Finney Is Back
Luka Modric
I have agreed with some of your other points but not this one.....New stadiums or major renovations is a must (at some point) for all serious clubs. We have that behind us and only costs us £17m a year.
If you think any serious business pay off capital on infrastructure projects when locked in on super low interest rates long term you are mistaken. Inflation will be along soon (well we can wait 23 years if we have to) to shrink the burden on its own.
Serious businesses absolutely pay off capital costs. The ones that don't tend to be the ones that eventually go bankrupt. Capital projects only have a certain shelf life. If you haven't paid off the loan for the capital project by the time the shelf life has expired then you have no room in which to manoeuvre to pay for the next capital project, or no room in which to borrow if an unforeseen event (such a covid) occurs.
Remember also that the average 23 year term of our debt at the 2.66% average interest is unlikely to just be made up of rolling loans that we are paying only interest on. If that is the case (and I would be very surprised) then we will have to continually restructure our debts and be at the mercy of interest rates rising. I suspect the club will indeed continue to look to restructure debt long term whenever it can find favourable interest rates to do so, though our shorter term debt will be at a lower rate of interest and it will be the long term debt that is jacking the overall average interest up to 2.66% so moving more debt long term will raise the level of interest paid (and that's before you consider the fact that there are typically penalties associated with paying off debt early.
THFC's total gross debt actually dwarfs the £630m or so loans taken out for the stadium as it includes the government covid loan, the interest on all of our the loans, tax owed to the government and fees owed to other clubs for transfers. In Feb of this year our total gross debt was estimated to be £1.17 billion. Which is a huge amount of debt for a club of our size to be carrying. Additionally I doubt that we are in a position to pay back in full the £175m to the government when it is due next month and will therefore have to hope that the government will extend their covid loan scheme or seek further debt from the market at higher rates than the government rate (thus increasing our debt pile further).
Inflating away debt is indeed a potential option but typically (and I know the world has been anything but economically typical since the financial crash in 2008) with inflation comes interest rate rises. Can the US, EU and UK afford continue to give away free money by quantative easing forever? Personally, I don't think so.
I suspect that ENIC will definitely look to pay off the stadium debt over the term of our loans, that is the prudent thing to do and not doing so would be put us seriously at risk in the event of interest rate rises, I would be surprised if the club hasn't invested in some interest rate options to hedge some of this risk but there is only so much hedging that you can do when you're carrying a huge debt.