blues2win wrote:We’re not accused of inflating sponsorships. We’re accused of massive fraud in that the sponsors did not pay all of the sums set out which were instead paid by City’s owners. So there is an alleged massive inter continental conspiracy over 10 years to present fraudulent accounts invlolving large numbers of very senior people. If you believe that you’ll believe anything.
Scatman wrote:Spartacus: but equity and loans are not something that are included in the calculations that decide what a club can spend are they? Arsenal have their interest free loans but it didn't give them any more to spend on players. Their big revenue streams did that. If we had interest free loans we would have had no more to spend on players, with the problem being that we didn't have big enough revenue streams to achieve our objectives either. So the Sheikh's cousin helped us out.
blues2win wrote:The PL have to prove beyond the balance of probabilities that City and associated Parties committed massive fraud not that this or that contract did not represent value for money. City and Etihad strongly deny that the funds for the sponsorship came from City. Not sure whether you agree with the PL about this or not.
Im_Spartacus wrote:blues2win wrote:We’re not accused of inflating sponsorships. We’re accused of massive fraud in that the sponsors did not pay all of the sums set out which were instead paid by City’s owners. So there is an alleged massive inter continental conspiracy over 10 years to present fraudulent accounts invlolving large numbers of very senior people. If you believe that you’ll believe anything.
Im_Spartacus wrote:blues2win wrote:We’re not accused of inflating sponsorships. We’re accused of massive fraud in that the sponsors did not pay all of the sums set out which were instead paid by City’s owners. So there is an alleged massive inter continental conspiracy over 10 years to present fraudulent accounts invlolving large numbers of very senior people. If you believe that you’ll believe anything.
2 sides of the same coin fella - it was alleged right from 2009 that the value of the Etihad sponsorship deal was unprecedented, and the suggestion was always that Etihad also had no real means to pay for that sponsorship given that they were a pretty small airline.
But here's an interesting one for everyone to ponder that's relevant to both the case we just had about how different sponsorships at different times are worth different things to different companies, and the question of disguised equity..........
Etihad's deal with City started in 2010
In 2011 they hit their first ever net profit, and revenues quadrupled in the 5 years period immediately after their sponsorship in City - and this is a great example to show that in the big scheme of things, $100m a year for Etihad, as a tactical sponsorship/marketing tool, it's hard to say that they didn't get value for money when you see the growth of the business during that time - while City's sponsorship deal was high, you can see how it was worth it to Etihad given how they subsequently grew. So again, why the fuck would Etihad need to get involved in disguising equity to cover $100m a year expenditure against a backdrop of $7bn of sales growth
2009 - $2.3bn - before sponsorship
2010 - $3bn
2011 - 4.1bn
2012 - 4.8bn
2013 - 6.1bn
2014 - 7.6bn
2015 - 9bn
Its patently fucking ridiculous $100m is chicken feed in the big scheme of things supporting that sort of revenue growth, then you have the likes of Emirates spending $300m a year across their portfolio, and nobody questions that 'state aid'
carl_feedthegoat wrote:Im_Spartacus wrote:blues2win wrote:We’re not accused of inflating sponsorships. We’re accused of massive fraud in that the sponsors did not pay all of the sums set out which were instead paid by City’s owners. So there is an alleged massive inter continental conspiracy over 10 years to present fraudulent accounts invlolving large numbers of very senior people. If you believe that you’ll believe anything.
2 sides of the same coin fella - it was alleged right from 2009 that the value of the Etihad sponsorship deal was unprecedented, and the suggestion was always that Etihad also had no real means to pay for that sponsorship given that they were a pretty small airline.
But here's an interesting one for everyone to ponder that's relevant to both the case we just had about how different sponsorships at different times are worth different things to different companies, and the question of disguised equity..........
Etihad's deal with City started in 2010
In 2011 they hit their first ever net profit, and revenues quadrupled in the 5 years period immediately after their sponsorship in City - and this is a great example to show that in the big scheme of things, $100m a year for Etihad, as a tactical sponsorship/marketing tool, it's hard to say that they didn't get value for money when you see the growth of the business during that time - while City's sponsorship deal was high, you can see how it was worth it to Etihad given how they subsequently grew. So again, why the fuck would Etihad need to get involved in disguising equity to cover $100m a year expenditure against a backdrop of $7bn of sales growth
2009 - $2.3bn - before sponsorship
2010 - $3bn
2011 - 4.1bn
2012 - 4.8bn
2013 - 6.1bn
2014 - 7.6bn
2015 - 9bn
Its patently fucking ridiculous $100m is chicken feed in the big scheme of things supporting that sort of revenue growth, then you have the likes of Emirates spending $300m a year across their portfolio, and nobody questions that 'state aid'
Premier league are going to see their arse on this issue.
https://news.sky.com/story/etihad-airwa ... p-13231021
Im_Spartacus wrote:carl_feedthegoat wrote:Im_Spartacus wrote:blues2win wrote:We’re not accused of inflating sponsorships. We’re accused of massive fraud in that the sponsors did not pay all of the sums set out which were instead paid by City’s owners. So there is an alleged massive inter continental conspiracy over 10 years to present fraudulent accounts invlolving large numbers of very senior people. If you believe that you’ll believe anything.
2 sides of the same coin fella - it was alleged right from 2009 that the value of the Etihad sponsorship deal was unprecedented, and the suggestion was always that Etihad also had no real means to pay for that sponsorship given that they were a pretty small airline.
But here's an interesting one for everyone to ponder that's relevant to both the case we just had about how different sponsorships at different times are worth different things to different companies, and the question of disguised equity..........
Etihad's deal with City started in 2010
In 2011 they hit their first ever net profit, and revenues quadrupled in the 5 years period immediately after their sponsorship in City - and this is a great example to show that in the big scheme of things, $100m a year for Etihad, as a tactical sponsorship/marketing tool, it's hard to say that they didn't get value for money when you see the growth of the business during that time - while City's sponsorship deal was high, you can see how it was worth it to Etihad given how they subsequently grew. So again, why the fuck would Etihad need to get involved in disguising equity to cover $100m a year expenditure against a backdrop of $7bn of sales growth
2009 - $2.3bn - before sponsorship
2010 - $3bn
2011 - 4.1bn
2012 - 4.8bn
2013 - 6.1bn
2014 - 7.6bn
2015 - 9bn
Its patently fucking ridiculous $100m is chicken feed in the big scheme of things supporting that sort of revenue growth, then you have the likes of Emirates spending $300m a year across their portfolio, and nobody questions that 'state aid'
Premier league are going to see their arse on this issue.
https://news.sky.com/story/etihad-airwa ... p-13231021
You're right - Abu Dhabi recently opened a spanking new airport and is now ready to grow in the coming years to compete with Qatar as a major hub - so then we can assume the deal under question now in this recent case was specifically structured to support that unique scenario which is primed and ready for massive growth over the next few years.
The current sponsorship is $68m a year against $6bn revenue - so roughly 1% of Etihad's global revenue. If they wanted to double that spend (for example), with a view to supporting a doubling of growth in revenue to $12bn over the next few years AND they were privy to what City were going to do with that money, eg specific marquee signings that may be directly tied to that deal that would also justify its value, then that is information no regulator can second guess the value of.
Now, when you look at whether a deal makes sense in the context of the company/time/place, contrast our Etihad sponsorship to Teamviewer, a relatively unknown brand who spent 10% of their total 580m global revenue on a single sponsorship.
Now if you came down from another planet and put those 2 deals side by side and asked which one looked suspicious on the basic economics of the deal, I don't think we need to be Einstein to see that Etihad isn't the problem here.
So in the case City have raised, their issue is that they didn't get the opportunity to see the deals the Etihad proposal was benchmarked against, and with that being hidden they have every right to suspect that apples weren't being compared with apples - it's a shocking process, and how the PL thought they could get away with it without a club like city challenging it is beyond me.
The funny thing is, the legal actions themselves are making City a massive advertising platform - giving Etihad more exposure than they could dream of - as every article mentions them and every article shows a picture of a city player with the Etihad brand splashed across it.
Mase wrote:Any club that tries to do that to us, the moment we try dealing with them for any reason at all I’ll call it a day. Nuke fuckin everyone.
johnny crossan wrote:Just read City's owners have been in charge longer than any other PL club owner (rags apart) and Pep is the longest serving manager. Amazing isn't it - we created the wealth that lot are there to plunder.
blues2win wrote:https://x.com/mikekeegan_dm/status/1844815710834364879?s=61&t=6ifllXVJePmO9Awxy5lqVQ
Masters now admits it will take time to deal with the fall out from City’s victory in the associated parties case. No quick fix as he originally suggested. Shambles.
Harry Dowd scored wrote:As per
@Lawton_Times
, the Premier League and Richard Masters have now GONE BACK on the statement they released on Monday stating that APT rule changes “can quickly and effectively be remedied by the league and clubs” and have now sent a letter to its clubs stating that they would be taking “the necessary time to develop our proposals and the associated draft rule amendments” for Associated Party Transactions.
Harry Dowd scored wrote:As per
@Lawton_Times
, the Premier League and Richard Masters have now GONE BACK on the statement they released on Monday stating that APT rule changes “can quickly and effectively be remedied by the league and clubs” and have now sent a letter to its clubs stating that they would be taking “the necessary time to develop our proposals and the associated draft rule amendments” for Associated Party Transactions.
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