Newcastle finances headlines for 13m to 31/7/20
Revenue £153m (down 13%)
Matchday £17m (down 30%)
Wages £121m (up 20%)
Operating loss £43m (£11m profit)
Player purchases £76m (£43m)
Player sales £30m (£42m)
Lee Charnley salary £675k (£267k)
Total income includes full matches from 19/20 as accounts extended to 31 July, most other clubs only had 32 matches as published to 30 June.
Matchday income down 30%, partly due to Covid.
Broadcast income down £18m partly due to rebates to TV companies.
Commercial income broadly flat as has been the case for some years. Surprising that clubs such as Brighton and Leicester are ahead of Newcastle...or is it?
Wages up £20m but this included an extra month compared to previous season. Average wage almost £52k a week, which is enough for a night to remember in the Bigg Market on a Saturday night.
Player amortisation (transfer fees spread over contract period) is the other main cost for clubs. In addition Newcastle had a further £11m cost for 'impairment' which is management speak for signing someone who was a bit bobbins and so value written down.
Newcastle wages £79 for every £100 of income. Overall EPL spent £69.30.
Excluding one off costs and player sales, Newcastle lost £43m in 19/20. Total losses for EPL were £1,260m up from £728m
Newcastle made £26m from player sale profits in 2019/20. Total EPL profits were £400m
Newcastle player purchases £76m but this includes two Julys. Player sales £30m. Overall net spend in EPL £1.07 billion
Newcastle’s loans due to Mike Ashley still £107m but now classified as ‘repayable on demand’ instead of due in more than one year.
Newcastle have had a net transfer spend of £48m since July 2020
Newcastle's squad cost a total of £216m at 31 July 2020, which, whilst a record for the club, is still bottom six by EPL standards.
Newcastle Spreadsheet Summary under MA
EPL Spreadsheet summary for 2019/20
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Premier League total income for 2019/20 down £633 million compared to previous season as Covid impact from March onwards. Gap between G6 and Other 14 average narrowed from £345m to £303m, which may 'justify' (in their own minds only) Project Big Powergrab & SuperLeague Franchise
EPL matchday income down 14% due to lockdown impact. Manchester United knocked off their perch for first time in EPL history by Spurs, who went from 4th to 1st. G6 clubs had 73% of matchday income, due to bigger stadia & more matches due to UEFA participation.
EPL broadcast income down £703m. Noticeable that Arsenal earned less than Sheffield United, a sign of a club clinging onto its 'Big Six' status?
Crystal Palace accounts for 2019/20 published, covers 13 months to include whole of season which ended in July:
Highlights #CPFC
Revenue down 8% to £142m
Wages up 11% to £132m (mainly due to 13 months)
Operating loss £60m
Player sale profits £0.5m
Total income includes all matches from 19/20, down a bit but expected due to loss of matchday & broadcast rebate.
Palace matchday down 19%. In bottom six of EPL which reinforces view that stadium expansion & new stand needed. #CPFC
Forest Green Rovers of League Two do publish full accounts for 14 months accounts for 19/20 and made a profit of £800k, although the club did receive over £2.6m of sponsorship from other companies in the group #FGR
FGR cash substantially down and total losses over the years exceed £12.7 million.
FGR income up 30% despite Covid. Matchday income just 11% of total as commercial income from other companies in group substantial. Also had furlough income of £433k & £250k from Bolton after professional wrong ‘un weaselled on Christian Doidge deal
Salford City lost £65,000 a week in their first season in the EFL in 2019/20 and total losses now exceed £9 million. Disappointing that @GNev2 takes advantage of legislation to only show the bare minimum information. Other clubs such as Carlisle in L2 far more transparent.
Salford signed players for £280k in 2019/20. Not possible to determine sales due to lack of transparency
Salford owe owners Project 92 Ltd £5.8 million at 30 June 2020. Owners also put £2.5m into club via a share issue.
Blackburn made operating losses of over £24 million in 2019/20. Player sales reduced this to ‘just’ £21 million. #Rovers
Blackburn total losses over the years now exceed £282,000,000. This has been funded by loans and shares bought by the Venkys.
Venkys lent #Rovers £14 million in 19/20 on top of £18 million the previous year. I suspect @AndyhHolt is unimpressed at the casino style football finance operations we constantly see in the Championship
In a drop your bacon sandwich start to the day Fulham report operating losses of £73 million for 2019/20, although player sales reduce this by £25m.
Fulham’s total losses over the years now exceed £402,000,000 but club still have cash in the bank as shares and loans from owners cover the losses.
Fulham’s income fell by almost £80m following relegation with broadcast income mainly in form of parachute 🪂 payments representing £75% of total. Wages down £15m. Average wage £34,000 per week, which to be fair doesn’t buy you much in West London