Leeds' season ended with somewhat of a whimper, however the post-season events have shown that Massimo Cellino has started to establish his regime and the beginning of the cost savings which are required by the club.
We know that the club was running operating losses of ca. £11.5m during the 2012/13 financial year, and sources have suggested to me that these costs increased significantly over the first half of 2014 (notwithstanding any cost increases over the first half of the 2013/14 season). It would therefore seem that the somewhat abrupt and drastic actions undertaken by Cellino have been driven by this circumstance.
Whichever buyer was intending to buy Leeds United would have had to instigate significant cost reductions, with a club operating with operating losses of £11.5m being unsustainable in a post-FFP era. If, as expected, the costs have increased significantly from this position, then it is likely these cuts would have had to be much more extreme.
Corporate restructuring is generally a painful and messy business, not least for the employees affected. It is even more complex when you have multiple stakeholders to deal with, which in the case of a football club is the fans. It is incredibly naïve to assume that the fans of a football club, who whilst not shareholders, are equally engaged in its operation will not have concerns on how it is run. Cellino did in essence pay £35m for a company which has few assets aside from a paying fanbase. It is this element which whilst not necessarily kept happy, does need to be kept relatively informed and in an appropriate way.
A club operating in an information vacuum, with a manager ostracised, players informed via Twitter whether they are being retained or released, and a son of the owner tweeting information (true or false, we shall see) over the internet is not the appropriate way to manage the communications for what is a complex and emotive period, even in the context of the club's recent history. This is one element which needs to be improved significantly by Cellino over the coming weeks, ideally with some clarity as to what the medium-term plan is. It is an information vacuum which allows dis-information to prosper, and ultimately is proving divisive amongst fans. That is not for the benefit of any of us.
The other element is whether these cost elements are being correctly allocated. From an outside perspective, but one with a relative understanding of the financial position, struggles to see whether the limited cost savings (given it is shut for a relatively short time, rent is still due, other staffing costs and utility bills will still have to be paid) outweigh the reputational and operational damage in having players with nowhere to train, utilisation of limited physio facilities at Elland Road and also the view from outside the club, where prospective players (in a season where we need to rebuild) looking at a club which seems to be in turmoil and can't seem to afford its training facility.
Now perhaps this is a completely justifiable move which will lead to substantial benefits, however it does leave me concerned and coupled with the information vacuum, is only seeking to provoke concern amongst much of the fanbase.
Personally, I remain supportive of Cellino's intentions, it is clear he needs to undertake some significant restructuring, and if the elements which have been suggested to me are correct, Leeds are in a significantly bad situation which will require his full support and focus which it would seem he is engaged in providing.
A key element which is lacking is the communication with the staff, players and fans. This is a long-haul project which is likely to take at least 1-2 years in my opinion to turn it around. Cellino is going to have to take the fans with him on this journey and without better communication, I doubt whether he will be able to make this project a success. Communication of the current situation, a medium term plan for stabilising the club, and proactive engagement with the fanbase would go a long way to ensuring that the club unites behind him.
Monday, 19 May 2014
Leeds United – 2012/13 Results - Time for the Italian Job?
“Leeds is potentially a Ferrari, now it’s a Cinquecento. I want to
transform Leeds from Highway to Hell to Stairway to Heaven” – Massimo Cellino
The 31st of March has sadly become a pivotal date
in the calendars of most Leeds fans, as we await with trepidation the latest
financial results. 31st March 2014 (or 8th April by the
time Companies House got the accounts uploaded) proved to be no exception.
The period covered by
the 2012/13 accounts cover the final 6 months of the Bates era, and the first 6
months of GFH taking the helm. To refresh the memories of Leeds fans, this was
the season where the “Bates Out” campaign really took hold, with average
attendances dropping from 23,369 to 21,572 (-7.7%). This led to a drop in match
day and other commercial revenue of 12% over the year, a clear indication that
fans boycotting Elland Road had a significant impact on the finances. Whilst a
drop of 12% in revenue might be a challenge for any business, for a club which
had spent a significant amount of time hugging the line between profitability
and loss, it became a death grip.
2012/13 saw an overall drop in gross profit of 13%, however also
an increase in administration costs of 16%. This had a “double whammy” impact
of tripling operating losses from £4.2m to ca. £12.4m. This was partially
mitigated by income generated through player sales of £3.9m (predominantly in
relation to the sale of Snodgrass). Since 2008, Leeds had
managed to cling onto profitability based on player sales. 2012/13 was the
first year where this strategy didn’t work as losses started to spiral.
A further indication of the engulfing financial crisis
facing Leeds during 2012/13 was the spike in borrowing costs, which increased
from zero to £1.3m during the year. This would indicate (and as we knew at the
time) that the club was having to borrow increasingly in order to cover its
over heads. Financial obligations increased 50% over the year to a total of
£34.4m, predominantly due to loans of £15.2m owed to “related parties”, which
relates to £11.3m owed to Brendale Holdings Ltd (a GFH subisidiary) and the
remainder owed to other “related parties”. £800,000 of the interest paid is in
relation to the redemption premium of preference shares owned by Lutonville
Holdings as well as a £100,000 administration fee. Lutonville Holdings is a
company connected to Outro and by virtue, Ken Bates.
The net conclusion of all this was a net loss of £9.9m.
However once you strip out discontinued operations (c. £650k relating to the
discontinuation of Yorkshire Radio) and player trading (“one-off” items which
aren’t indicative of the true ongoing operating position) you get to a net loss
of £11.4m which is a more accurate reflection of the true financial position of
the club. This was a substantial increase from the net loss of ca. £540k in
2011/12 and significantly in excess of the limit under the financial fair play
regime which will come into force next season which allows losses of £3m and a
further equity injection of £5m (a total of £8m).
Where do we
go from here? Leeds in perspective vs. other Championship clubs, and the task
ahead for Cellino
The publication of the accounts was followed swiftly by the
publication by Swiss Ramble of the statistics of the other Championship clubs,
which can be found on Twitter by following @swissramble or online at http://swissramble.blogspot.co.uk.
The 2012/13 results show that Leeds generated the second
highest Championship revenue overall. Once you strip out parachute payments,
Leeds were actually highest by some considerable margin, with the next highest
being Brighton, some 20% behind. It is worth reflecting that this was in a
season where Elland Road was dealing with average attendances of 21,572, the
lowest average attendance since 2006-07 when we were relegated from the
Championship.
With a club generating this much revenue, even in a bad
year, why is the club making such substantial losses? The highest cost item for
a football club is invariably the wage bill. On an absolute basis, Leeds has
the 11th highest wage bill in the Championship, with the highest
being Bolton, followed closely by Blackburn Rovers, Cardiff City and Wolves, a
legacy of relegation from the Premiership. This is a resolutely mid-table
budget which looks to in contrast to the aspirations of a club who should be
fighting for promotion.
What is quite interesting is that Leeds are also behind the
likes of Birmingham City, Nottingham Forest and Middlesborough, whilst only
being slightly ahead of Crystal Palace and Bristol City, all this for a club
generating revenue twice as high as these clubs.
Now it is perfectly reasonable that these other clubs may be
taking considerable risks with their finances, something which Leeds are not
willing to do, and for the likes of Middlesborough, Nottingham Forest and
Bristol City the losses are higher, but not to the extent we would expect for
clubs operating higher wage bills with lower commercial revenue (somewhere in
the region of £5m higher losses for clubs with a turnover ca. £10-15m lower).
In addition, Birmingham and Crystal Palace actually had lower losses or even a
profit in Crystal Palace’s case.
This is further underpinned by the wage to turnover ratio, a
key metric for the health of most football clubs. Based on this metric, Leeds
have the third lowest wage to turnover ratio within the Championship at around
68%. This is well within sustainable levels, and is of a comparable level to
that of Watford, Derby County, Peterborough and Blackpool.
Therein lies one of the key issues with Leeds United. How
can a club with the highest turnovers in the Championship, operating with a
wage budget of that of a mid-table Championship club, still be generating such
significant losses? The key element is the “other costs” of the club. Leeds
have the highest amount of “other costs” in comparison to other Championship
clubs, and almost double in comparison to clubs such as Cardiff City and
Leicester City. The growth in this cost element has been phenomenal since 2008.
Leeds’ accounts are notoriously opaque as to what these
“Other Costs” are. I have stripped out an amount for rent which I have assumed
has grown from £2m in 2008 at 3% p.a. The question on the lips of all Leeds fans should be, what
are these costs, and why have they increased by 210% since 2008, vastly
outstripping the growth in wages or turnover?
Ultimately, we don’t know. Press speculation has suggested
“exorbitant” legal costs being charged to the club, alongside items such as
private jet contracts. It remains to be seen what else could be included in
there but what this does suggest is that Leeds has been run with an approach to
executive expenditure more akin to that of a FTSE 100 company with a £1bn
turnover, than that of a Championship club with a turnover of £30m. It is
therefore important for the club to sort this element out, which will rapidly
feed through to an improvement in the profitability of the football club.
Cellino therefore faces quite a challenge to improve the
profitability of the club. In my view this requires the following steps:
1)
Buyback
Elland Road and Thorpe Arch: The sales of Elland Road and Thorpe Arch in
2004 were a necessary evil in order to ensure the survival of the football club
at that time. A decade later, and after every owner or potential owner having
promised to buy them back, we are still paying an exorbitant level of
rent. To improve the profitability of
the club, it is crucial that Cellino becomes the first owner to fulfil this
promise.
2)
Reduction
in overheads: Leeds are the biggest club in the Championship in terms of
turnover, and have one of the lowest wage to turnover ratios in the division.
Based on this, it is clear that it isn’t the wage bill which is a drag on the
club’s profitability. In fact it is the other costs related to the club which
are acting as a millstone around it’s neck.
It is of the utmost importance
that Cellino gets to grips with the profligacy of previous regimes and cuts
this back. I would argue that on a wage to turnover basis, with a club aiming
to achieve promotion to the Premier League, the club actually should be showing
more ambition, especially given we would expect the turnover to increase over
this season (given the average attendance has increased by ca. 25% since these
accounts). A well run club should be able to run at a wage to turnover ratio of
70-75%, and I see no reason why Leeds shouldn’t have that as a medium term
goal.
3)
Boost
turnover: The era of Financial Fair Play will over the medium term, mean
that clubs with the biggest turnovers and who are run sustainably, will achieve
promotion. Leeds, as the biggest club on a turnover basis by a substantial
element should effectively use this to “bully” the other teams in the division.
To my mind this doesn’t mean increasing ticket prices, Leeds fans already pay
some of the highest prices in the football leagues, but instead it requires the
club to maintain the likes of “Leeds for Less”, one of the few positives from the
GFH era, which helped to provide a boost to attendance, likely increased
expenditure on club merchandise, re-engaged the club with the city after Ken
Bates, and introduced a new generation to Leeds.
Subject to getting points 1 &
2 sorted, this to my mind, requires boosting attendances up towards 29,000,
which was our attendance in the first year in the Championship. At these levels,
and with some resolution to the above points, we should start to be generating
some reasonable profits which will undoubtedly feedback through to squad
investment and allow us to compete effectively for the best players. This can
be seen below:
4)
Squad
investment: The immediate output of this needs to be a restructure of the
squad over the summer. In order to maintain or increase attendances, Cellino
needs to create optimism and boost the performance on the pitch. This will
require investment and expenditure on good quality signings. Leeds have had a
long history of not investing effectively on the pitch, relying on free
signings, older players, and a number of loan signings. Increased squad investment
doesn’t necessarily need to result in an increase in the overall wage bill, but
certainly a reallocation of resources and a better use of the budget. Cellino
and the football management team need to start creating a sustainable squad
base for next season, and then a medium term plan for investment. This requires
stability and continuity at the heart of the club’s hierarchy.
“Now I’m driving the bus. Now the bus is ours and we have to run the
bus.”
GFH inherited a rudderless oil tanker, which this blogger
said at the time would require substantial time to turn around and get back on
the right track.
As has become
apparent over the past few weeks, the oil tanker is not only rudderless, but
also listing heavily to one side. In order for Cellino to turn Leeds into a
success, it will require a substantial amount of investment, but also time. We
have effectively lost a season under the mis-management of GFH and it is up to
Cellino to plan ahead, not only for next season but also over a medium term (3
years in my view) horizon. In the short term this will require investment in
the playing squad and in meeting our operational losses, as well as a period of
stability off the pitch.
Over the longer term, it will require some expert
management, with Cellino bringing his financial management skills from Cagliari
(a small but financially well-run club) to Leeds. The excess of previous
regimes needs to be pruned, and it is only at that juncture that Leeds will
have the sustainable platform to grow and challenge for promotion.
The good news for Cellino? He has inherited one of the
largest and most passionate fan bases in the UK. This will ultimately lead to
the financial success of the club provided it is nurtured and grown effectively
over the coming seasons. This will require more than going for a pint down the
Old Peacock with the fans, and time will tell as to whether Cellino has the
aptitude and patience to make this work.
“Marciare su
insieme?” Time will tell as to whether this will truly be the case and Leeds
will finally make the long overdue journey back to our rightful home.
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