The Financial Situation (36 Viewers)

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
117,567
If all this "Plusvalenza case restrictions" are true, then why are we still Plusvalenza-ing ourselves to death? Mbangula, Savona, Weah, Costa. If we're broke, then why aren't we selling other dead weight and keeping the younger talents like any sane club would do? None of it makes any sense and I think some of this talk is deep cover for the fact we have no plan at all.
 

s4tch

Senior Member
Mar 23, 2015
35,368
If all this "Plusvalenza case restrictions" are true, then why are we still Plusvalenza-ing ourselves to death? Mbangula, Savona, Weah, Costa. If we're broke, then why aren't we selling other dead weight and keeping the younger talents like any sane club would do? None of it makes any sense and I think some of this talk is deep cover for the fact we have no plan at all.
from a financial pov, it makes sense: sales generate instant income, while purchases are spread over the length of the contract. if you sell a good player for 10m and replace him with an equally good player for 10m on a 5 year contract, that's an instant 8m gain. then you can sell the 10m player you just bought next year, generate instant revenue, and get someone as a replacement, who'll be also sold in a year or two. again, this makes sense from a financial pov only

that's not team building though

i don't envy our managers one bit. jj became a mess to handle
 

Siamak

╭∩╮( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)╭∩╮
Aug 13, 2013
19,798
The squad cost are the combined wage and transfer amortisation a player have on the annual budget.



A total of €84m in squad cost are set to leave Juventus by the end of this season.



As things stands 6 players currently have their contracts expiring in the summer of 2026, while Luiz (most likely) and Weah are leaving the club permanently through obligations attached to their recent sales.



• Vlahovic: €41.7m

• Luiz: €18.6m

• Kostic: €7.3m

• McKennie: €5.6m

• Weah: €4.9m

• Rugani: €4.0m

• Facundo: €1.4m

• Pinsoglio: €0.5m



= In total: €84m



The transfer window is not completely closed yet and movements may still occur, but €84m corresponds to approximately 30-35% of Juventus total squad costs.
 

Robee

Senior Member
Jun 21, 2011
7,522
Pretty good recap of the impact of the (absent) mercato near the end of the latest Turin Giants podcast.

Also highlights the big difference between Giuntoli's mercato last season and this Comolli-Modesto one. Maybe @JCK asked for this specifically.

Plus mentioning an upcoming capital increase which was already agreed upon.
 
Last edited:

mondo1

Senior Member
May 14, 2006
11,863
Pretty good recap of the impact of the (absent) mercato near the end of the latest Turin Giants podcast.

Also highlights the big difference between Giuntoli's mercato last season and this Comolli-Modesto one. Maybe @JCK asked for this specifically.

Plus mentioning an upcoming capital increase which was already agreed upon.
So you want us to listen to a podcast? Why not summarize it for us ?

Another capital increase - why would we need it after Junktoli fixed our finances ?


Gesendet von iPhone mit Tapatalk
 

cimenk

Senior Member
Jul 23, 2008
3,320
Good explanation regarding our situation. This explain why there is so many restriction during this summer transfer window.

So i still dont see there is high possibility of Kolo Muani arrival if PSG keep asking on obligation and we still have Vlahovic.
 

Akshen

Senior Member
Aug 27, 2010
11,148
Juventus Transfer Market – The Two New Signings
Starting with incoming players, Juventus has offered Zeghrova €20 million plus bonuses. The player will sign a contract until 2030, which means the amortization fee will be €4 million. Considering her gross salary of €4.63 million (€2.5 million net), we're talking about a total cost of € 8.63 million for 2025/26.

As for Lois Openda , according to German press reports, the deal would involve a €4 million loan fee and a €42 million buyout obligation, plus a €5 million bonus. This obligation would be tied to the Bianconeri finishing at least in the top half of the Serie A table.

Since this is a simple but necessarily uncertain situation, if this is the case, we can estimate a loan cost of €4 million for next season. Added to this figure is a gross salary of €7.4 million (€4 million net), for a total of €11.4 million in 2025/26.

Juventus Transfer Market – The Sale of Nico Gonzalez
Finally, the Nico Gonzalez story. The Argentine striker has moved to Spain, to Atletico Madrid, on loan with an option to buy set at €33 million. According to rumors, Juventus will receive €1 million for the loan. To this figure will be added the €4.7 million gross salary savings, for an overall positive effect of €5.7 million .
 

s4tch

Senior Member
Mar 23, 2015
35,368
How are Milan above us? They haven't qualified for the UCL. They didn’t participate in the Club World Cup. They finished below us in Serie A.
this is the telegraph article as they are using as a reference: https://archive.ph/KobSD

their source is deloitte: https://www.deloitte.com/uk/en/serv.../analysis/deloitte-football-money-league.html

1756970931021.png


1756970960916.png


we were banned from european competition for the 2023/24 season, hence the much lower broadcasting revenue, and we also lost on gate receipts and sponsorship

(just fyi money league ignores transfer revenue)
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 33)