Top News
Next Story
Newszop

Newcastle United have green light on huge Premier League spending ahead of crunch meeting

Send Push

Newcastle United will join its Premier League counterparts in voting on a potential rule changes that could grant them through revised sponsorship regulations.

On Nov. 22, CEO Darren Eales will represent the club at a top-flight meeting at London's Nobu Hotel in Portman Square. The rules governing Associated Party Transactions (APT), which involve deals with companies closely linked to club owners, were altered shortly after Newcastle's 2021 takeover, sparking the ire of then co-owner Amanda Staveley.

Following 's successful legal challenge against the, which had blocked deals with Etihad and First Abu Dhabi Bank, the rules are now poised for revision. Should these spending restrictions be relaxed, as and Manchester City hope, the Public Investment Fund (PIF) is prepared to provide substantial backing to the Magpies in the transfer market.

To date, only Profitability and Sustainability Rules (PSR) and Financial Fair Play (FFP) regulations have limited United's spending, but understands that PIF remains "as committed to the club as ever".

In Riyadh, the club's affluent financial supporters are closely monitoring developments from the London meetings. As reported by on October 29, Eddie Howe is expected to receive funding for January transfers, according to insider sources.

Newcastle's heavy hitters, PIF, with an 85% slice of the Magpies pie, boast a sprawling empire of partnerships from club backers Sela to titans like Arab Bank and Riyadh Air, not to mention their property portfolio. The narrative is that Sela's sponsorship purse strings might have been looser had the Premier League's rulebook not played hardball, echoing Man City's courtroom play.

In the latest twist, the rulebook's changed its tune; 'fair market value' has lost some rigidity—no longer a debate on what 'would' sell but what 'could', with "normal conditions" scrubbed from the script.

A comprehensive 14-page rundown has landed on the desks at St. James' Park and their top-tier brethren, outlining a now more bendy stance on endorsements—a win for both Newcastle and title-holders City, who could see it as carte blanche for lucrative brand deals bolstering their PSR strategy.

Loving Newspoint? Download the app now