|
Winter Transfers 2013 |
|
|
|
Sep 4 2012, 03:18 PM
|
Primavera
Group: Moderators
Posts: 23,206
Joined: 20-November 05
From: Athens, Hellas
Member No.: 911
|
I don't have a problem with these price tags. I mean those guys bring that money back we cannot compare with how things were even 10 years ago.
|
|
|
|
|
Sep 5 2012, 08:41 AM
|
Loves Greek Women esp Fay
Group: Moderators
Posts: 14,924
Joined: 19-May 06
From: Bangalore,India
Member No.: 1,865
|
If I pay 100 million for Cristiano Ronaldo, but agree to pay it at 10 million for the next 10 years, all my expenses are is at 10 million right??
As long as they can make the interest payments it's all fine. Banks generally don't like to recall loans, since it leaves a very bad impression on a bank's workings.
But the next few seasons will be interesting. Barca and Real had very quiet windows this season (relatively). The wage problem is going to hit them soon.
|
|
|
|
|
Sep 5 2012, 10:34 AM
|
Prima Squadra
Group: Helpers
Posts: 30,192
Joined: 11-March 07
From: Birmingham, England
Member No.: 3,660
|
QUOTE (Jack Sparrow @ Sep 5 2012, 09:41 AM) If I pay 100 million for Cristiano Ronaldo, but agree to pay it at 10 million for the next 10 years, all my expenses are is at 10 million right?? That's not what their account showed. It showed around 200m on transfer purchases (Kaka', Ronaldo + others), yet their overall numbers were still a profit. So even if they agreed to pay out the full transfer on the day, they'd make money overall. If they did wat you said above (even if it's not shown that way in the accounts) there's even less chance FFP will have any impact on Madrid. As for wages, they spent 200m on transfer in 1 summer and made money. Even if they spent 100m on transfers every year, their wages would have to increase 100m just to reach the crazy figure they paid to get Kaka'/Ronaldo. FFP isn't even on Madrid's radar.
|
|
|
|
|
Sep 5 2012, 12:18 PM
|
Primavera
Group: Moderators
Posts: 23,206
Joined: 20-November 05
From: Athens, Hellas
Member No.: 911
|
QUOTE (Rossoneri7 @ Sep 5 2012, 12:30 PM) Surely the introduction of the Euro-currency did more damage than good, one can argue. It allowed countries like Greece, Spain, etc to borrow at the same low-rate that Germany (being the benchmark) would borrow at. That's too superficial I'd say. The problem is not the currency itself, the problem is that no side have kept their promises. Greece and Spain have problems but France have too. And it's not because they borrow at that rate. It's because Germany have kept inflation under 2%, which was the minimum agreed upon when Eurozone was founded and as a result increased their competitiveness against everybody as they increased their surplus against everyone else's deficits. But well, this is the Winter Transfers thread. (IMG: style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
|
|
|
|
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:
|
|