
Chelsea have confirmed that they are in talks with the European Union on their sustainable finance after violating the possibilities of the fair financial game laws of the board of directors.
The Blues are in talks with the European Union over a settlement related to their financial results for the year until the end of June 2024, when the club made a pre-tax of £128.4m after Todd Bohli took the club’s Cleartic consortium.
The number is worth £200 million in the most successful women’s team of “respect” as a separate man from the men’s team in a contract with Badluco at the end of the season.
The value of the £200m, which will be a record number for women’s team, has not yet been approved by the European Union or the Premier League.
Chelsea announced on Saturday morning that the club had “included the European Union on the reduced factors affecting their organizations.
UEFA laws prohibit any transactions of the relevant party, so it means that the money obtained from the sale of women’s teams is not included in the number of their fair financial games.
It also bans the club by selling two hotels to a sister company used last season to comply with the rules of profits and sustainability of the Premier League.
Last season’s accounts, the sales of hotels in the city of Captorn and Millenim at Chelsea were charged £76.3m. After the Premier League assessment, the value of the two hotels was reduced to £6m.
Over the past three years, clubs that will participate in European competitions will allow the EU’s 200 million euros (170.1 million pounds) will be allowed.
In the 2023/24 season, Chelsea spent £553m on players and earned £208m from the sale of players.