The Financial Situation (66 Viewers)

OP

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #1,063
    I remember in the summer Blanc mentioned that he would try to get both are home and away shirts sponsor by different companies, to received more revenue. But I'm guessing he couldn't get a sponsor for the away kit.
    Yes. It seems we were not that tempting to other sponsors, so we chose to use the same sponsor for both.
     

    Nicholas

    MIRKO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    Jan 30, 2008
    38,737
    Fantastic read and really makes me proud of our financial guys at Juventus, what we've been through and were just 19.7 Million in debt is absolutly fantastic. It's worrying for other teams because once we are back to winning ways we could become one of the main players in the market again.
     

    Hust

    Senior Member
    Hustini
    May 29, 2005
    93,703
    Fantastic read and really makes me proud of our financial guys at Juventus, what we've been through and were just 19.7 Million in debt is absolutly fantastic. It's worrying for other teams because once we are back to winning ways we could become one of the main players in the market again.
    We still are. :stuckup:

    Fake
    a
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    The Curr

    Senior Member
    Feb 3, 2007
    33,705

    Paid-off-Ref

    Senior Member
    Dec 16, 2004
    4,102
    Inter isn't a big enough club to compete under financial fairplay.

    They simply aren't popular enough. Even today sponsors and sportswear manufacturers know this and don't pay them an amount worthy of European/Italian Champions. Their income in a good year (Basically the best year a club can have) is lower than our's in a very bad year.

    Inter will always be club number 3 in Italy, behind Juventus and Milan, and under financial fairplay Moratti's money won't be able to hide that fact anymore.
     

    Paid-off-Ref

    Senior Member
    Dec 16, 2004
    4,102
    They will basically have to break even. There will be an adjustment period for a few years. They have a 150 million euro gap to close. That's enough to give any CPA a heart attack.
    If they manage to close it it will be because they have driven down costs. I don't believe they have much growth potential because their income is pretty much the same as it was in 2002/2003.
    Cutting a 150 million gap will mean bringing down wages by bringing in less prestigious players. They might also have to sell their best players.
    They will have a way smaller budget than us.
     

    Buck Fuddy

    Lara Chedraoui fanboy
    May 22, 2009
    10,877
    Inter (and the other big clubs) will find a way around these new rules & regulations.
    Or does anyone honestly believe that Uefa is going to exclude teams like ManU, Real, Milan, ... from competing in the CL (or El for that matter)?
     

    Paid-off-Ref

    Senior Member
    Dec 16, 2004
    4,102
    Inter (and the other big clubs) will find a way around these new rules & regulations.
    Or does anyone honestly believe that Uefa is going to exclude teams like ManU, Real, Milan, ... from competing in the CL (or El for that matter)?

    Yeah true. Especially early on when the regulations are imperfect and many loopholes exist.

    However, although Inter may be able to get away with not breaking even they will not be able to keep a 150 million euro deficit every year.
     

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