Manchester United £15m behind on half-time profits

On the football pitch, mighty Manchester United may be heading the Premier League but on the balance sheet the money making machine…

On the football pitch, mighty Manchester United may be heading the Premier League but on the balance sheet the money making machine is looking decidedly injury prone as the half-time whistle sounds. Lashing out millions to buy the best footballing talent available has eaten into profitability at the publicly-quoted club, half-yearly results this week showing pre-tax profits eroded 24 per cent to £14.9 million. On the credit side, Old Trafford gate receipts rose 3 per cent to £19 million and income from television improved £2 million to £8 million due to an improved deal with BskyB and payments for playing in the European Champions league.

Loyal supporters collect a 9 per cent higher interim dividend of 0.52p per share.