mono, that's net revenue after deducting amortised franchise fees.here is the revenue flow for 2010
From the looks of it 8 teams earned around 3.5bn indian rupees. that's around 80mn USD. so 10mn USD per team. even from that estimate it will take about 35 years for the new franchises to break even. So my intuition was correct. These teams are obscenely over valued. This type of valuation is fine only as long as the IPL can sustain their momentum from 2010 in the subsequent years.
thanks. you're correct. I missed that.mono, that's net revenue after deducting amortised franchise fees.
as I suspected, the franchises arent paying upfront amt of the bidding amount, but is spread over the franchise period, which makes business sense
To begin with, the cost of acquiring a franchise is
fairly low. For instance, if Reliance Industries won
the Mumbai team bid for $111.9 million, it has to
pay IPL only a tenth of that amount. In RIL's case,
that is $12 million a year. And that is a team's
biggest expenditure. Player wages, fixed at $5
million then, is now capped at $9 million. Logistics
and administrative costs account for another $2-3
million
If you are still unimpressed, consider this: teams
get nearly $10 million a year from IPL's central
broadcasting and sponsorship pool. It is their
biggest source of revenue, contributing almost
70% of income. The teams keep earnings from
ticket sales, sponsorship deals they strike on their
own, and income from merchandise such as
replica shirts and sundry souvenirs.
Together, these returns offset the personnel costs.
4.2 for the week ending 23rd April.What is the TRP like at this point in time?
Thanks. So far so good.4.2 for the week ending 23rd April.
Yeah, as of now none of the franchises are worried. In every year, the TRP dips as IPL grinds on and on, and then picks up again towards the end when the battle for places in the knockout heats up.Thanks. So far so good.
MUCH lesser than last year thoughThanks. So far so good.
the tv revenues for ipl are basically locked in for the next 7 years. any risk from fall in eyeballs and such will be borne by set max, the broadcaster.The accounts of none of the IPL franchises are not in public domain. Despite all the brave claims by the owners, AFAIK, the IPL franchises (except for KKR in the inaugural year) have made operational losses every year. The two new franchises (which have to pay out 30 million dollars as fees, three times as much as the older franchises) will make astronomical losses for the foreseeable future.
The equations I think are a little different. For example, take Sahara which bought Pune. If they didn't have an IPL franchise, the money that they would have spent on advertisements to get an equivalent number of eyeballs would be greater than the loss that they expect to make in running the franchise. Which is why every franchise wants a longer IPL with more games, though the number of games do not affect their share from the broadcasting and sponsorship pool which is a fixed amount per year.
The whole economics revolves around the Indian TV viewership for IPL. If the TRP drops, simultaneously the advertising expenses will drop and the operating losses would rise. The precise number is guesswork, but I think that about 3.0 or so is the bare minimum TRP that they would need to keep the losses within manageable limits.
Not really a surprise. We've just won cricket's biggest trophy; IPL doesn't even matter.MUCH lesser than last year though
Christian was just plain weird, I still find it ridiculous that it turned into a bidding war for him.I don't think too much thought went into some of those signings. James Hopes, Dan Christian, Kierron Pollard, Eoin Morgan, Doug the Rug. These blokes are not up to it and are an enormous waste of cash. What is going on?
And Ten Doeschate batting at No.7 in the IPL? When is he going to get a chance to influence his side from there? He has to bat at least at 5, more probably 4.
Danny Morrison on commentary? Don't quite think he is the new Benaud!