Football stocks 2023: which football clubs can you buy shares in?
Football stocks move with results, revenues and scandals – enabling you to invest in your favourite team or its rivals. Find out how you can trade shares of football clubs on the stock market.
What are football stocks?
Football stocks are the shares of publicly listed football clubs. Most football clubs are privately owned, but around 20 clubs have opened share ownership up to the masses by trading on the stock market.
The term ‘football stocks’ is also used more broadly, to cover companies that are involved in sponsoring teams, events and providing equipment – including the likes of Adidas and Budweiser – and even companies in the hospitality industry that benefit from match days, such as JD Wetherspoons.
Why trade football stocks?
Buying football stocks might be seen as a bit of a novelty, just another way of supporting your favourite team. So, it’s easy to forget that football clubs are first and foremost businesses. Although they provide millions of fans with entertainment, they also seek to provide owners and shareholders with profit.
It’s worth pointing out that while some football clubs are open to investment, you’d need to own a significant number of shares to get any say over the management of the club and other decisions. For the most part, buying football stocks is just a means of getting exposure to the economy around one of the most popular pastimes.
Over the years, professional football clubs have shown they can achieve impressive revenue figures through global broadcast deals, ticket sales, sponsorships, merchandising and player transfers. The Deloitte Football Money League found that the average revenue of the 20 largest clubs was €460m in 2021/22, back to pre-Covid levels.
You can speculate on whether football shares will rise or fall in value with City Index using CFDs, so you can take advantage of periods of growth and decline.
Which football stocks can you trade?
Most of the top revenue-generating clubs are not currently available for public investment. Only three out of the 20 clubs in Deloitte’s Money League are exchange traded. These are:
- Manchester United
- Juventus
- Borussia Dortmund
There are other publicly traded football clubs on the market, but they’re much smaller in size so tend to have far lower liquidity. This can not only cause difficulty opening and closing positions but tends to lead to higher transaction costs too.
Examples include the two Glasgow clubs Celtic and Rangers, and two Rome teams, AS Roma and Lazio.
Manchester United (MANU)
Manchester United is the largest publicly traded football club. Its shares are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), under the ticker MANU.
The club’s shares previously traded on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) but left in 2005 after being bought by Malcolm Glazer and his family, who acquired 28.7% of Manchester United. MANU was relisted in 2012 on the NYSE.
As a popular international team, Man Utd is able to make money from multiple revenue streams, such as kit sales, sponsorship deals and broadcasting revenue. But its corporate returns are heavily influenced by match results – and ever since the departure of Sir Alex Ferguson in 2014, the club’s performance has been unimpressive.
When it listed on the NYSE, it was priced at $14 per share, which valued the club at $2.3 billion and made it the world’s most valuable team. Since then, Man Utd stock hasn’t had a clear trajectory. It bounced around until late 2016, when a bull market took it to its record high of $26.20 on 31 August 2018. But in the next few years, its share price slid – not helped by Covid-19 emptying stadiums and the economic crisis reducing spending.
In late 2022, it suddenly spiked off of the back of a planned takeover from Qatari Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al Thani. However, in 2023 that deal appeared to have collapsed, sending MANU stock back down again. Today, it has a market cap of around $2.9 billion.
Juventus (JUVE)
Juventus is the biggest of the three Italian clubs publicly traded on Milan’s Borsa Italiana, and the most successful club in Italian football, having won 36 Serie A titles.
The Agnelli family, owners of the Fiat automotive company, gained control of the club in 1923. They continue to hold a majority of the shares.
Juventus was listed on the Borsa Italiana in 2001, at €1.19 per share. But if you’d invested at the IPO, you’d have a negative return, as its shares have been trading below €1 since February 2020.
Juventus has faced its fair share of scandals that impacted its share price – most famously when it was caught up in a match-fixing scandal that saw them relegated from Serie A to Serie B in 2006. When the news broke, JUVE shares fell from €0.67 to lows of €0.39.
Despite recovering in the interim, the last few years have been poor for JUVE investors. Covid-19 and fresh scandals have seen its shares slide to below €0.30, giving the club a value of €675 million.
Borussia Dortmund (BVB)
Borussia Dortmund is a German football club, which listed its shares on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in 2000. It remains the only German football club to have done so.
At the time of its IPO, BVB shares traded at €11, but have been trading below €8 since 2020 – and in 2023 hit a new low below €4.
Interestingly, football and related activities aren’t Borussia Dortmund’s only revenue streams. The club makes money through hotel and car hire bookings, travel services by air, ship, and rail, and package tours offered via travel agents. The club also holds interest in a medical rehabilitation centre.
The club’s diversification had led to strong revenue growth over the years, but Dortmund’s profits peaked in 2017/2018. It’s since been in decline due to falling income from match operations, merchandising and catering. Borussia Dortmund generated revenue of €456.9 million in the 2021/2022 financial year.
What impacts the price of football stocks?
Football stocks, like all company shares, are driven by supply and demand. As with most businesses, these are influenced by:
- Company financials
A company’s financial statements are usually released to the public a few times a year during earnings season. The reports give investors insights into the current performance of a company as well as its future growth outlook. - Macroeconomics
Although not all macroeconomic data will cause share price fluctuations for football clubs, news of economic contractions can spell bad news. Financial downturns ultimately lead to lower consumer spending, with entertainment one of the hardest-hit industries, this can cause lower ticket sales and less money for fans to spend on merchandise. - Unforeseen events
Like a lot of sectors, the global pandemic rocked the football industry. It was estimated that as a result of COVID-19 clubs missed out on well over €2 billion of revenue over the 2019/20 and 2020/21 seasons. The impact of COVID-19 on football stocks wasn’t all negative, though. While ticket sales shrunk to an all-time low of €111m, aggregate broadcast revenues broke records at €4.5 billion.
But there are some factors that are unique to football stocks, such as:
- Game results
The result of individual matches, and tournaments in general, change sentiment toward the clubs. Although they have little direct impact on the value of the company itself, when a team wins, its perceived worth increases, and the share price can be buoyed.
- Signing of players
As with other types of news, the signing of players can boost sentiment around a club, while the selling of a fan favourite can have the opposite effect.
- Player and team scandals
When there’s a controversial event involving a player – such as infidelity or drug use – or the entire team, such as match fixing, it can cause share prices to drop as the consequences could impact the team later on. Penalties for team-wide scandals have included relegations in the past, which lead to a loss of revenue.
- Sponsorship deals
Large sponsorship deals for the club can boost revenue significantly. Companies pay hefty amounts to be featured on the club’s kit and to show ads in the stadium on match days.
Can you trade football tournaments?
You cannot trade football tournaments like the World Cup and Euros directly, as there are no publicly traded country football teams. However, they can have a significant effect on individual stocks.
In 2022, for example, the World Cup was scheduled to take place in winter for the first time in history, which had a variety of impacts on the event.
Firstly, it meant that Premier League clubs put the brakes on matches while their players jetted off to represent their countries. Although they suffered significant revenue losses due to no match-day sales, they were compensated by FIFA to the tune of £8,500 per day.
UK clubs, including Manchester City, Chelsea, Tottenham and Manchester United, were estimated to pocket over £1.5 million for allowing their players to represent their countries in the group stages alone.
Secondly, the impact on the broader economy was less pronounced. Usually, the hospitality industry in the UK sees a huge increase as fans flock to pubs and other venues to watch the matches. In 2022, the cold weather and cost-of-living crisis lessened that impact.
World Cup stocks
Although there are no publicly traded football teams at the country level, there are other ways to get exposure to World Cups such as:
- Location-specific companies - like airlines and other travel stocks could see a boost thanks to the influx of football fans to the country
- Official World Cup sponsors - including Adidas, Visa, Hyundai and Coca-Cola, could also see a boost due to high profile position of their advertisements
- Hospitality stocks - such as JD Wetherspoons, typically see a boost in revenue
How to trade stocks with City Index
You can trade stocks with City Index using CFDs, with spreads from 0.1%. Follow these easy steps to start trading now.
- Open a City Index account or log in if you’re already a customer
- Search for the company you want to trade in our award-winning platform
- Choose your position and size, and your stop and limit levels
- Place the trade
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