blues2win wrote:Sport Bild say the move to City is imminent. De Bruyne's agent says he's spoken to Aloffs and a solution is being sought between the Clubs. I really don't think there's much doubt this will happen and I doubt it will go right to the wire because Wolfsburg need time to spend the cash. De Bruyne at least through his agent has made it very clear to Wolfsburg he wants to make the move.
Tim777 wrote:blues2win wrote:Sport Bild say the move to City is imminent. De Bruyne's agent says he's spoken to Aloffs and a solution is being sought between the Clubs. I really don't think there's much doubt this will happen and I doubt it will go right to the wire because Wolfsburg need time to spend the cash. De Bruyne at least through his agent has made it very clear to Wolfsburg he wants to make the move.
But correct me if I'm wrong - the payment would be spread over the period of his contract according to this thread article viewtopic.php?f=119&t=50468 (refer to the point re. "amortisation") so Wolfsburg would have to wait a mighty long time to spend it all.
Unless it's done in such a way that, either it's taken as a full payment to Wolfsburg and CFG settles over the contract period but reflects on both parties' books as a full credit and debit respectively, or Wolfsburg is able to make deals with CFG's pro-rata money to another club with the same payment arrangement as the preceding deal.
lets all have a disco wrote:Wolfsburg are looking to bang a 30 millions offer in for Mertens at Napoli.
mr_nool wrote:lets all have a disco wrote:Wolfsburg are looking to bang a 30 millions offer in for Mertens at Napoli.
Hmm ... No better than Navas in my opinion.
lets all have a disco wrote:mr_nool wrote:lets all have a disco wrote:Wolfsburg are looking to bang a 30 millions offer in for Mertens at Napoli.
Hmm ... No better than Navas in my opinion.
I dont care how they spend it as long as this saga gets wrapped up.
Manchester City reportedly agree £50.4m fee for Kevin De Bruyne
Last Updated: 21/08/15 4:19pm
Kevin De Bruyne may be heading to Manchester City for a fee in excess of £50m
Kevin De Bruyne may be heading to Manchester City for a fee in excess of £50m
Bild newspaper are reporting that Manchester City have reached agreement on a fee for Wolfsburg's Belgium international attacking midfielder Kevin De Bruyne.
The 24-year-old is said to be on his way to Manchester for a fee believed to be 70m euros (£50.4m).
Bild added that De Bruyne trained with his current club on Friday morning and is in their squad for the Bundesliga match at Cologne on Saturday.
Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini was asked about the potential deal on Friday but refused to be drawn.
"I don't talk about rumours," he said. "I have to talk about so many players, it is impossible. When things are finished, then I can talk about them.
"The window closes on 1 September. Before that, nobody knows what happens."
City are understood to have made a £47m offer for the former Chelsea player last week but there have been no developments since then.
Pellegrini's men have made a good start to the season, winning both of their first two Premier League matches 3-0.
And City have been big players in the transfer market this summer, as they look to recapture the Premier League title, having acquired forward Raheem Sterling from Liverpool, defender Nicolas Otamendi from Valencia, and midfielder Fabian Delph from Aston Villa, among others.
Cocacolajojo wrote:http://www.skysports.com/football/news/11679/9959569/manchester-city-close-on-163504m-kevin-de-bruyne-sky-germanyManchester City reportedly agree £50.4m fee for Kevin De Bruyne
Last Updated: 21/08/15 4:19pm
Kevin De Bruyne may be heading to Manchester City for a fee in excess of £50m
Kevin De Bruyne may be heading to Manchester City for a fee in excess of £50m
Bild newspaper are reporting that Manchester City have reached agreement on a fee for Wolfsburg's Belgium international attacking midfielder Kevin De Bruyne.
The 24-year-old is said to be on his way to Manchester for a fee believed to be 70m euros (£50.4m).
Bild added that De Bruyne trained with his current club on Friday morning and is in their squad for the Bundesliga match at Cologne on Saturday.
Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini was asked about the potential deal on Friday but refused to be drawn.
"I don't talk about rumours," he said. "I have to talk about so many players, it is impossible. When things are finished, then I can talk about them.
"The window closes on 1 September. Before that, nobody knows what happens."
City are understood to have made a £47m offer for the former Chelsea player last week but there have been no developments since then.
Pellegrini's men have made a good start to the season, winning both of their first two Premier League matches 3-0.
And City have been big players in the transfer market this summer, as they look to recapture the Premier League title, having acquired forward Raheem Sterling from Liverpool, defender Nicolas Otamendi from Valencia, and midfielder Fabian Delph from Aston Villa, among others.
Socrates wrote:Tim777 wrote:blues2win wrote:Sport Bild say the move to City is imminent. De Bruyne's agent says he's spoken to Aloffs and a solution is being sought between the Clubs. I really don't think there's much doubt this will happen and I doubt it will go right to the wire because Wolfsburg need time to spend the cash. De Bruyne at least through his agent has made it very clear to Wolfsburg he wants to make the move.
But correct me if I'm wrong - the payment would be spread over the period of his contract according to this thread article viewtopic.php?f=119&t=50468 (refer to the point re. "amortisation") so Wolfsburg would have to wait a mighty long time to spend it all.
Unless it's done in such a way that, either it's taken as a full payment to Wolfsburg and CFG settles over the contract period but reflects on both parties' books as a full credit and debit respectively, or Wolfsburg is able to make deals with CFG's pro-rata money to another club with the same payment arrangement as the preceding deal.
I have no idea what you are getting at? Amortisation is spread over the contract regardless of when or how actual payments are made. The cost of acquiring the "asset" is spread over it's useful life when it comes to calculating profit and loss. This is the same whether you pay cash upfront or buy on credit. Is kind of irrelevant anyway as even if we paid instalments so could they on buying a replacement.
KinkyKinkladze wrote:Fifty fucking mill. Outrageous we've agreed to pay that.
I know I've been negative over this transfer since the beginning but I really do not see him being worth even half that.
I really would love to be proved wrong though so over to you kev, show me up to be a mong, I beg thee.
Tim777 wrote:Socrates wrote:Tim777 wrote:blues2win wrote:Sport Bild say the move to City is imminent. De Bruyne's agent says he's spoken to Aloffs and a solution is being sought between the Clubs. I really don't think there's much doubt this will happen and I doubt it will go right to the wire because Wolfsburg need time to spend the cash. De Bruyne at least through his agent has made it very clear to Wolfsburg he wants to make the move.
But correct me if I'm wrong - the payment would be spread over the period of his contract according to this thread article viewtopic.php?f=119&t=50468 (refer to the point re. "amortisation") so Wolfsburg would have to wait a mighty long time to spend it all.
Unless it's done in such a way that, either it's taken as a full payment to Wolfsburg and CFG settles over the contract period but reflects on both parties' books as a full credit and debit respectively, or Wolfsburg is able to make deals with CFG's pro-rata money to another club with the same payment arrangement as the preceding deal.
I have no idea what you are getting at? Amortisation is spread over the contract regardless of when or how actual payments are made. The cost of acquiring the "asset" is spread over it's useful life when it comes to calculating profit and loss. This is the same whether you pay cash upfront or buy on credit. Is kind of irrelevant anyway as even if we paid instalments so could they on buying a replacement.
You are basically repeating what I had said in my last paragraph but in a different way. If you indeed had no idea what I was asking, why attempt to answer anyway? That's cuntish.
What the hell is that dude?
Blues2win provided some insight to the above that I was looking for.
DoomMerchant wrote:Tim777 wrote:Socrates wrote:Tim777 wrote:blues2win wrote:Sport Bild say the move to City is imminent. De Bruyne's agent says he's spoken to Aloffs and a solution is being sought between the Clubs. I really don't think there's much doubt this will happen and I doubt it will go right to the wire because Wolfsburg need time to spend the cash. De Bruyne at least through his agent has made it very clear to Wolfsburg he wants to make the move.
But correct me if I'm wrong - the payment would be spread over the period of his contract according to this thread article viewtopic.php?f=119&t=50468 (refer to the point re. "amortisation") so Wolfsburg would have to wait a mighty long time to spend it all.
Unless it's done in such a way that, either it's taken as a full payment to Wolfsburg and CFG settles over the contract period but reflects on both parties' books as a full credit and debit respectively, or Wolfsburg is able to make deals with CFG's pro-rata money to another club with the same payment arrangement as the preceding deal.
I have no idea what you are getting at? Amortisation is spread over the contract regardless of when or how actual payments are made. The cost of acquiring the "asset" is spread over it's useful life when it comes to calculating profit and loss. This is the same whether you pay cash upfront or buy on credit. Is kind of irrelevant anyway as even if we paid instalments so could they on buying a replacement.
You are basically repeating what I had said in my last paragraph but in a different way. If you indeed had no idea what I was asking, why attempt to answer anyway? That's cuntish.
What the hell is that dude?
Blues2win provided some insight to the above that I was looking for.
Soccs is right. Unless you're fucking 8 years old you're talking about this shit like it's fucking Monopoly.
You get these two fundamentals, right:
We pay for a player in whatever way clubs agree -- cash, players, payment plans, etc
A club can amortize said players costs over a contract term for the management of their finances.
What the fuck else are you curious about exactly?
cheers
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