Serie A 2021-22 (23 Viewers)

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GiocataGrande

Commendatore
May 26, 2016
4,073
Inter confirmed the club ran at a loss of €245.6m in 2020-21, the highest ever deficit in the history of Serie A.

Their losses more than doubled compared to the 2019-20 campaign, which ended with negative figure of €102.4m.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the lack of fans in stadiums, the revenue also fell from €373.3m to just €364.7m.

However, that only tells half the story, because over the last two financial years, Inter have lost over €900m.

The Nerazzurri coffers will be bolstered for the 2021-22 financial year by the sales of Romelu Lukaku and Achraf Hakimi, but Suning continue to seek new investors, having taken loans and emitted bonds to raise funds.

The €245m losses represent the highest in history for a Serie A club, eclipsing the €209.9m losses posted by Juventus in 2020-21.

Of the top 10 biggest loss-making seasons in Serie A, six were at Inter, as they also ran at a loss of €206m in 2006-07, €181.4m in 2005-06, €154.4m in 2008-09, €148.3m in 2007-08 and €140.5m in 2014-15.




Losing $900 million over 2 years? How is that even possible?
Regardless, music to my ears.
Such a joke of a club. Their scudetto win last year means nothing and was only a consolation prize, they will rot in mud for years to come. Deservedly so
 

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s4tch

Senior Member
Mar 23, 2015
33,692

Strickland

Senior Member
May 17, 2019
5,859
99% of the time when I read about club finances everytime every club seems to be operating at a loss. Are football clubs just for prestige of the owners and not so much for profit or there is something I am missing?
Been like that for decades, there are very few examples where the owners come out in the green long term. Its kind of what fans expect from the owners as well, to not treat it as a business entity.
 
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