That's not how profit on player transactions is actually calculated.Ibe £14.5m profit
Sinclair £4m profit
Smith £3m profit
Canos £2.5m profit
Benteke £5.5m loss assuming no add-ons
Allen £2m loss
Skrtel £1m loss
At least £15.5m profit
How it works is that say you buy a player for £20m on a 4 year deal, his asset value is on the balance sheet at £20m year 1.
In the year 1 profit and loss account, his value is amortized by 1/4 of his asset value, as he's on a 4 year contract, so you take a cost of £5m against him.
So year 2 he sits on the balance sheet at £15m and so on and so forth.
So Allen for example who signed in 2012 - assuming he originally signed on a 4 year deal - will have stood on your books this summer at £0. So the trading profit on him that'll show in the current years accounts will be £13m.
This is how clubs stay within FFP, as if you say spend £100m in one window, and all the players bought were on 4 year deals, then the cost that'll hit your P&L in that year is only £25m. So in Liverpools example you'd only have to sell a Joe Allen and a Jordan Ibe to more than cover the cost and show better than breakeven.
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