A couple of weeks ago Deloitte published the 19th edition of
their annual Football Money League, which ranks leading clubs by revenue, this
time for the 2014/15 season. On the face of it, little has changed compared to
the previous year, as Real Madrid once again top the table for the 11th year in
a row with annual revenue of €577 million (£439 million), and there are no new
entrants in the top 10.
However, there has been some movement with Barcelona (€561
million) overtaking both Manchester United (€520 million) and Bayern Munich (€474
million) to reclaim second place, as they became only the third club to break
the €500 million revenue barrier.
In turn, United fell to third place, while Bayern dropped to
fifth place, the first time in 12 years that it has slipped down the table.
Paris-Saint Germain (€481 million) climbed to fourth place, the highest position
ever achieved by a French club, on the back of their commercial growth.
The seemingly inexorable rise of the English clubs continued
apace, as the top 20 now includes nine clubs from the Premier League. Although
the Spanish giants still lead the way, there are no fewer than five English
clubs in the top nine: Manchester United £395 million, Manchester City £353
million, Arsenal £331 million, Chelsea £320 million and Liverpool £298 million.
Then, a fair way back, come Tottenham Hotspur £196 million,
Newcastle United £129 million, Everton £126 million and West Ham £122 million.
Total revenue for the top 20 clubs rose €470 million (8%)
from €6.161 billion to €6.631 billion, split between commercial €2.7 billion
(41%), broadcasting €2.6 billion (39%) and match day €1.3 billion (19%).
However, individual clubs sometimes have a very different revenue
mix. Within the top 20, the highest reliance on a specific revenue stream was
as follows: match day – Arsenal 30%; broadcasting – Everton 69%; commercial –
Paris-Saint Germain 62%.
On the other side of the coin, the clubs with the smallest
share of their total revenue from each category were: match day – Milan 11%;
broadcasting – Paris-Saint Germain 22%; commercial – Everton 16%.
It is worth emphasising the role that exchange rates play in
these rankings, as Sterling has strengthened by 10% against the Euro (moving
from 1.1958 last year to 1.3145 this year). This has greatly benefited the
English clubs relative to their continental counterparts. In fact, around half
(€262 million) of the €532 million year-on-year growth for this year’s top 20
clubs is purely down to this FX movement, leaving the real growth as €270
million (4%).
This effect is perhaps best highlighted with Manchester
United, whose revenue increased in Euro terms by €2 million from €518 million
to €520 million. However, the exchange rate movement produce a Euro increase of
€51 million, so their underlying revenue actually fell by €50 million. This is
backed up by looking at their figures in Sterling, where the revenue decreased
by £38 million from £433 million to £395 million.
Partly as a result of this favourable movement in exchange
rates, the revenue of all English clubs grew compared to 2013/14 with Liverpool €86 million and Arsenal €76
million leading the way.
It’s a slightly different story if the FX impact is stripped
out, with the most impressive real growth being reported by Barcelona €76
million, Liverpool €56 million, Roma €53 million, Juventus €45 million and
Arsenal €41 million. The big losers were Milan €51 million, Manchester United
€50 million and Bayern Munich €14 million.
The main drivers for the revenue growth in 2014/15 were
broadcasting €207 million (up 9%) and commercial €202 million (up 8%). The
match day increase lagged at €60 million, but this still represented 5% growth.
The revenue growth at the leading football clubs in the last
few years is remarkable, rising from below €4 billion in 2009 to the current
€6.6 billion, an increase of €2.7 billion (just under 70%). Deloitte expect the
€7 billion threshold to be reached next season with new TV deals driving the
total towards €8 billion in 2016/17.
Perhaps surprising to some, commercial income has been the
main contributor with growth of €1.5 billion (115%) from €1.3 billion to €2.7
billion, followed by broadcasting, up €1.0 billion from €1.6 billion to €2.6
billion. In the same period, match day has risen by less than €0.3 billion
(25%) from €1.0 billion to €1.3 billion.
These growth rates have obviously been reflected in the
revenue share. Since 2009, commercial has significantly increased from 32% to
41%, while broadcasting has eased from 42% to 39%. Match day has slumped from
26% to just 19%, its lowest ever share.
In fact, with further increases anticipated in commercial
and broadcasting revenue in the coming years, the revenue that clubs generate
from match day should fall in importance even more than its current record low.
This trend of corporates paying more for a club’s upkeep than the match going
supporters could be considered a good thing – so long as the growth elsewhere
were reflected in lower ticket prices.
Real Madrid and Barcelona have the highest broadcasting
revenue with £152 million apiece, as they continue to benefit from the freedom
to negotiate their own lucrative TV rights deals for La Liga. Even though this is due to change next season, the new
collective deal is significantly higher than the aggregate of the previous
individual arrangements – and the big two will be protected from any revenue
reduction.
Juventus are in third place, partly due to receiving the
highest Champions League distribution of £68 million (€89 million). This is
heavily influenced by their share of the Italian market pool, due to a
combination of a very good TV deal and the fact that they only had to divide
this with one other Italian club, Roma, as these were the only two to qualify
for the group stages.
"Play to win"
The importance of revenue from European competition is
highlighted by Paris Saint-Germain, whose £43 million payout was actually
higher than their domestic money £38 million. Similarly, Atletico Madrid
generated half of their broadcasting money from Europe. This will be further
emphasised by the higher Champions League deal starting from the 2015/16
season.
The English clubs fill all the places between fourth and
tenth for broadcasting income, thanks to the size of the Premier League
contract. This is even before next year’s blockbuster deal, which should
increase the TV revenue of the top clubs by around £50 million a season.
The relative weakness of the Bundesliga TV deal is evidenced here with the German clubs towards
the lower end of the table. Their domestic money is nowhere near the English
clubs: Bayern Munich £43 million, Borussia Dortmund £37 million and Schalke £33
million.
Commercially,
six clubs are well above the rest: Paris-Saint German £226 million, Bayern
Munich £212 million, Manchester United £201 million, Real Madrid £188 million,
Barcelona £186 million and Manchester City £174 million. There then follows a
big gap to Liverpool at £116 million.
Indeed,
there is much work to do for many English clubs on the commercial side with three
of them filling the bottom spots: in the top 20: Everton £20 million, West Ham
£24 million and Newcastle £25 million.
"The Leader"
PSG
benefited from renewed deals with Emirates and Nike, but the lion’s share of
their revenue comes from their innovative €200 million arrangement with the
Qatar Tourism Authority. Barcelona also saw a hefty commercial increase, partly
due to additional sponsorship bonuses paid in their treble winning season.
There seems
little sign of a saturation point being reached commercially, at least for the
elite, as Manchester United’s revenue will further increase in 2015/16
following the start of their record £750 million ten-year Adidas kit deal. Moreover,
in the last few days the media has reported that even this mega deal will be
eclipsed by Real Madrid signing a new 10-year contract, also with Adidas, for a
staggering £106 million a season.
Arsenal
have the highest match day revenue in the world with £100 million, despite the
Emirates Stadium having a substantially lower capacity than the Bernabéu, home
of Real Madrid, and Nou Camp, Barcelona’s famous ground. This is a reflection
of Arsenal’s ticket prices and a high proportion of corporate seating.
Match day
revenue has more than doubled from the £44 million Arsenal generated in their
last season at Highbury, which helps explain why Tottenham and Chelsea are so
keen to redevelop their grounds. Even though the construction is a significant
investment, football clubs still need to assess this option or risk falling
further behind their rivals.
What is
particularly striking is the low match day income for Italian clubs. Juventus’
move to a club-owned stadium has helped increase their revenue to £39 million,
but the others’ revenue is miles behind: Roma £23 million, Milan and Inter both
£17 million. It was recently reported that the average attendance in Serie A had dropped below 22,000 in the
2015/16 season.
For the
fourth time in the last seven seasons the Money League top 20 clubs is wholly
populated by representatives from the “Big Five” leagues, namely England,
Germany, Spain, Italy and France. The number of English clubs rose from eight
to a record nine, while the other leagues were unchanged: Italy four, Germany
three, Spain three and France one. The only club from outside the “Big Five”
last year, Galatasaray from Turkey, dropped to 21st place.
England
only had six clubs in the top 20 in 2013, but funnily enough had eight back in
2006, so the current dominance is not a completely new phenomenon. The big
losers are Germany, whose representation has fallen from five clubs in 2009 to
three, and France, who had three clubs in 2012, but now just the one.
Turkey had
two clubs in the top 20 as recently as 2013, while the last time a Scottish
club made the rankings was Celtic in 2007. Portugal’s last representative was
Benfica a year earlier in 2006.
The top 30
clubs is where the English strength is really reflected with the number of
representatives rising from eight in 2013 to 17 in 2015 (up 3 from 14 in 2014),
including three debutants: Crystal Palace, Leicester City and West Bromwich
Albion. As Deloitte observed, “This is again testament to the phenomenal
broadcast success of the English Premier League and the relative equality of
its distributions, giving its non-Champions League clubs particularly a
considerable advantage internationally.”
This has
produced some notable exclusions from the top 30, including Valencia, Seville, Hamburg,
Stuttgart, Lazio, Fiorentina, Marseille, Lyon, Ajax, PSV Eindhoven, Porto,
Benfica and Celtic.
If we look
at the growth of the highest ranked club in each of the “Big Five” leagues
since 2009, the absolute growth of Real Madrid (€176 million), Manchester
United (€193 million) and Bayern Munich (£184 million) is broadly similar,
though the percentage growth is much smaller at Madrid (44%), compared to
United (59%) and Bayern (63%).
The outlier
is Paris Saint-Germain, whose revenue has shot up by €380 million from €101
million to €481 million since the Qatari takeover. Juve have recorded
impressive growth of 60%, but in absolute terms the increase was “only” €121
million, which means that the gap to the other four clubs has widened.
Despite a
sizeable reduction in revenue following their failure to qualify for Europe in
2014/15, Manchester United still managed to remain in the top three of the
Money League, thus demonstrating the underlying strength of the club’s business
model.
In England,
the two Manchester clubs (United and City) continued to lead the way, but
Arsenal overtook Chelsea, due to the commencement of the new kit supplier deal
with Puma. Liverpool’s healthy growth was due to the Reds’ return to the
Champions League, which boosted both broadcasting and match day revenue.
Since 2009
Manchester City have registered the stand-out growth of £362 million, which is
around twice as much as their peers, mainly due to their commercial success,
including the celebrated Etihad deal.
Despite
their revenue fall in 2015 (in Sterling terms), United are still well ahead of
City, while there is a bunching of the pursuers (Arsenal, Chelsea and
Liverpool), whose relative positions basically depend on the timing of their
principal sponsorship agreements, e.g. Chelsea’s Yokohama Rubber deal will only
be included in the next set of figures.
In a
similar way, the revenue at the mid-tier clubs (Newcastle United, Everton and
West Ham) is also converging, albeit at a much lower level. The interesting one
is Tottenham, who are stuck in the middle between the top five clubs and the
rest. “Neither Fish Nor Flesh”, as Terence Trent D’Arby once put it.
In Spain,
it’s essentially a case of the rich get richer, though Barcelona’s growth last
year (€76 million) was much better than Real Madrid (€28 million).
Nevertheless, Madrid kept their noses in front and their figures will soon be
enhanced by the barely credible new kit supplier deal with Adidas.
The other
Spanish clubs are so far behind that they are almost out of sight with the
nearest challenger being Atletico Madrid at €187 million – exactly one third of
Barca’s revenue. Valencia did not even reach the top 30 clubs, which is
unsurprising given that their 2014 revenue was less than €100 million.
There will
be a boost in broadcast revenue for Spanish clubs with the new collective
selling regime in La Liga, but the
gap will remain massive.
In Germany,
the situation is even worse, as Bayern Munich are in a league of their own.
Despite a dip in revenue in 2015, due to a decrease in commercial income,
Bayern’s €474 million is nearly €200 million more than Borussia Dortmund’s €281
million with Schalke 04 another €61 million behind. Incredibly, there is then a
further €100 million difference to the closest German clubs, namely Hamburg and
Stuttgart.
Since 2009
only Dortmund have managed to keep pace with Bayern, at least in terms of
growth: €175 million vs. €184 million. In the same period, Schalke only grew by
€95 million, while Stuttgart’s revenue was flat and Hamburg’s actually fell.
How do you say,
“mind the gap”, in German?
In Italy,
it’s a similar story, as Juventus’ revenue of €324 million is €125 million more
than Milan’s €199 million. The bianconeri
also led the way in Italy in 2009, but since then they have increased their
revenue by €121 million, while it has been a tale of woe for their rivals from
Milan: in the same period, Milan’s revenue has barely moved, while Inter’s revenue
has actually fallen by €32 million to €165 million.
There has
been encouraging growth at Roma, largely thanks to their return to the
Champions League in 2014/15 for the first time since 2010/11. Napoli suffered
from the opposite effect, as they participated in Europe’s premier competition
the previous season, though they have still grown revenue by €38 million since
2009 to €126 million to creep into the top 30 clubs.
These are
worrying time for Italian clubs, as they struggle to match the growth of their
foreign peers, largely due to the continuing lack of stadium development, which
is reflected in feeble match day income.
In 2006, it
was a very different story with three Italian clubs in the top seven: Juventus
3rd, Milan 5th and Inter 7th. The nerazzurri
are now perilously close to falling out of the top 20. As a man who lived
three years in Milan at a time when Arrigo Sacchi’s team bestrode Europe like a
colossus, it gives me absolutely no pleasure to say this, but how the mighty
have fallen.
Paris
Saint-Germain remain the only French club in the Money League this year and
have moved up a position to fourth. Marseille and Lyon have been regular
representatives in the top 20 (16th and 17th respectively in 2012), but their
lack of revenue growth has seen them disappear from the rankings.
A combination
of PSG’s “friendly” commercial deals and healthy Champions League income means
that the financial difference between them and other French clubs is not so
much a gap as an abyss. Little wonder that Ligue
1 is pretty much a cakewalk for the Parisians.
After a few
years when the gap between the 10th place club and 11th place club seemed to be
closing, it has widened this year from €18 million to €43 million, being the
difference between Juventus €324 million and Borussia Dortmund €281 million.
The gap
between top and bottom, defined as 1st place to 20th place, has been constantly
growing. In fact, it has more than doubled since €207 million in 2006 to €416
million in 2015, representing the difference between Real Madrid €577 million
and West Ham €161 million.
That said,
the financial threshold for membership of the Money League club is becoming
increasingly challenging with the requirement for a place in the top 20 rising
12% from €144 million to €161 million. This has nearly doubled in the last 10
years from €85 million.
As Deloitte
noted, Napoli, down in 30th position this year with revenue of €125 million,
would have had a position in the top 20 as recently as two seasons ago with the
same revenue.
Although
Deloitte have done a fine job in adjusting the clubs’ reported revenue figures
in order to enable a meaningful, like-for-like comparison, it is still worth
exploring some of these adjustments, as the supporters of individual clubs
might be a little puzzled over differences with the figures they might expect
to see.
I have
taken an example of each of the following adjustments to demonstrate that
reported revenue figures are not always black and white and there is often room
for interpretation, even with something as theoretically rigorous as a football
club’s accounts:
- Profit on player sales
- Different classification of revenue types
- Holding company vs. football club
- Operating income
- Change in accounting year
- Restatement of prior year revenue
- Calendar year
Continental
clubs often include profit on player sales in their revenue figures, as seen by
Bayern Munich boasting of €524 million revenue in their 2014/15 press release.
The difference between this number and the €474 million in the Money League is
the €50 million they earned from selling players.
This is
further complicated with Italian clubs who include profit on player sales in
revenue, but any losses made on player sales are booked in expenses.
The
classification between different revenue categories can be different, as seen
with Everton. Commercial revenue in the club accounts rose 37% from £19 million
to £26 million, comprising sponsorship, advertising and merchandising £10.4
million plus other commercial activities £15.6 million.
This always
seemed a bit high with the suspicion that Everton had included the commercial
element of the Premier League TV deal within commercial income, even though
most other clubs classify it as broadcasting income, and Deloitte have duly
reduced commercial and increased broadcasting (though the total revenue is the
same).
Football’s
a simple game, but clubs increasingly operate within a more complex corporate
structure. In particular, sometimes there is a holding club that owns the
football club with different revenue figures (usually higher).
A good example
is Chelsea, where the football club (Chelsea FC plc) had revenue of £314.3
million in 2014/15, which is around £5 million lower than the £319.5 million shown
in the Money League. This is almost certainly because Deloitte have used the
figures from the holding company (Fordstam Limited). Although this company has
not yet published its 2015 accounts, the £324.4 million reported in 2014 is
exactly the same as the figure in last year’s Money League.
Football
clubs usually separate non-trading income from turnover and classify this as
Other Operating Income. As an example, West Ham reported revenue (turnover) of
£120.7 million, but Deloitte have also included £1.7 million of Other Operating
Income to give their revenue figure of £122.4 million.
Clubs sometimes change their accounting date, i.e. when they close their accounts, which means
that the length of that accounting period is not the usual 12 months. For
example, Swansea City changed their close from May to July in 2014/15 in order
to be more aligned to the football season, so their latest accounts cover 14
months.
Their
revenue was only slightly higher, as there is no additional match day or broadcasting
income in June and July, but commercial agreements are evenly accrued. Thus,
Deloitte have reduced the 2014/15 revenue from the £103.9 million reported by
the club to £101.0 million.
The Money
League occasionally restates the revenue figures used in its own report the
previous year. One example of this is Paris Saint-Germain, where Deloitte
reported €474.2 million last year, but have included €471.3 million as a 2014
comparative this year. This does not impact this year’s rankings, but does affect
the stated year-on-year growth.
Most clubs
now use the football season for their accounting period, but some use the
calendar year, especially in Italy. As an example, Milan’s most recently
published accounts cover the 12 months up to 31 December 2014 and the adjusted
revenue is around €215 million, which is higher than the €199 million reported
by Deloitte.
The main
reason for the difference is that Milan’s 2014 accounts include a part of the
Champions League money they earned in the 2013/14 season.
"Paint me down"
Next year’s
Money League may well see Manchester United topple Real Madrid, as the English
giants are projecting revenue of £500-510 million for the 2015/16 season, following
their return to the Champions League and the start of the record Adidas kit
deal, which would make them the first English club to break through the
half-billion pounds barrier.
Beyond
that, Real Madrid might well bounce back if reports of their huge new
sponsorship deal with Adidas are not exaggerated.
Obviously a
club’s financial performance does not begin and end with its revenue, as
explained by no less an authority than the famous German actress, Marlene Dietrich, “There is a gigantic
difference between earning a great deal of money and being rich.”
"Points of authority"
In the
past, clubs suffered from what Alan Sugar’s described as the “prune juice
effect”, whereby any increases in revenue simply fed through to higher player
wages, transfer fees and agents’ commission.
This is no
longer automatically the case, largely due to the implementation of various
Financial Fair Play regulations, which has increased profitability, especially
in England, thus making it more likely that overseas investors will explore the
purchase of football clubs.
In “All The
President’s Men” the whistle blower Deep Throat advised the investigative
journalists to “Follow the money. Always follow the money.” The circumstances
were clearly somewhat different in the movie, ultimately leading to the
resignation of the President of the United States, but that is still sound
advice that is more true than ever in the world of football.
In other words, money talks and is almost invariably reflected in success on the pitch. There might be the occasional exception to the rule, as we have seen with Leicester City's rise this season, but after all is said and done those clubs at the top of the Money League will usually be the ones competing for trophies.
Yet another wonderful piece of analysis from TSR.
ReplyDeleteThanks again for keeping the analysis thorough, the language accessible and the shady corners illuminated.
Hi!
ReplyDeleteCan you explain please why Barcelona can't afford to sign Nolito for 18m€? The president just said that they can't because their debt ratio is 3.2 or something and the maximum allowed by the club's norms is 2.7. But I don't understand it :(
The Barcelona accounts this year also say their wage bill is 73% of the income, which is so high and the press say they can't afford to renew Neymar's contract because he asks for a huge payrise.
The Barcelona fans think this board is so useless, they have the best team in the world, the best players and they can't benefite financially from it. They can't even find a sponsor for the shirt and Qatar's sponsor contract ends this season. They are beging for a sponsor everywhere. So sad.
They also face a posible huge fine with the dark Neymar contract (lot of millons will have to be paid by the club in taxes if the reports are true)
Is Barça on crisis?
Always appreciate your roundup. thanks
ReplyDeleteThanks Swiss. You make things very easy to understand and I always enjoy reading your reports
ReplyDeleteDanke Ihnen für umfassende Informationen!
ReplyDeleteYour articles are AWESOME!!! What a lot of information! Great job, you won a new follower!
ReplyDeletethanks for doing the money leagues and i hope you continue,great stuff
ReplyDeleteSurprised about some of the Chelsea stat in there. Certainly interesting reading!
ReplyDelete