Company type | Investment Funds |
---|---|
ISIN | PTYEVLIM0004 |
Industry | Association football |
Founded | 30 September 2009 (2009-09-30) |
Defunct | 30 September 2014 (2014-09-30) |
Headquarters | Portugal |
Benfica Stars Fund was a football investment fund belonging to Portuguese club Benfica's SAD, a public limited sports company responsible for the financial management of the club's professional football team.
The fund was set up by ESAF – Espírito Santo Fundos de Investimento Mobiliário SA on 30 September 2009. At first the fund had 8,000,000 unit each with €5 each.
Benfica Stars Fund was the fourth investment fund of Portuguese football, after First Portuguese Football Players Funds in the 2000s. Moreover, Benfica was the last of the "Big Three" clubs in Portugal to set-up an investment fund. The club sold part of the economic rights of 12 players to the fund, in exchange for cash. If Benfica sold the players, Benfica would give back a percentage of transfer fees received to the fund. In October 2009, S.L. Benfica SAD invested €6 million to the fund, accounted for 15% of total units.[1] The club then sold more players to the fund, made the subscription, in turn became an injection of asset instead of cash.
After the sale of David Luiz in January and Fábio Coentrão in summer 2011, the fund acquired five players from Benfica instead of keeping cash for €6.135 million.
As an asset, the rights were amortized proportionally according to the length of contract (between players and club). Moreover, the fund also bore the admission fee related to player transaction, tax arose, agent fee and FIFA solidarity mechanism (5% of transfer fee distributed to youth clubs) proportionality to the ownership ratio. Thus, to make the fund profitable, the club had to sell the player above the fee that the fund acquired. The club had to ask the fund if the club had to sell the player below the reference price of the fund.[2]
On 31 July 2014, Benfica SAD (which owned 15%) completed the acquisition of Benfica Stars Fund by spending around €28.9 million for 85% (decreased from €34 million in 2009), purchasing the remaining economic rights of nine players (with a valuation of €5,079,437), as well as €21,704,300 deposits and future receivable from bonus clauses.[3][4]
Date | Players | Nationality | Percentage | Price | Departed date | Departed team | Departed revenue (adj.) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 September 2009 | David Luiz | Brazil | 25% | €4.5M[5] | 31 January 2011 | Chelsea | €6.25M[6] + €0.5M (value of Matić)[7] |
30 September 2009 | Rúben Amorim | Portugal | 50% | €1.5M | 8 September 2014 | Bought back | Lump sum[3] |
30 September 2009 | David Simão | Portugal | 25% | €0.375M | 31 July 2013 | Arouca | €375,000[8] |
30 September 2009 | Ángel Di María | Argentina | 20% | €4.4M | 29 June 2010 | Real Madrid | €5.0M + Bonus[9] |
30 September 2009 | Javi García | Spain | 20% | €3.4M | 31 August 2012 | Manchester City | €4.0M + Bonus[10] |
30 September 2009 | Roderick Miranda | Portugal | 25% | €2.0M | 31 July 2013 | Rio Ave | Undisclosed[11] |
30 September 2009 | Nélson Oliveira | Portugal | 25% | €2.0M | 8 September 2014 | Bought back | Lump sum[3] |
30 September 2009 | Leandro Pimenta | Portugal | 25% | €0.375M | 31 July 2013 | Gil Vicente | Undisclosed[12] |
30 September 2009 | José Shaffer | Argentina | 40% | €1.4M | 27 September 2012 | Bought back (Released) | €120,000[13][14] |
30 September 2009 | Urreta | Uruguay | 20% | €1.2M | 8 September 2014 | Bought back (Released) | Lump sum[3] |
30 September 2009 | Miguel Vítor | Portugal | 25% | €0.5M | 30 June 2013 | Released | €0[15] |
30 September 2009 | Ishmael Yartey | Ghana | 25% | €0.375M | 19 July 2012 | Sochaux | €562,500[14][16] |
10 February 2010 | Óscar Cardozo | Paraguay | 20% | €4.0M | 4 August 2014 | Trabzonspor | €1M + bonus [17] |
10 February 2010 | Fábio Coentrão | Portugal | 20% | €3.0M | 5 July 2011 | Real Madrid | €6.0M[18] |
10 February 2010 | Felipe Menezes | Brazil | 30% | €1.5M | 31 July 2013 | Palmeiras | €1.5M[8] |
10 February 2010 | Rafik Halliche | Algeria | 20% | €0.4M | 23 August 2010 | Fulham[19] | €511,211[20] |
10 February 2010 | Maxi Pereira | Uruguay | 30% | €1.35M[21] | 8 September 2014 | Bought back | Lump sum[3] |
20 June 2010 | Airton | Brazil | 40% | €3.0M[22] | 8 September 2014 | Bought back | Lump sum[3] |
20 June 2010 | Alan Kardec | Brazil | 50% | €3.0M | 1 May 2014 | São Paulo | €2.25M[23] |
30 September 2011 | Bruno César | Brazil | 15% | €1.035M[24] | 21 January 2013 | Al Ahli | €1.035M[8] |
30 September 2011 | Franco Jara | Argentina | 10% | €0.6M | 8 September 2014 | Bought back | Lump sum[3] |
30 September 2011 | Nicolás Gaitán | Argentina | 15% | €2.025M | 8 September 2014 | Bought back | Lump sum[3] |
30 September 2011 | Ezequiel Garay | Argentina | 10% | €1.175M | 25 June 2014 | Zenit Saint Petersburg | €600,000 [25] |
30 September 2011 | Nolito | Spain | 20% | €1.3M | 31 July 2013 | Celta de Vigo | €1.3M[8][26] |
28 June 2013 | Rodrigo | Spain | 24% | €3.6M | 31 January 2014 | Valencia | €7.2M[23] |
28 June 2013 | André Gomes | Portugal | 20% | €0.8M | 31 January 2014 | Valencia | €3M[23] |
28 June 2013 | Filip Đuričić | Serbia | 20% | €2.0M | 8 September 2014 | Bought back | Lump sum[3] |
28 June 2013 | Miralem Sulejmani | Serbia | 25% | €1.25M | 8 September 2014 | Bought back | Lump sum[3] |
Total | €52.06M | €45,783,148 + undisclosed |