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QPR accounts for 2012/13 season
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I thought that clubs would be fined £ for £ on any loss over £18m. There are different amounts for each league too, so not sure which applies to us. Then there are legal challenges coming up which could put things on hold. The premier league apparently also voted for ffp fines to be donated to charity, instead of being shared out among lower league clubs. Was it spite to hinder lower clubs progressing?
Or was voting for charity allowing clubs an option to challenge the ffp ruling? If it's shared out, then lower league clubs will be backing the FA etc. on upholding their ruling. If no lower clubs are benefiting then maybe a challenge may be more successful?
If an owner wants to gift money to a club with no repayment back at all, is that OK and not a debt?
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Originally posted by klonk View Posti'm an (out of practice) accountant.
and yes, it probably is as bad as you're reading it. (it could actually be worse than you're reading it)
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If TF et al pull the plug then the club is gone.... No one would rescue us with such losses and such a debt. Until then we limp along financially. If we go up this year we pay the huge fine (which means we can't buy players, this squad won't be able to compete in the PL, so we go back down....). If we don't go up this year we're subject to a transfer embargo and can't get players in, so won't go up next year.... Bleak.
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Originally posted by Greengrass View PostI thought that clubs would be fined £ for £ on any loss over £18m. There are different amounts for each league too, so not sure which applies to us. Then there are legal challenges coming up which could put things on hold. The premier league apparently also voted for ffp fines to be donated to charity, instead of being shared out among lower league clubs. Was it spite to hinder lower clubs progressing?
Or was voting for charity allowing clubs an option to challenge the ffp ruling? If it's shared out, then lower league clubs will be backing the FA etc. on upholding their ruling. If no lower clubs are benefiting then maybe a challenge may be more successful?
If an owner wants to gift money to a club with no repayment back at all, is that OK and not a debt?
if the owner gives money to the club, this is basically financing - it's not a debt as such, but it's still a balance sheet transaction (balance sheets state all the assets and liabilities that a company has at the end date of the accounting period) so it doesn't affect the calculation of profit/loss.
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Originally posted by Greengrass View PostSo a sponsor can give money to a club and that can balance the books, but an owner can't balance the books with a donation? Is that what you're saying?I should probably write something insightful here
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