Why The New Price Of MLS Talent Has European Clubs Hunting For Bargains

by Jeff Hash on July 26, 2008 · 1 comment

For the National Bas­ket­ball Asso­ci­a­tion, it has been a turn-around of a sit­u­a­tion it has long held advan­tage of.  In the last cou­ple of weeks, the league has seen sev­eral cur­rent play­ers or draft picks decide to turn down the chance to play in the NBA in order to move to, or stay in, Europe, and more are rumored to be con­sid­er­ing the same.  What makes this unusual is that these are late first-round picks or, in the case of Josh Chil­dress, a career 11 point, 6 rebound per game player.  In other words, not play­ers exist­ing on the league’s fringes.  What has caused this?  One rea­son is an increase in money avail­able to Euro­pean clubs from richer owners.

But there is a sec­ond rea­son, and its one that is also set to take a bite out of Major League Soc­cer as well.  Dar­ren Rov­ell, sports busi­ness expert for CNBC, called it a poten­tial ‘great equal­izer’ in player salaries.  That rea­son?  The recent steep decline of the US dollar.

Cer­tainly, the US dol­lar has traded unfa­vor­ably with the Euro, the stan­dard cur­rency of most of Europe, for roughly the last six years.  How­ever, it has now quickly reached a level that seems shock­ing to believe.  At this time in 2006, the going exchange rate was around $1.25 to 1 Euro.  Now, the exchange rate stands at $1.57, a jump of over 30 cents dur­ing that time span.

How does this affect MLS?  Two ways.  First, it makes it cheaper for Euro­pean clubs to match up or exceed the salaries that MLS offers to its play­ers.  Cur­rently, the max­i­mum salary allowed in MLS for a non-designated player is $300,000.  Two years ago, equalling that salary took just over 238,500 Euros.  Last year, it would have taken 218,800 Euros.  Today, match­ing the league max­i­mum will only set a club back 191,300 Euros; a greater than 12% drop in the last year, and a 20% decrease over two years.

Sec­ond, it makes it cheaper for Euro­pean clubs to make large trans­fer offers for higher-end tal­ent.  Last month, Jozy Alti­dore trans­ferred from New York Red Bulls to Span­ish side Vil­lareal for $10 mil­lion, the high­est fee ever paid for an MLS player.  On the day the con­tract for the move was com­pleted (June 11th), 10 mil­lion dol­lars was the equiv­a­lent of 6.4 mil­lion Euros.  Go back to the same day last year, and that same $10 mil­lion would have cost Vil­lareal 7.5 mil­lion Euros instead.

With less cur­rency needed to match salary demands and trans­fer pay­ments, there is now less risk and more upside than ever before for Euro­pean clubs to make deals for MLS tal­ent.  And recent trans­fers show that clubs are begin­ning to pounce.  Just in the last month, we had the Alti­dore deal.  Else­where, FC Dal­las mid­fielder Juan Toja is report­edly being scooped up by Roman­ian side Steaua Bucharest, while team­mate Kenny Cooper is being hunted by mul­ti­ple clubs.  And Brad Guzan, for the sec­ond time, is await­ing a move to England’s Aston Villa.  Go back to this past off-season, and you’ll see a lineup of Euro­pean trav­ellers that includes Bryan Arguez, Chris Gbandi, Eddie John­son, Pat Noo­nan, Clarence Good­son, and Nate Jaqua, who all jumped to big­ger money at Ful­ham, Hertha Berlin, Aus­trian side SCR Altach, and three dif­fer­ent Nor­we­gian clubs.

The good, and bad, news is that the exchange rate, in cur­rent trading, looks to remain flat for the next 18 months.  Futures con­tracts trad­ing today for Decem­ber 2009 have an exchange rate of $1.53 per Euro.  That means the price won’t get cheaper for Euro­pean clubs, but it also means that the cur­rent dis­count on MLS play­ers will be avail­able for the forsee­able future.  So, MLS now faces two pos­si­bil­i­ties: either increase the amount of money it is spend­ing to keep its cur­rent crop of play­ers, or accept that Euro­pean clubs will con­tinue to scour the league for more bar­gains in the forsee­able future.  Either way, the cur­rent cur­rency crunch will leave a heavy mark on the league for years to come.

GD Star Rat­ing
load­ing…

Leave a Comment

1 trackback

Previous post:

Next post: