Untold Arsenal: Arsenal News. Supporting the Lord Wenger in all he does » False profits. Revealed: how Tottenham cooked the books and conned us all

False profits  – a look at the finances and spin of the Spurs

This is the first of a two part report on one of the most bent and disreputable forms of accounting ever seen in English football.

by Phil Gregory

Next up in the Premier League financial review is Tottenham Hotspur. Given they are our close rivals I’ve given our figures next to theirs for ease of comparison, though if you haven’t already read it,  I’d advise you to read the Arsenal finance review

Spurs’ turnover stood at £113 million at the end of 2009, against Arsenal’s of £225million. Part of the reason for this difference is as a result of matchday revenues (ours of £100million are almost four times theirs at £27.9million).

There is also the difference in TV money. Our £73 million from broadcasting includes a Champions League semi-final and a 4th placed league finish, whereas they come in at only £45 million, partly due to an average performance in the Europa League (which doesn’t pay much anyway) and coming 8th in the league. They perform quite well in commercial terms, with a figure of £34million not a million miles away from our figure of £48million.

Their wage bill is roughly 60% of ours, £60.4 million against our £104  million, though their wages are higher as a percentage of turnover at 53.5% (we stand at 46.2%). Both of those percentages are well within recommended limits of 60%, and Spurs are very healthy at the operating level, with profits reported for the last five years totalling over £104 million against our £142million.

This perhaps doesn’t tell the whole story, given their January spending on Defoe, Palacios and Keane will mean their wages have only been considered in the accounts for half the season. Whether there will be a substantial “top four” bonus payment included in the wages for 09-10 remains to be seen, but it seems a likely cost. For 09-10, expect wages to have grown considerably, though they will still be lower than ours.

Firing Ramos and co only cost them £2.1 million according to the accounts, much less than I would’ve expected. I didn’t see any figures for compensation to Pompey for Redknapp.

All that is straightforward.   But then…

It starts to get ropey when you consider what they call  “football trading”. In their accounts, they don’t list a separate figure for each of player trading and amortisation, they bundle them together. This makes it hard to directly compare the data they give for transfer spending to another club, but we can look at how it has changed for the club themselves.

They define football trading as “representing the amortisation, impairment,  and the profit/loss on disposal intangible assets [players] and other football related income and expenditure”.

We’ll ignore how vague and ambiguous those last few words are though they could bung almost anything in there under  “football related income and expenditure” to massage the figures.  Let’s trust it is a fairly reliably measure.

In 2005, football trading was at £12.8million. Now it is £38.1million, and the total for the last five years is nearly £120million. That’s a substantial amount of money, and more than they can afford as their total operating profit over the same period  was only £94.8million. So there is already a shortfall there, and we aren’t even taking into account depreciation, taxation, interest etc.

But with football trading, the most important thing is to understand what they mean by “profit/loss on disposal of intangible fixed assets”. I won’t bore you with the accounting nonsense, but the idea of profit in this regard is not related to profit in terms of the transfer fee the player was bought for and the transfer fee received upon the sale. To you or I, if a player is bought for £10 million, and then sold for £20 million, the profit on the transfer fee is quite obviously £10million. Of course, this doesn’t take into account wage costs, agents fees, signing on fees etc, but it is probably a decent enough indicator for how a manager is doing in terms of player transfers if it is  used as a rough guide only.

Here, however things are different. If a £10million player is signed on a four year contract, as per amortisation, that player will lose £2.5million of his value every year of his contract (10m/4 years = 2.5m per year). Hence in the accounts, in the 2nd year of that contract, the player has a value of £5million.

This is vaguely logical, as you’d assumed a player with three years left on his contract will cost more to buy than one with two years left due to bosman transfers coming into the mind of the selling party (indeed a player is deemed to have no value  at the moment his contract expires, as he can leave without a fee).

Back to the example, if our £10million player was sold after two years for £6million, in the accounts that would be considered a profit of £1million (as his value was only five million, apparently). To everyone else it would be considered a loss of £4million (that’s where Rafa’s mystery profits on transfer dealings were coming from!).

To paraphrase the accounts the profit is thought to be the value of the receivable fee (with any transaction costs subtracted) minus the remaining value of the player after amortisation has been done. If a player was to be sold for a considerable fee in the last year of his contract, the “profit” would be substantial, and when considered against the substantial outgoings on player purchases, it reduces the “football trading”. With Tottenham having a bit of a rotating door transfer policy in the last few years, they are likely to have made quite a “profit” on player trading in the last few years.

In a nutshell, some accounting jiggery-pokery can create a profit where there isn’t really one, and hence use the profits to reduce the size of the net spend in football trading. This football trading figure is then used as a “look! We only spent £30million, not sixty!” kind of approach, or just the accounting profit is quoted, as you will see at the end of the article.

Imagine someone like Henry, who had been with us a long time, so his value on the books will have been very, very low due to amortisation. When he was sold for £16million, almost all of that would be considered to be profit and would improve the player trading statistics somewhat falsely in my opinion.

My main concern is that they consider the profit to be the difference between the value the accounts give for a player, and the amount of money paid for them by a buying club.

But quite frankly the accounting value is almost always out of kilter with reality, hence the figures are distorted. Since discovering this, I’ve stopped even looking at “player trading” figures in my analysis as because of this they understate the actual amount of money spent on players. This problem isn’t solely something done by Tottenham, but due to their substantial sales and purchases over the last few years, it has allowed their numbers to look better than they should.

Part two of this article is here

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