Minggu, 20 November 2011

Man City sees record £194.9m loss

18 November 2011 Last updated at 15:43 GMT City's books are open - Marwood

Manchester City has reported an annual loss of £194.9m for 2010-11, the biggest in English football history.

But the operating loss does not include the club's huge sponsorship deal with Etihad Airlines, worth a reported £35m a year, or revenues from this season's Champions League campaign.

Uefa's Financial Fair Play rules, which come into full effect in 2013-14, say clubs must break even over three years.

However the latest figures fall outside the accounting window for that.

The previous biggest Premier League loss was £141m reported by Chelsea in 2005 - when they went on to win the league.

The scale of City's losses reflect the investments made by owner Sheikh Mansour of Abu Dhabi, who has spent more than £460m on players since taking over the club in 2008.

Since then, City have been transformed into the current Premier League leaders.

Brian Marwood, chief football operations officer at the club, told the BBC: "We know that we still have an awful lot of work to do but I think it's exactly where we said we would be in terms of the initial investment.

"Over a period of time we are fully aware we have to be compliant and there's a lot of work going on to make sure that's achieved."

He added that the club was working with Uefa all the time and was "comfortable" with the governing body's new rules.

'No repeat'

It is the second year in a row that City has made big losses. In 2009-10, it reported an operating loss of £126m.

But chief operating officer Graham Wallace said the losses "will not be repeated on this scale in the future".

Turnover hit £153.2m, up from £125.1m in 2009-10.

This was driven by a 49% jump in commercial partnership revenue to £48.5m.

Income from television rights rose by 27.4% to £68.8m, thanks largely to the club's third-place finish in the Premier League, winning the FA Cup and a run to the last 16 of the Europa League.

Match day ticket sales were up 8.2% to £19.7m.

But wage costs continue to exceed turnover, rising from £133m in 2009-10 to £174m in 2010-11.


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