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Premiership losses nearly doubled

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Topic: Premiership losses nearly doubled
Posted By: Richard Lowther
Subject: Premiership losses nearly doubled
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2023 at 08:09
From the Telegraph

Premiership Rugby’s losses nearly doubled to £36 million last year, Telegraph Sport can reveal, in another sign of the economic turbulence in English rugby. 

Accounts published by Companies House show that Premier Rugby Ltd lost £36.11 million in the year through to June 2022, up from £19.03 million the previous year. The total equity in the company also fell nearly by more than half from more than £96 million to £43 million. 

This season Premiership Rugby has seen two of its clubs, Worcester Warriors and Wasps, go under, which a Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee labelled a “stain on the reputation” of the sport’s stakeholders. MPs also lambasted Premiership Rugby’s “complacent belief” that rugby’s calamitous finances can be solved by improving collaboration and increasing central revenues, with clubs losing on average around £4 million per year. 

London Irish, with debts of more than £30 million, are skirting dangerously close to the abyss but are hoping that an American consortium can finalise a takeover from owner Mick Crossan. As of Tuesday, the Rugby Football Union had yet to receive notification for any potential takeover. 

In the case of Premiership Rugby, the losses were anticipated as a result of the venture capital firm CVC Capital Partners’ taking a 27 per cent stake in 2019. In the strategic report released alongside the financial results, the board of directors wrote: “The company now posts an accounting loss, which is to do with the accounting treatment of the CVC investment in that period, as opposed to reflecting operating performance.” 

Overall, turnover increased by six per cent to £65.5 million as Covid restrictions on crowds at sporting events were lifted. The report, signed off by CVC managing partner Nick Clarry, makes clear that the clubs are still far from out of the woods with the loans from the Sports Survival Package during the pandemic due for repayment. 

“Another major factor affecting the league is the financial health of the shareholder clubs, as illustrated by the recent issues impacting Worcester Warriors and Wasps,” Clarry wrote. “Premiership clubs have benefited from loans provided by DCMS and Sport England through the Sports Survival Package, and whilst this support has been a key factor in no clubs going under during the main phase of the pandemic, those loans will remain on the clubs’ balance sheets for many years to come. We continue to work closely with clubs, Sport England and DCMS on this topic.” 

Premiership Rugby’s two main sources of funding are the Rugby Football Union, through the Professional Game Agreement, and their broadcasting deal with BT Sport, both of which are due for renewal in 2024.



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Replies:
Posted By: tigerburnie
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2023 at 10:04
The Sport Survival loan is what made Leicester Tigers raise capital from a sale of shares to pay that debt off, that debt is an example of the rather poor support this government is giving to businesses in general, not just rugby. Exeter, Tigers and Saracens have taken steps to address their situation and I believe Newcastle have done similar too.


Posted By: Kimbo
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2023 at 10:09
The bright side. The '23 figures should go down without W*sps chucking in their annual minimum 10m loss.

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Our City,
Our Club


Posted By: Raider999
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2023 at 10:36
Take the Irish £30m out and the picture is not that bad average of £600k per team.

So to me the large debt being touted is rather skewed

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RAID ON


Posted By: Big Eddie
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2023 at 11:20
Originally posted by Raider999 Raider999 wrote:

Take the Irish £30m out and the picture is not that bad average of £600k per team.

So to me the large debt being touted is rather skewed

I disagree. I have reviewed a couple of the latest public sets of accounts for two Premiership clubs. One is known to be in trouble, the other isn't. Both have balance sheets which show significant net liabilities even after the holding values of their P Shares have been revalued to circa £20m and £18m respectively.

Strip out the value of the P Shares (and I hugely doubt on a willing buyer willing seller basis that the value will ever approach these revalued carrying numbers) and the position is as bleak as bleak as can be.

The current blue sky business model for professional rugby is pie in the sky



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''The future isn't what it used to be''


Posted By: Mark W-J
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2023 at 11:21
Originally posted by Raider999 Raider999 wrote:

Take the Irish £30m out and the picture is not that bad average of £600k per team.

So to me the large debt being touted is rather skewed
This isn't the combined losses of the Premiership clubs, it's the losses of Premiership Rugby, the umbrella organisation.


Posted By: Raider999
Date Posted: 05 Apr 2023 at 18:19
Originally posted by Mark W-J Mark W-J wrote:

Originally posted by Raider999 Raider999 wrote:

Take the Irish £30m out and the picture is not that bad average of £600k per team.

So to me the large debt being touted is rather skewed

This isn't the combined losses of the Premiership clubs, it's the losses of Premiership Rugby, the umbrella organisation.


I didn't realise that, thanks for clarifying.

In that case I would question how an umbrella organisation gets itself in such a mess?

I can understand the clubs owing money as they spend money they don't earn through gate receipts and TV revenue each year.

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RAID ON


Posted By: SK 88
Date Posted: 09 Apr 2023 at 13:40
As the notes to the accounts say, it is because of how the CVC deal is structured and where the money sits now.  They generated £15m more cash than they spent (i.e. distributed to clubs).

To be honest there is a story in Premiership Rugby's new structure but I don't think it is this.  The league appears to have £80m of loan notes accruing 12% interest due to be repaid in 2031.  Where did that money go, why did the league take that debt on and who is liable for it when it inevitably cannot be repaid? 



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