Devil's Advocate
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 20 Aug 2022
- Messages
- 164
Net spend isn't utterly meaningless. It is an indicator and one that Swiss Ramble has used more frequently in his posts because it is the language understood more widely by football fans. Like you, he also explains (and always has) that it is more nuanced - wages + amortisation, transfer profits etc etc.Bravo. Net spend is an utterly meaningless metric, plus the only truly reliable figures are in the accounts. As you say, wages is another key metric and the actual cost of the squad should be looked at as wages plus amortisation. Net spend doesn't take into account any wages or amortisation that goes off the books, via sales, for one thing. So if you buy a player for £50m and pay him £100k a week, that's £15m on your annual player costs. If you also lose 3 players on a free transfer who were on £100k a week, you've saved £15m in wages a year, which effectively covers the new player's cost. But the net spend wankers would see that as a £50m net spend when in reality it's had no impact on the bottom line at all.
So after that spending spree of over £200m in the summer of 2017, with net spend supposedly around £120m, our wages and amortisation only increased by £7m when all that was taken into account. And half of that was offset by a small increase in the profit on sale of players. That's just one illustration of how net spend is a meaningless metric.
Another is that clubs, particularly successful ones like us and Liverpool, and even united, generate significant amounts of cash even after paying wages and other expenses. Typically we'd generate around £120m of spare cash each year, before player sales, which will be available to spend on new players (and other things, such as infrastructure, debt repayment, etc). The real question should be, how much does each club generate and reinvest into its squad? We reinvest 100% while Liverpool only reinvest around 80%.
For example, in Swiss Ramble's great post today he draws everyone in with gross/net spend and then goes on to explain again about wages + amortisation.
As an aside, let's not forget the terminology "net expenditure" is included as a note to our accounts each year.As an example, from 2021 accounts below. Of course you are already aware of this be because you read them but it wouldn't be there would it if utterly meaningless?
25. EVENTS AFTER THE REPORTING DATE
Since the year end the Club has entered into agreements to acquire the football
registrations of Jack Grealish (from Aston Villa), Kayky Da Silva Chagas (from Fluminense),
and Scott Carson (from Derby County). The football registrations of Jack Harrison (to Leeds
United), Ivan Ilic (to Hellas Verona), and Lukas Nmecha (to VfL Wolfsburg) have been sold.
The net expenditure on these transactions was approximately £79.8m.
As for Liverpool only reinvesting 80%, I saw your commentary on this a while back but cba at the time checking/reconciling your figures. It does feel right though and it would be great if you could summarise this again in a way that is digestable.