Results 1 to 4 of 4
  1. #1
    Administrator DIEHARD's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Brisbane / HK
    Posts
    39,123

    NRL NRL expects 'between five and eight' clubs to make profit

    NRL expects 'between five and eight' clubs to make profit
    http://www.nrl.com

    The 2018 Telstra Premiership season will see "between five and eight" clubs break even off the back of the financial success of a code on course to deliver a $45 million surplus this year.

    In 2017 only one of the 16 clubs returned a profit without the help of leagues club funding – the Brisbane Broncos.

    ARL Commission chairman Peter Beattie and NRL chief executive Todd Greenberg delivered the half-yearly results to club chairs and CEOs at Moore Park headquarters on Friday. They anticipate up to half of the clubs to be in the black this year.

    "So around six clubs – never happened before," Greenberg said.

    Beattie promised to open the books to clubs and the States – representatives from the QRL and NSWRL now sit on the ARLC's finance audit committee – when he took over from former chair John Grant last December.

    "This is actually a closer working relationship than perhaps the administration of the game has ever had with our clubs chairs and our CEOs," Beattie said. "And we're determined to keep doing that."

    In April at the quarterly release of financial data, the NRL was on course for a $40 million profit. That figure is now $45 million for the 2018 year.

    Chief Operating Officer Tony Crawford said the NRL's improved financial health over the past five years meant it was "in the top 10" of the 100-listed companies on the ASX [Australian Stock Exchange] for performance.

    This time last year the NRL was wrangling with the RLPA on a new collective bargaining agreement for players, after battling the 16 NRL clubs on their grants and funding over the course of the five-year broadcast deal [2018-2022].

    The game was $11.2 million in the red. But now is $27.8 million in the black and on track for a $45 million surplus.

    "We're building the future of the game now," Beattie said.

    Among the figures released on Friday:

    Commercial revenue has grown from $42.1 million in 2017 to $60.1 million in 2018
    A 29% rise in sponsorship revenue [$20.7m to $26.7m]

    Direct costs have grown 13% compared with a 43% increase in commercial revenue

    Operating costs at the NRL have remained flat, excluding the one-off redundancy payments of approximately $1 million for about 30 staff

    Major events revenue dropped by 24% [$4.2m to $3.2m] due to no Auckland Nines or All Stars events, but these figures don't include the 2018 Holden State of Origin series or Grand Final as they haven't been held yet
    Broadcast revenue has grown from $103m at 2017 half-year mark, to $161.6m

    Clubs received a 39% increase in funds [from $79.7m to $110.5m largely driven by grant rising from $8.4m in 2017 to $12.5m in 2018]

    States receiving a 17% increase from $13.8m to $16.1m

    "There is more money going to clubs than ever before; more to players than ever before; more to grassroots than before," Beattie said.

    "We are going to end up in the black, all which shows better management and the sort of job Todd has been doing.

    "With the animosity [between Commission and clubs] gone, you can now actually start planning for the future ... to be strategic ... to make sure the clubs are part of our investment strategy."

    With that in mind, Beattie has asked fellow Commissioner Dr Gary Weiss to plan where and how the NRL can invest its money to build a nest egg and secure its financial future.

    Weiss is chairman of Ridley Corporation Ltd, executive director of Ariadne Australia Ltd, as well as sitting on the boards of another eight top-ranked national and international companies covering areas like health, entertainment, media and research.

    Greenberg hopes the $45 million figure will be topped, with those profits being shared evenly between the four main stakeholders: the clubs, players, grassroots and NRL.

    "Every dollar we can generate over and above that $45 million profit gets shared among the stakeholders," he said.

    "At the end of the five-year cycle, we distribute that back to the four stakeholders. So if we beat our revenue targets everyone benefits.

    "I've said to the players there can't be a better opportunity in the game's history for you to get in behind us ... you have massive incentive to speak up, talk the game up.

    "Why? Because if revenues go up you get a quarter of that upside."

    While the Titans, Panthers and Broncos have completed their centres of excellence, another 10 clubs have secured funding to begin theirs.

    The first of four main stadia to undergo reconstruction – Western Sydney Stadium at Parramatta – will be completed by March 2019.

    Then North Queensland Stadium in Townsville will be finished in early 2020; Stadium Australia in Sydney by mid-2021; and the Sydney Football Stadium in Sydney by early 2022.
    PUT EM TO THE SWORD! SHOW SOME STEEL!

    Moejoe: "REMEMBER!!!! SLIP - SLOP - SLAP in the sun. Skin Cancer is a growing problem. It could happen to anyone!!"
    TITANS, DIEHARDS, WARRINGTON WOLVES, MAROONS, KANGAROOS, HONG KONG THUNDER

  2. #2
    Immortal Titanic's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Next door to Alice
    Posts
    10,465

    Default

    If anybody else had said it other than Peter Beatie I would have been optimistic.
    Four reasons to escape to Queensland: Sun, Surf, Sand & the Titans.

  3. #3
    Administrator DIEHARD's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Brisbane / HK
    Posts
    39,123

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Titanic View Post
    If anybody else had said it other than Peter Beatie I would have been optimistic.
    PUT EM TO THE SWORD! SHOW SOME STEEL!

    Moejoe: "REMEMBER!!!! SLIP - SLOP - SLAP in the sun. Skin Cancer is a growing problem. It could happen to anyone!!"
    TITANS, DIEHARDS, WARRINGTON WOLVES, MAROONS, KANGAROOS, HONG KONG THUNDER

  4. #4
    Administrator DIEHARD's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Brisbane / HK
    Posts
    39,123

    Default

    NRL posts $28 million half-year profit
    https://www.sbs.com.au/

    ARL Commission Chairman Peter Beattie has been praised for opening up the organisation's books. (AAP)
    The NRL says it has recorded a $27.8 million profit for the first half of 2018.

    The NRL claims the game has never been in better financial shape - and they've shown everyone in clubland the numbers to prove it.

    As promised when he took over, ARL Commission chairman Peter Beattie on Friday opened the league's books to club and state chairmen and chief executives.

    And what they found was a $27.8 million surplus over the first half of the season - a far cry from the $11.2 million they were in the red this time last year.

    The NRL trumpeted a 29 per cent increase in sponsorship, a 39 per cent rise in distributions to clubs and a 17 per cent jump in funding to the states.

    It is believed the rise in club grants could result in at least six of them posting a surplus in what would be a first for the code.

    The NRL also said Australian TV audiences were up one million viewers on last year while crowds had grown three per cent.

    "This is the first time this has actually happened, that we've shared every bit of the finances with the clubs, the chairs and the states," Beattie said.

    "That's the kind of transparency that will build trust and confidence in the game."

    Beattie promised to be transparent after his predecessor John Grant was ousted following a dispute with the clubs over the allocation of funds and the game's finances.

    Gold Coast chairman Dennis Watt praised Beattie and the NRL for their transparency.

    "What's particularly pleasing is there's less reliance on our wonderful broadcast partners in terms of driving results," he said.

    "The NRL team have driven those non-broadcast revenues, those commercial arms in particular in terms of sponsorship, wagering and the digital fields.

    "There's also been incredible discipline shown by the NRL around costs and containment."

    Beattie is hoping their growing relationship with clubs means the game can also look at investing extra revenue in assets that could eventually do away with a reliance on broadcast revenue.

    The NRL also revealed the establishment of a distress fund for clubs, who will each tip in $187,500 per year over the course of the broadcast cycle and reclaim it if unused.

    The governing body says any money made above the budgeted surplus would be accumulated until 2022 before being split equally between clubs, players, grassroots and the NRL.

    Clubs have also secured a combined $316.9 million for centres of excellence. Wests Tigers will get $58m of it while some will go towards facilities in Victoria and Northern Territory.
    PUT EM TO THE SWORD! SHOW SOME STEEL!

    Moejoe: "REMEMBER!!!! SLIP - SLOP - SLAP in the sun. Skin Cancer is a growing problem. It could happen to anyone!!"
    TITANS, DIEHARDS, WARRINGTON WOLVES, MAROONS, KANGAROOS, HONG KONG THUNDER


Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

ABOUT US

    Established in 2005 as the Gold Coast Titans official Chat Forum, we are now known as the League of Titans Independent Website. A place for fans of the Gold Coast Titans to come and touch base with other diehard fans.

QUICK LINKS

FOLLOW US ON

League of Titans designed and cutomised by Matt Glew