Barça Space

Barça flattens the path to finish the Camp Nou works

The Barça club maintains its credit rating before asking members for permission to incur more debt

The Barça coach Hansi Flick and president Joan Laporta on a recent visit to the works of the new Spotify Camp Nou.
2 min

BarcelonaThe very intense heatwave that crushes Barcelona these days the Camp Nou works do not stop. The work these summer days is concentrated on the third tier, built from scratch in recent months, and also on the structure that will support the stadium's roof. It is planned (and assumed, hence the improvement of the fair play of the League) that this third ring will reopen in phases during the next season and will raise the stadium's capacity to over 100,000 spectators. If the schedule is respected, the installation of the roof will begin next summer, will extend for a minimum of four months, and therefore, will require another exile of the Barça men's first team to Montjuïc, which is the only space with enough capacity to cover the needs of a club that bases a large part of its business model on the exploitation of the ticketing.

But for the medium and long-term economic and patrimonial forecasts to be met, Barça needs short-term financing. As this newspaper reported at the beginning of June, the board of directors chaired by Joan Laporta will request permission from the members to ask for more money to finish the works at the Camp Nou. There is a lack of liquidity to complete the integral reform of the stadium after the 1,450 million raised in 2023 through Goldman Sachs were not enough. The deviation exceeds 350 million, not including the Palau Blaugrana, which still does not have a definitive project and was excluded from the first credit operation. Sources from Barcelona assure ARA that an extraordinary assembly is planned to discuss the Espai Barça above all. The date is not set, but the calendar for the end of August is being studied to coincide with a home league match. The most likely option, therefore, is the Barça-Rayo scheduled for the last weekend of that month.

Due to a lack of concrete details about this very important vote, this Wednesday the international agency Morningstar DBRS confirmed the BBB credit rating of the Barça club. This is very welcome news at the Arístides Maillol offices. Morningstar believes that Barça's increased debt due to the final phase of the Camp Nou works is "temporary" and makes an optimistic forecast from 2028, when the new stadium is expected to operate at full capacity and guarantee a sustained increase in revenue. The Canada-founded rating agency also applauds Barça's commercial positioning (record sales of shirts and official products and sponsorships) and the competitiveness of its professional teams.

Real Madrid does not have a public credit rating

Maintaining the BBB rating paves the way for Laporta to obtain more financing to complete the new Camp Nou. It is the second-lowest credit rating considered investment grade. Above it are the ratings BBB+, A-, A, A+, AA-, AA, AA+, and AAA, with the latter being the best of all. Below BBB are the speculative-grade ratings (from worst to best): D, C-, C, C+, CC-, CC, CC+, CCC-, CCC, CCC+, B-, B, B+, BB-, BB, and BB+. For example, the credit rating of the Spanish state is A, while that of Italy, Greece, or Hungary is BBB. Among football clubs, not many expose themselves to a public rating. That Barça does so is a sign of transparency for the arrival of investors and to obtain financial products under the best conditions. It should be remembered that three years ago it closed the operation with Goldman Sachs with a BBB rating and an average interest of 5.5%.

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