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Author Topic: NSWE Investment  (Read 1069896 times)

Offline Dogtanian

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6840 on: June 16, 2026, 01:34:15 PM »
I think he pointed out that HMRC needed paying.

But I see him always talking shit on Football Insider click bait results.

"Harvey Barnes is keen on a transfer... ex-Villa CEO Keith Wyness expecting £40m deal..."

"Keith Wyness blasts ridiculous rules as Aston Villa to lose big chunk of Morgan Rogers fee"

"Keith Wyness Left Shocked by Aston Villa Wonderkid Transfer"

"Aston Villa to make big John McGinn decision as Keith Wyness reveals their PSR decision if they win Europa League"

"Aston Villa need close talks with FC Annecy to stop relationship falling apart - Keith Wyness"

Talk about desperation and milking it.

 :-\

Offline eamonn

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6841 on: June 16, 2026, 02:21:39 PM »
If it makes him feel important and in turn nicer for his family to be around him, what harm?

Offline Dogtanian

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6842 on: June 16, 2026, 02:34:56 PM »
Yep, you are right.

What's another absolute twatbag spewing shit into the world in the hope that enough absolute fucking idiots will lap it up and make him a few quid?

Basically a drop in the ocean at this point.  :(

Online kippaxvilla2

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6843 on: June 16, 2026, 02:55:48 PM »
The absolute nadir was us writing to Burnley to request an advance on the instalment due on the Westwood deal just so we could keep the lights on.  Desperate times.

Offline cdbearsfan

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6844 on: June 16, 2026, 03:03:32 PM »
I think we did similar with Everton (Gueye) and Marseille (Amavi). Agreed to reduce the total due in exchange for getting it all at once.

Offline Dogtanian

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6845 on: June 16, 2026, 03:15:57 PM »
Bristol City helped us out with that, too.

Offline cdbearsfan

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6846 on: June 16, 2026, 03:19:02 PM »
I refuse to believe that, given their initials.

Offline Dogtanian

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6847 on: June 16, 2026, 03:22:05 PM »
I refuse to believe that, given their initials.


... Before Cdbearsfan?

Offline cdbearsfan

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6848 on: June 16, 2026, 04:47:50 PM »
Why you.

Offline Exeter 77

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6849 on: June 16, 2026, 05:49:58 PM »
Who we sell to Bristol City? Or was it something to do with Kodjia deal? I have wiped a lot of Xia's time out if my mind after some expensive therapy

Offline PeterWithesShin

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6850 on: June 16, 2026, 05:51:40 PM »
Who we sell to Bristol City? Or was it something to do with Kodjia deal? I have wiped a lot of Xia's time out if my mind after some expensive therapy

Nathan Baker.

Offline Dogtanian

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6851 on: June 16, 2026, 06:10:42 PM »
Who we sell to Bristol City? Or was it something to do with Kodjia deal? I have wiped a lot of Xia's time out if my mind after some expensive therapy

Nathan Baker.

Lovely guy, too. Insanely tall.

Offline Matt C

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6852 on: June 17, 2026, 02:59:28 AM »
Worse still were we not selling (or mortgaging) future transfer fee installments at one point? I see to remember that was the case with Amavi. Either way, it was grim.

Online ChicagoLion

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6853 on: June 17, 2026, 06:20:55 AM »
The Tony Payless era was a real H&V low point.

Online kippaxvilla2

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Re: NSWE Investment
« Reply #6854 on: June 17, 2026, 09:19:51 AM »
From the Guardian at the time after the play off final in 2018.

Aston Villa face bleak future as Xia shortfall exposes house of cards
This article is more than 8 years old
The Villa owner’s increasingly unreliable backing has left a club who were over-reliant on his funds facing crisis

Stuart James
Stuart James
Thu 7 Jun 2018 08.46 BST

Alarm bells were ringing at Aston Villa long before a tax bill went unpaid last month. The first indication that all was not well came last year, when Tony Xia’s monthly payments stopped arriving with the same frequency, leaving a club that were operating way beyond their means, and are totally dependent on the owner’s financial support, scrambling around to pay the bills.

Xia, the Chinese businessman who revealed that it was his dream to turn Villa into one of the world’s top three clubs when he took over two years ago, had previously always made regular transfers to cover the outgoings, averaging around £4m a month across his first season. Yet the Guardian understands that those payments were made nothing like as consistently from as far back as 2017.

Villa, one way or another, managed to get by for the majority of last season, sometimes by asking clubs to bring forward staggered transfer fees for players that had been sold on. That practice, not uncommon in the Championship, saw Villa write off money in the long term to solve cash-flow problems in the short term.

Reality, however, was about to bite. In April and May, as the season neared the end, the money trail from China dried up completely and Villa’s financial position became critical. HM Revenue & Customs was due a payment in the region of £4m after May’s payroll and Villa, quite simply, had no way of getting their hands on the money.

The Championship play-off final was on the horizon – a get-rich-quick ticket that had the potential to put Villa’s financial worries to bed – but so was the HMRC deadline, which came 24 hours before the pivotal game against Fulham at Wembley. Villa missed the deadline and the golden ticket slipped through their fingers the following day. Suddenly it was crisis time.


Plenty of staff working within Villa Park must have seen the storm coming, including Keith Wyness, the chief executive, who felt duty-bound to act once it became clear that the club were not going to be able to pay HMRC. Wyness, who would have known the fiduciary responsibilities that come with his role on the board, is believed to have sought insolvency advice before and after the Fulham match.

Indeed, it is understood that Wyness advised Xia, who has been in Beijing since the play-off final, of the severe consequences of failing to pay HMRC, including the prospect of Villa being placed in administration and served with a winding up petition.

Xia was effectively placing all his chips on winning promotion with a high-risk strategy that has badly backfired
HMRC, which has adopted a robust approach in recent times to the football industry, was far from impressed with Villa’s inability to pay their tax bill and not minded to cut them much slack. The club were given a 10-day extension, which expired last Tuesday.

Wyness was no longer in control of the day-to-day running of the club by the time that deadline passed, after being told via a letter that he had been suspended. The reasons for that decision have not been made public but it is believed that Xia took exception to Wyness’s views on Villa’s predicament and wants the club to investigate the chief executive’s conduct in relation to the conversations that took place about insolvency.


It is all rather strange and, worryingly for Villa fans, easy to imagine things getting worse before they get better. Even if Villa come up with the money to cover May’s HMRC bill – there are suggestions an agreement will be reached by the end of the week – another payment will be due in less than three weeks’ time and then the whole episode starts again, not overlooking the fact that there will be many other creditors to satisfy. An exodus of players, including the departure of Jack Grealish, the club’s prize asset, seems inevitable.

Although complying with the Championship’s financial fair play rules threatens to be a major issue now that Villa’s three-year-loss limit has fallen to £39m, FFP is a problem for another day. The more pressing concern is the here and now, highlighted by a sobering story in the Birmingham Mail, revealing that the club are considering selling a plot of land close to Villa Park, which is used as a staff car park, to raise a few million quid.

This is the same club that embarked on an unprecedented spending spree at Championship level the season before last, when £88m was splurged on signings. Xia was effectively placing all his claret and blue chips on winning promotion with a high-risk strategy that has badly backfired and leaves the club with a huge financial void to fill next season, with or without his funding.

How much Xia is actually worth is a matter of debate and tied in with the question of why he is no longer bankrolling Villa. A key reason put forward is that the Chinese government has clamped down on capital flight, where investors send their money out of the country, although some Villa fans could be forgiven for wondering if that is a smokescreen for other issues. The club have been approached for comment.

Reports about potential takeovers continue to give those fans a glimmer of hope that there could be a resolution, although no change of ownership is anticipated in the near future. In fact, all that can be said for sure right now is that one of England’s most famous football clubs is in an awful mess.

« Last Edit: June 17, 2026, 09:21:30 AM by kippaxvilla2 »

 


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