Quote from: tomd2103 on April 03, 2024, 11:10:03 PMQuote from: Risso on April 03, 2024, 10:42:58 PMQuote from: Dante Lavelli on April 03, 2024, 10:23:34 PMUnder FFP it seems to me that the debt attached to a stadium is valued differently compared to the debt attached to wages/transfers i.e. it can be deducted from losses. Furthermore the extra income the stadium provides gives extra headroom to invest more in players, so it’s a decent multiplier.It doesn't work like that at all. You can obviously spend what you like on a stadium without it affecting FFP, but that doesn't affect the stuff that does, like revenue, wages and amortisation.I might have got this badly wrong (apologies if that is the xase), but has the new stadium had that much of an impact for Spurs if they have lost £80m +? It seems that it is that £72m depreciation that is keeping them out of FFP trouble, as opposed to increased revenue? As an aside, it said on the radio earlier that this is the first time in 14 years that they had not been in European competition. Surely the answer to that is they'd have lost much more money without the extra revenue of the new stadium. That's going to be an absolute game changer for them.And the no European competition thing won't have any accounts impact until next year's.
Quote from: Risso on April 03, 2024, 10:42:58 PMQuote from: Dante Lavelli on April 03, 2024, 10:23:34 PMUnder FFP it seems to me that the debt attached to a stadium is valued differently compared to the debt attached to wages/transfers i.e. it can be deducted from losses. Furthermore the extra income the stadium provides gives extra headroom to invest more in players, so it’s a decent multiplier.It doesn't work like that at all. You can obviously spend what you like on a stadium without it affecting FFP, but that doesn't affect the stuff that does, like revenue, wages and amortisation.I might have got this badly wrong (apologies if that is the xase), but has the new stadium had that much of an impact for Spurs if they have lost £80m +? It seems that it is that £72m depreciation that is keeping them out of FFP trouble, as opposed to increased revenue? As an aside, it said on the radio earlier that this is the first time in 14 years that they had not been in European competition.
Quote from: Dante Lavelli on April 03, 2024, 10:23:34 PMUnder FFP it seems to me that the debt attached to a stadium is valued differently compared to the debt attached to wages/transfers i.e. it can be deducted from losses. Furthermore the extra income the stadium provides gives extra headroom to invest more in players, so it’s a decent multiplier.It doesn't work like that at all. You can obviously spend what you like on a stadium without it affecting FFP, but that doesn't affect the stuff that does, like revenue, wages and amortisation.
Under FFP it seems to me that the debt attached to a stadium is valued differently compared to the debt attached to wages/transfers i.e. it can be deducted from losses. Furthermore the extra income the stadium provides gives extra headroom to invest more in players, so it’s a decent multiplier.
Interest payments must effect FFP though? I think the point people are trying to make is that if you spend money on a new stadium and increase your revenue as a result then its a good move from an FFP perspective because the additional revenue created helps FFP the most of the costs you sunk into achieving that increased revenue arent counted against it.
Suppose the point I was trying to make was that even with the new stadium, they are still making big losses and need that £72m a year to keep them on the right side of FFP.
Quote from: SamTheMouse on April 03, 2024, 11:04:35 PMIt means investing in bigger and better facilities is a no-brainer. Which makes it all the more mystifying why we appear to have slammed the brakes on in that department.I think it's because we've realised spunking 120m on a new north stand isn't going to make enough difference, and the only way we can do that is to build a new ground.I know I keep saying this, but the clues are all there. Heck and his "it's not just about one stand, it's about improving things for all fans" comment in his canning-it statement. Altairos. Pointing out the poor public infrastructure. Not even building Villa Live.Honestly, I reckon all the clues are there.
It means investing in bigger and better facilities is a no-brainer. Which makes it all the more mystifying why we appear to have slammed the brakes on in that department.
I went to a networking event a couple of weeks ago at Villa and the speaker was the club's new head of Strategy and Analytics. This role is looking at the non-playing-side data, amongst other things, doing what supermarkets do with your data through loyalty cards and how they profile your habits). Anyway... he made some interesting points about measuring the average spend of supporters in the ground, what they spend on merch and food, the different trends and patterns. But importantly about whether the figures stacked up for the new stand - based on the spending power of current fans that this (alongside 1/3 of the ground being affected, transport etc) was one of the reasons it was stopped. Basically, there isn't enough demand (atm) to justify an increase of 2000-3000 premium seats.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on April 03, 2024, 11:15:10 PMQuote from: SamTheMouse on April 03, 2024, 11:04:35 PMIt means investing in bigger and better facilities is a no-brainer. Which makes it all the more mystifying why we appear to have slammed the brakes on in that department.I think it's because we've realised spunking 120m on a new north stand isn't going to make enough difference, and the only way we can do that is to build a new ground.I know I keep saying this, but the clues are all there. Heck and his "it's not just about one stand, it's about improving things for all fans" comment in his canning-it statement. Altairos. Pointing out the poor public infrastructure. Not even building Villa Live.Honestly, I reckon all the clues are there.So far though, Comcast are rumoured to have put £100m in. That's not going to pay for a new stand, much less an entire new stadium. Obviously they could invest more or provide new loans or whatever in the future, but a new stadium is terms of building is going to be what, a minimum of 5 - 6 years away. You'd have to identify a site, have a public consultation, have plans drawn up, gain planning permission and compulsory purchase any houses/businesses who don't want to sell up before you even stick a spade in the ground. What are they going to be doing in the mean time?
Whatever the plan is, it can not be to just stay where we are and change nothing
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on April 03, 2024, 11:15:10 PMQuote from: SamTheMouse on April 03, 2024, 11:04:35 PMIt means investing in bigger and better facilities is a no-brainer. Which makes it all the more mystifying why we appear to have slammed the brakes on in that department.I think it's because we've realised spunking 120m on a new north stand isn't going to make enough difference, and the only way we can do that is to build a new ground.I know I keep saying this, but the clues are all there. Heck and his "it's not just about one stand, it's about improving things for all fans" comment in his canning-it statement. Altairos. Pointing out the poor public infrastructure. Not even building Villa Live.Honestly, I reckon all the clues are there.Don't you think our new head of Strategy and Analytics actually saying the North Stand had been cancelled because of a lack of confidence in the demand for GA+ tickets is a bigger clue?Quote from: London Villan on March 05, 2024, 04:23:00 PMI went to a networking event a couple of weeks ago at Villa and the speaker was the club's new head of Strategy and Analytics. This role is looking at the non-playing-side data, amongst other things, doing what supermarkets do with your data through loyalty cards and how they profile your habits). Anyway... he made some interesting points about measuring the average spend of supporters in the ground, what they spend on merch and food, the different trends and patterns. But importantly about whether the figures stacked up for the new stand - based on the spending power of current fans that this (alongside 1/3 of the ground being affected, transport etc) was one of the reasons it was stopped. Basically, there isn't enough demand (atm) to justify an increase of 2000-3000 premium seats.
I'm with Paulie. Something is afoot.
I wouldn't be surprised if news of a new ground comes out really quickly in the summer. We're too deep into our chase for CL/UECL to release it now but I don't think what the plans are can drag on into the new season.