The Cult of Calcio
·28. Februar 2025
Juventus Bounce Back Financially After Years of Losses
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The Cult of Calcio
·28. Februar 2025
Juventus aren’t doing particularly well on the pitch, but the financial situation at the club has improved significantly in the past calendar year, primarily thanks to the return to the Champions League after a one-year ban stemming from the ‘plusvalenze’ trial, La Gazzetta dello Sport informs.
The Bianconeri announced having closed the last six months of 2024 in the black by €16.9M. They had lost €95.1M in the same period of 2023 and 199M for the entire past season. The UEFA prize money was a big factor. The team pocketed €64,1M.
Juventus will bring in €5M more thanks to their results from January on. Their Champions League and Coppa Italia journeys ended earlier than expected, which will cause a €15M deficit relative to their business plan. Making the top four will be pivotal not only for Thiago Motta’s future.
The Old Lady also benefitted from a ticket sale increase of €5M, payroll cuts, and the profits stemming from the sales of a host of talents. The revenues jumped from €173.3 to €224.2M in 12 months even though the club is still without a main sponsor, which would net about €20M annually.
Juventus generated €67.4M in profits from player trading. The richest deals involved Matias Soulé, Dean Huijsen, and Samuel Iling-Juniors. The exits kept the amortizations stable despite the massive transfer market investments, €154M in June and €37M in January.
The UEFA squad cost rule that says that the roster shouldn’t account for more than 80 percent of the total revenue is currently being respected. The team expects to be in the red by about €30M at the end of the fiscal year in June, which would avoid a capital increase.
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