #AFC match day revenue of £96m only placed them in 5th place, they still had the highest percentage of revenue from this stream with 25%, well ahead of the 19% at the next highest clubs (#RealMadrid, #FCBarcelona and #TeamOL).
Thanks to that lucrative Premier League deal, English clubs fill 8 of the top 10 places in domestic TV, led by #MCFC £171m, #LFC £166m and #CFC £159m. Only exceptions are #FCBarcelona (4th) and #RealMadrid (7th). Relatively low French TV deal puts #PSG and #TeamOL at the bottom.
Commercially, there was significant growth at #FCBarcelona, up £52m to £338m, and #PSG, up £43m to £320m, but it was flat at #FCBayern £314m, #RealMadrid £313m, #MUFC £280m and #MCFC £230m.
Well over half of the total income at #PSG 57% and #FCBayern 54% comes from commercial income, followed by #RealMadrid 47%, #FCBarcelona 46% and #MUFC 45%. This revenue stream has increasingly become the distinguishing factor between elite clubs.
Total expenses, including wages, player amortisation and impairment, depreciation and other expenses, have steadily risen in line with revenue. Highest at the Spanish giants, #FCBarcelona £824m and #RealMadrid £706m, ahead of #PSG £621m, #FCBayern £599m, #MUFC £583m & #CFC £583m.
Even after excluding other sports, #FCBarcelona £442m wage bill is over £100m more than the next highest club. There are 6 clubs with wages in a narrow £22m range: #MUFC £332m, #PSG £327m, #RealMadrid £319m, #MCFC £315m, #FCBayern £314m and #LFC £310m.
Most of the leading clubs have a wages to turnover ratio within the 50-60% range. The highest (worst) are #EFC 85%, #ASRoma 78%, #WHUFC 71%, #Juventus 66%, #CFC 63%, #Atleti 63% and #SSCNapoli 62%. The three lowest (best) ratios are Schalke 38%, #THFC 39% and #RealMadrid 48%.
Other expenses can be high at some clubs (including include transport, rent, maintenance, utilities, insurance, security, consultants, legal fees, etc). The highest were reported at #FCBayern £219m, #RealMadrid £211m, #FCBarcelona £210m and #PSG £186m.
Operating losses are partially offset by profit on player sales. The highest profits from this activity were delivered by #ASRoma £113m, #Juventus £112m, #FCBarcelona £89m and #RealMadrid £87m. The London trio, #WHUFC, #AFC and #THFC, only made £13m, £12m and £11m respectively.
12 of the top 20 clubs reported profits before tax, with the largest surpluses coming from #THFC £87m, #FCBayern £66m, #RealMadrid £47m, #SSCNapoli £42m and #LFC £42m. The highest losses by some distance were at #EFC £112m and #CFC £102m.
After all that, 12 clubs were profitable after tax with the top 5 being #THFC £69m, #FCBayern £46m, #RealMadrid £34m, #LFC £33m and #SSCNapoli £26m. Largest losses: #EFC £112m, #CFC £97m, #Inter £43m and #Juventus £35m.
The clubs with the highest squad value per the accounts, i.e. cost less accumulated depreciation, are #CFC £477m, #FCBarcelona £462m and #MCFC £445m. Note that this is not the same as market value, which would be much higher. Also homegrown players have no value in the books.
Seven clubs had cash balances over £100m as at June 2019: #MUFC £308m, #AFC £167m, #FCBayern £140m, #FCBarcelona £140m, #RealMadrid £137m, #MCFC £130m and #THFC £123m. These will be much lower now, due to payment of liabilities and COVID losses.
The highest net debt (gross debt less cash) was at #THFC £534m, #Juventus £408m, Inter £358m and #EFC £309m. Five clubs actually had net funds (cash higher than financial debt), namely #FCBayern £140m, #SSCNapoli £93m, #RealMadrid £64m, #MCFC £57m and #BVB £39m.
All clubs pay transfer fees in stages, so transfer debt is an important liability on top of financial debt. The highest payables were: #FCBarcelona £230m, #Juventus £195m, #MUFC £188m and #LFC £167m. Where clubs do not separate transfer debt, I have taken 90% of Trade Creditors.
Total liabilities is the broadest definition of debt, including bank debt, transfer debt, tax liabilities, trade creditors, staff debt, provisions, accrued expenses and even deferred income. Here, 3 clubs owe over £1 bln: #THFC £1,291m, #MUFC £1,081m and #FCBarcelona £1,281m.
Hopefully, this analysis has given you a good overview of the top 20 clubs’ financial situation, highlighting the different business models and the challenges they face. Revenue is obviously important, but the other metrics are also vital to better understand their position.
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