Mancio4ever wrote:welcome old common good sense!
Did I ever mention that I truely love Ronk, despite I am pretty sure that in the real world HE is an "ugly" bloke, nowhere near to the LOVELY Lady behind which he hides... ;)
ronk wrote:Mancio4ever wrote:welcome old common good sense!
Did I ever mention that I truely love Ronk, despite I am pretty sure that in the real world HE is an "ugly" bloke, nowhere near to the LOVELY Lady behind which he hides... ;)
I figured we'd all rather look at her than me.
ronk wrote:At its simplest, FFP means less money can be spent on players, this money goes to the owners.
The owners want this (in general), but by making it happen Platini is making a name for himself. Risk taking is fine during the expansion phase of a business, but you want to make a profit eventually.
Agreed
The really big clubs have had little trouble keeping down others, FFP is a bit drastic in that it affects them too.
By threatening UeFA unless they got the financial and structural changes they wanted. (see earlier posts regarding KHR). It affects non of the top earners whatsoever, their income ensures their spending will be unaffected.
In aggregate, clubs lose money at the moment. To all make a small profit, player wage growth will have to be restrained. that will make things easier for scum and Arsenal to make money, it will slow us down a little.
European clubs earned 4.4Bn Euros in the last Deloitte list. Who of the top clubs apart from Chelsea lost money?
This is about money, it's that simple. The anti-City parts are a populist distraction and secondary benefit. We're seeing it at the moment, we couldn't find a taker for Adebayor's wages. More players are going for transfer fees and aren't really getting the silly wages. Even Arsenal are spending money and guys like RVP are going in their last year for solid fees rather than holding out for crazy wages.
I agree, it is only about money and not anti City. It is about defending the gains they have already made and there are more than City who pose a threat to that.
The attitude a while back was that wages were good and transfer fees are bad. We're seeing that balance change somewhat.
There is plenty of evidence to disprove that mate. A glance at some of the rags and Madrid's buying policy should do for starters.
ronk wrote:That's revenue. They want profit and lots of it.
http://m.guardian.co.uk/football/2012/m ... pe=article
Slim wrote:I am sure we have people who have looked into FFP regulations more than me, but our owners must have a lot of influence over banks, finanacial instrutions and loansharks, if we cannot offset the losses in keeping with the FFP regulations, why can't we just shift them into debt? The rags have insane debts and they aren't bothered by it at all.
Slim wrote:I am sure we have people who have looked into FFP regulations more than me, but our owners must have a lot of influence over banks, finanacial instrutions and loansharks, if we cannot offset the losses in keeping with the FFP regulations, why can't we just shift them into debt? The rags have insane debts and they aren't bothered by it at all.
Mancio4ever wrote:Slim wrote:I am sure we have people who have looked into FFP regulations more than me, but our owners must have a lot of influence over banks, finanacial instrutions and loansharks, if we cannot offset the losses in keeping with the FFP regulations, why can't we just shift them into debt? The rags have insane debts and they aren't bothered by it at all.
That's it, at least a part of, along with what explained by Ronk, plus a certain politacal influence on several votes at any FIFA election and - regretfully I do not handle the english language well enough to put it an short theatrical screenplay - being in the position to ring the UK PM and say "Look David, what about if I stop pouring fresh equity in the British Economy and I revert it to an edge fund aimed to speculate shorting Your Sovereign Debt", and so on...
perhaps it's a too cynical point of view, certainly little accorded to the political friendly approach of the Club, but all this FFP scare is... not accorded to... well, the reality of present history.
ronk wrote:Mancio4ever wrote:Slim wrote:I am sure we have people who have looked into FFP regulations more than me, but our owners must have a lot of influence over banks, finanacial instrutions and loansharks, if we cannot offset the losses in keeping with the FFP regulations, why can't we just shift them into debt? The rags have insane debts and they aren't bothered by it at all.
That's it, at least a part of, along with what explained by Ronk, plus a certain politacal influence on several votes at any FIFA election and - regretfully I do not handle the english language well enough to put it an short theatrical screenplay - being in the position to ring the UK PM and say "Look David, what about if I stop pouring fresh equity in the British Economy and I revert it to an edge fund aimed to speculate shorting Your Sovereign Debt", and so on...
perhaps it's a too cynical point of view, certainly little accorded to the political friendly approach of the Club, but all this FFP scare is... not accorded to... well, the reality of present history.
Sheik Mansour is not putting equity into the British economy. He lent money to Barclays so they could avoid taking a government bailout that came with restrictions on executive pay, and he made a good profit from it.
For reasons that my understanding of macro-economics are just keeping up with, Britain is effectively immune from the type of bond vigilantism that is affecting Ireland, Spain and Greece. Borrowing in your own currency creates a stabilising mechanism for any capitol flight that makes it less likely, whereas borrowing in a shared currency amplifies the situation so that even a perfectly sound economy can be forced into submission, even Germany.
The FFP regulations are about losses, not how those losses are paid for. Some expenses can be excluded but they know all the big ones that count for FFP as long as we continue to pay players above the table, which of course we will continue to do. Footballers don't keep secrets well, we'd be blackmailed by every unhappy player and it would be a lot worse for us than losing Cook because he pissed off Ned's mom (in case anyone thinks it's a good idea) and the whole club isn't worth the risk for Khaldoon. Some income is excluded too, so we couldn't just buy Umbro and list every England shirt sold as income for FFP purposes.
The best crooks UEFA, FIFA and the big football clubs of Europe can provide drew up these regulations to avoid the sort of loopholes they could envisage (and not control). We'll have to work within the framework, but I think that's possible.
Mancio4ever wrote:Ronk, Sir,
my demi-rant was not deemed to be specifically technical, rather than to provvide a general, and still incomplete, breakdown of reasons why I - personally and humbly - do think that FFP is not a serious threat for MCFC, particularly from where we stand now (as per Soccs's and NQDP's, could have been different and worser if the Owners had pleased the Rags media and gave another couple of "fair chances" to Sparky to keep us off the CL spots).
yet, far from polemic mood, I struggle to see how injecting about £ 1.2 bil (less fee paid to Frank for the shares) on players acquisitions (i.e. fees paid to other Clubs, most of them English, at least along the 1st phase of the project ) and redevelopment of the whole Eastlands area, hence creating jobs and increasing real properties values, are not "not putting equity into the British economy". Again, let me stress the point, free of any polemic will.. ;)
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