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Juve, record balance sheet but no dividend

Revenues in the last financial year exceeded half a billion euros, with a profit of 42 million which, however, will be put in reserve: in fact, the next market does not foresee large capital gains like that of Pogba who moved 100 million.

Record balance sheet for Juventus: in the last six years the turnover of the Turin company has almost tripled (now it is more than half a billion euros), and in particular the latest balance sheet, approved yesterday by the shareholders' meeting, is the best of last 50 years, with a profit of 42 million. Despite this, the club led by Andrea Agnelli, the proponent of this financial boom that also saw the construction of the stadium and the mega capital gain with the sale of Pogba to Manchester United, has decided not to distribute dividends to shareholders.

In 2010, when the saga of the young Agnelli and Beppe Marotta began, Juve was – financially – a mid-level European club, with a turnover of 172 million. They exploded to 341 in 2016, up to this year's record, under a management that even on the field won almost everything that could be won, apart from the Champions League. Despite the excellent numbers, there will be no dividends for shareholders, to the displeasure of the small ultras-shareholders who crowded the meeting: in fact, next year there will be no super capital gains to pump up the balance sheet and it is probable that the accounts will red, after three years. So it's better to stock up: the 42 million will be put in reserve.

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