Having huge debts, going bust, its all linked.A club that has nearly £1B debt should not be allowed to have a 400% spending advantage over clubs with no debt. Especially if the club with no debt have wealthy owners.If ManU have debt that is serviceable, what is the difference between them & their serviceable debt due to large profits, or a club having wealthy owners who can finance potential purchases?If, the purpose of PSR is about stopping clubs spending beyond their means, going into debt, or going bust?
Quote from: pablo_picasso on March 19, 2024, 03:52:59 PMHaving huge debts, going bust, its all linked.A club that has nearly £1B debt should not be allowed to have a 400% spending advantage over clubs with no debt. Especially if the club with no debt have wealthy owners.If ManU have debt that is serviceable, what is the difference between them & their serviceable debt due to large profits, or a club having wealthy owners who can finance potential purchases?If, the purpose of PSR is about stopping clubs spending beyond their means, going into debt, or going bust?Lots of successful businesses have debt, the majority of the ManU debt was incurred prior to FFP.I agree that the way the authorities have bought in FFP is poor but the current scheme is based on profitability which is a P&L measurement not debt which is Balance Sheet item.The difference is that debt is interest bearing which impacts the P&L whereas investment isn’t but is still a Balance Sheet item.Because Man U have huge revenue they can service large amounts if debt, the will always have an advantage over most clubs because this, the debt situation is thankfully holding them back.
Debt is only a problem if you can not service it. I know this, because it's what i tell my Mrs every time she moans about my credit card balance.
Quote from: ChicagoLion on March 19, 2024, 04:09:21 PMQuote from: pablo_picasso on March 19, 2024, 03:52:59 PMHaving huge debts, going bust, its all linked.A club that has nearly £1B debt should not be allowed to have a 400% spending advantage over clubs with no debt. Especially if the club with no debt have wealthy owners.If ManU have debt that is serviceable, what is the difference between them & their serviceable debt due to large profits, or a club having wealthy owners who can finance potential purchases?If, the purpose of PSR is about stopping clubs spending beyond their means, going into debt, or going bust?Lots of successful businesses have debt, the majority of the ManU debt was incurred prior to FFP.I agree that the way the authorities have bought in FFP is poor but the current scheme is based on profitability which is a P&L measurement not debt which is Balance Sheet item.The difference is that debt is interest bearing which impacts the P&L whereas investment isn’t but is still a Balance Sheet item.Because Man U have huge revenue they can service large amounts if debt, the will always have an advantage over most clubs because this, the debt situation is thankfully holding them back.But we are talking about football & its ridiculous "profit & sustainability rules". There are plenty of things that happen in big business that isn't allowed in football. Spending one's own money, being one.Im not saying that clubs should go all out & splash cash willy nilly. There has to be some form on cap on spending, otherwise we will see more Chelsea & ManC's. But the way we go about it at the moment is wrong. Im not concerned if ManU's debt was incurred before FFP/PSR. There are plenty of clubs who are suffering for not having the cash to buy titles & success, therefore huge sponsors & profits, etc, over the past twenty years or so. But we are stuck with the rules that make it doubly difficult to compete, while others utilise the ill gotten gained profits to be able have huge sponsors & profits that give them a huge advantage over the rest of us. And then there are clubs with huge debts like ManU. I see no reason why debts cant be factored into PSR. Even if it's a points deduction for every £100M of debt. The Premier League can be pretty creative when it suits their own purpose. So they could do 'something'. Anything.If the debt is not an issue for ManU due to their profits, then they should be able to cover that debt pretty quickly over the course of a few years. And that should reduce their income, their profits & that should lower their spending ability. If it is an issue to pay it back over a few years, then isn't that a huge problem & part of the reason that PSR was created?We agree that FFP/PSR has been shit, I just think that it's completely ridiculous that a club £1B in debt can spend 400% more than a club with no debt & some of the wealthiest owners in the world.
Is the plan for increasing our stadium capacity by having an area of safe standing by taking all the seats out of the lower North Stand?
Man Utd might be 1b in debt but the club is worth 5b + so it’s hardly negative equity
Quote from: john e on March 19, 2024, 12:48:51 PMMan Utd might be 1b in debt but the club is worth 5b + so it’s hardly negative equityThey also had a bumper year commercially breaking all records. The gloryhunting twats complain about the Glaziers but the club are financially strong just not great appointing managers and buying half decent players.
Quote from: Rudy Can't Fail on March 20, 2024, 08:04:41 AMQuote from: john e on March 19, 2024, 12:48:51 PMMan Utd might be 1b in debt but the club is worth 5b + so it’s hardly negative equityThey also had a bumper year commercially breaking all records. The gloryhunting twats complain about the Glaziers but the club are financially strong just not great appointing managers and buying half decent players.But again, serviceable or not, (which it is at the moment, but things can change pretty quickly in both business & footballing worlds), is having huge debts but being allowed to spend 400% more than a club with no debt & much wealthier owners fair?
Quote from: pablo_picasso on March 20, 2024, 09:21:09 AMQuote from: Rudy Can't Fail on March 20, 2024, 08:04:41 AMQuote from: john e on March 19, 2024, 12:48:51 PMMan Utd might be 1b in debt but the club is worth 5b + so it’s hardly negative equityThey also had a bumper year commercially breaking all records. The gloryhunting twats complain about the Glaziers but the club are financially strong just not great appointing managers and buying half decent players.But again, serviceable or not, (which it is at the moment, but things can change pretty quickly in both business & footballing worlds), is having huge debts but being allowed to spend 400% more than a club with no debt & much wealthier owners fair? Why do you imagine that anyone wants the system to be fair? They don't claim it's fair, they don't seek fairness. The last thing anyone wants is for anything to be fair.