The Oxford English Dictionary defines a myth as:
One of the largest myths in association with Leeds United
concerns the argument that Ken Bates has created a “well run” football club. A
cursory glance at the accounts indicates that this is far from the case.
Stepping back to the original takeover, it can be argued
that at that critical juncture there was no one else with neither the will nor
ability to step in and take over Leeds. Maybe so, but that doesn’t explain the
chronic misallocation of capital away from what should be the primary objective
of a football club, the playing squad.
My analysis has focussed on the accounts from the period
2008-2012. 2008 coincided with the exit of Leeds from the latest period of
administration, a deduction of 15 points and effectively a business facing a
new start. Bates’ consortium had taken control of the club following a payment
to shareholders of 11.2p in the pound and whilst numerous creditors lost out,
Leeds was effectively debt-free. On that basis, and with the highest turnover
of any club in the lower leagues, then Leeds should have been ideally placed to
grow from a sustainable base. What therefore happened? One of the main parts of
the Bates mythology surrounds his assertion that he established a well-run
football club. A simple analysis of the cashflow, the starting basis for
whether a business is in a healthy state or not suggests otherwise:
As can be seen above, the cashflow of Leeds was largely
supported by player sales throughout the post-2008 era, with the exception of
2011 where the net outflow was £1.25m on player transfers. If we look at the
entire period, income from player sales contributed £8.4m to Leeds United’s
cashflow over the period, and as can be seen from above, this has played a
crucial role in keeping Leeds United operating as a viable concern over the
period.
Construction Costs
Looking at the cashflow, a total of £18.6m was spent over
the 5 years on alterations and fixtures/fittings, which we can see is related
to the improvements made to Elland Road (this ties in broadly with the £20m
that Bates said had been invested in Elland Road in the Daily Mail article in
December). To put this amount into context, the total amount of cashflow generated
from operating activities by the club, plus the player sales over the 5 year
period totals £19.25m. This is quite astonishing, and for a business whose
primary revenue generator isn’t real estate (especially one which doesn’t actually
own the real estate it is investing) it is the equivalent of betting the house
on black.
Now, there are two reasons why investing this amount may
have been necessary/desirable:
1.
Elland
Road was unsuitable to host Championship football: Whilst Elland Road may
have been requiring modernisation in an ideal world, this wasn’t something that
was strictly required. If there had been some legislative or structural
requirement to improve the stadium, then under most circumstances this would be
the responsibility of our landlord (whoever they may be...).
2. The investment would produce an attractive
and sustainable return which can be reinvested in the playing squad: Given the
cost of investing such a large amount involved diverting funds and weakening
the playing squad, one would expect that the business would have to receive a
substantial return over a short timeframe in order for this to justify the
outlay.
To my mind, neither point is valid in this case and
certainly not to the detriment of investment in the playing squad. £18.6m which
could have been invested in the playing squad was instead diverted to a
spurious building project which has done little to enhance the bottom line of
the business and by diverting funds at crucial points over the past 5 years,
may have prevented Leeds United securing promotion at an earlier stage. This is
further proved when looking at the growth in turnover components over the
period. For this I have excluded central distributions and TV income which are
largely outside of the control of the football club business and instead
focussed on gate receipts, merchandise revenue and other commercial revenue. If
we assume that corporate hospitality falls into other commercial revenue which
is its most logical location, we can see that it has broadly flatlined over the
period;
What therefore was the justification for investing a huge
component of the cashflow for what looks like quite meagre returns to date?
Administrative
Expenses
Another component which stands out when looking through the
accounts is the amount of administrative expenses. As can be seen below, whilst
wage growth has been relatively constrained, and I have assumed that rent has
grown by 3% per year from a base of £2m (as per Swiss Ramble’s blog: http://swissramble.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/leeds-united-marching-on-together.html),
the growth in other costs has been huge, growing from £5.5m to a total of £10.6m,
in effect doubling. It is hard to see what significant other costs would be due
to be paid by a club which has outsourced its catering services and does pose
some questions. As ever, given the lack of clarity in the accounts it is very
hard to see where the costs have been accrued.
Given the comments during the Levi case where Harvey
referenced the huge legal costs that the club had incurred, one can only
presume that a significant component of the other costs must relate to some of
these legal costs.
Wage growth has remained constrained throughout the period,
as can be seen from the chart below:
Leeds have consistently kept the ratio of wages/turnover between
49-56% over the 5 year period which, as Swiss Ramble stated in his blog, puts
Leeds at the bottom of the pile compared to other Championship clubs. Whilst
sustainability is obviously important (as we have seen over our recent history)
it does suggest that there is room for further investment in wages to be made,
especially if there can be some cost control of some of the other costs within
the business.
Conclusions
"We are one of the most stable clubs in the country, we
will not take any risks, and we will not spend money that we haven`t got in the
hope that we will go up." – Ken Bates 28/12/11
Looking at the 2008-12 period and Bates’ claim of building a
“well-run club”, one which takes no risks and doesn’t spend money it doesn’t
have doesn’t quite stack up. For a start, investing the vast majority of the
operating cashflow of the business whilst also funding the remainder by selling
the only valuable assets of the business (the playing squad) to fund an
investment which to date has failed to produce any form of reasonable return
for the outlay strikes me as the exact opposite of not taking risks.
When the cashflow started to run out in 2011/12, Bates had
to rely on raising capital by forward-selling income from season tickets and
taking loans from other spurious sources. Forward-selling season ticket income
it should be remembered was exactly the strategy that got Leeds into trouble
during the Ridsdale era, an era Bates likes to refer to as an example of bad
management.
Ultimately 2008-12 represents an opportunity missed. Had the
operating cashflows been invested sustainably in the playing squad, had the
club taken a more active approach in keeping some of the promising League One
squad together by perhaps increasing its wage/turnover ratio and reducing some
of the other costs, then the dream of Premier League status could have been
realised. Instead we have shiny new corporate facilities, another season of mid-table
Championship football and a club which has a significant amount of its future
cashflow sold onto other companies. Turning around a troubled business is like
turning around an oil tanker and therefore GFH or whichever other party becomes
involved with Leeds over the near future will require time and investment to do
this. Ultimately the rhetoric and mythology that Bates has sought to create
belies the reality of a club which has gone backwards rather than forwards over
the past 5 years.
Its bad enough that £18.6 million wasn't invested in the playing squad but on the stadium which as you say was perfectly adequate.
ReplyDeleteThe fact that we don't own the ground and have forward-sold income to pay for stadium improvements puts Bates right up there with Ridsdale in terms of financial mismanagement.
A disastrous day for Leeds United when he regained control of the club in 2007.