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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Sport
Jack Rathborn

Transfer value for players will drop by 18 per cent due to coronavirus, says KPMG

The suspension of leagues around Europe will see the value of players in the transfer market drop by 18 per cent, according to KPMG.

Clubs have been hit badly by the pandemic with leagues suspended over the last three months.

Revenue has been hit as leagues resume due to no fans permitted inside stadiums, with Andrea Sartori, global head of sports for the services network, claiming the knock-on effect will see the value of players drop sharply in the transfer market.

“In the top 10 leagues... the decrease in player value is 6.6 billion euros or a fall of about 18%,” Sartori said on the Reuters Global Markets Forum following a KPMG study conducted on nearly 4,200 players.

“Players with high values in Europe – the top 20-30 players – are retaining value to a greater extent than other players.

“In case of continuation of the leagues, the top 20 players – for example Kylian Mbappe, Mohamed Salah, Eden Hazard and Neymar – will see a value decline of 13%.”

Terminating all the leagues prematurely, as France’s Ligue 1 has done, would have resulted in an overall decrease of 10 billion euros in player market value, Sartori added.

Sartori said the pandemic would not affect the length of new player contracts but salary negotiations in the next renewal cycle would be affected while free agents would not necessarily be more in demand.

“I see many more player exchanges: less monetary transactions, more loans, exchanges, and not necessarily a high number of free agents,” he said.

“Overall clubs are going to be cautious, not only in the next transfer window. The effects will be for 18-24 months, so transfer windows in that time will show the effect.”

Club finances have taken a major hit without matchday revenue for three months, and Sartori said Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules may have to be eased to allow clubs to get back on their feet.

Under UEFA regulations any club spending more than the revenue they generate may face sanctions including bans from competitions run by the European governing body, such as the two-year ban it is currently seeking to impose on Manchester City.

“The key rule that could cause major pressure is the break-even rule – the pillar of FFP,” he said. “(It is) the most important regulation of FFP, how clubs have to behave.

“There will probably have to be an element of relaxation to the break-even rule as clubs need to face the fall in revenue due to the virus, while costs have not fallen at the same pace.

“Relaxation could be a combination of time allowed to not match the rule as well as the losses permitted.”

Reuters contributed to this report

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