Manchester United Ltd. (MANU) delivered a mixed bag of results Thursday that tells an interesting story about cost discipline versus top-line growth. The football club's first-quarter fiscal 2026 numbers showed revenue taking a step backward, but operating profit swinging sharply positive as the financial benefits of recent restructuring efforts started showing up on the balance sheet.
Here's the scorecard: quarterly revenue came in at 140.3 million pounds (about $189.28 million), down from 143.1 million pounds a year earlier. That 2% decline also fell well short of Wall Street's $214.99 million estimate. Not exactly the kind of top-line performance that gets investors excited.
Where the Revenue Softness Came From
The revenue decline had a few culprits. Commercial revenue dropped 1.3% year-over-year due to changes in the club's commercial partner mix. Matchday revenue slipped 1.1%, a relatively modest decline. The biggest hit came from broadcasting revenue, which fell 4.5%. That drop was primarily driven by the men's first team participating in the UEFA Europa League during the prior year quarter, while there was no UEFA competition in the current quarter. Tournament appearances matter for the bottom line.
The Profit Picture Looks Better
Here's where things get more interesting. Manchester United posted a quarterly operating profit of 13.0 million pounds, compared to a loss of 6.9 million pounds in the same period last year. That's a meaningful swing, and it reflects the payoff from cost-cutting measures the club has been implementing.
Adjusted EBITDA reached 26.9 million pounds, up 13.5% from the prior year. The company reported an adjusted net loss of 2 cents per share, which sounds bad until you realize analysts were expecting a loss of 9 cents. Beating expectations by 7 cents is nothing to sneeze at.
One headwind worth noting: net finance costs swung to 21.4 million pounds from 8.6 million pounds in income a year earlier. The culprit? Unfavorable foreign exchange movements that triggered unrealized losses on unhedged USD borrowings, versus gains in the prior period. Currency volatility strikes again.
What Management Is Saying
CEO Omar Berrada emphasized that the difficult decisions made over the past year have created a sustainably lower cost base and a more streamlined, efficient organization. The goal is positioning the club to improve both sporting and commercial performance over the long term. Those restructuring efforts have also enabled investment in both the men's and women's teams, which are currently sitting in sixth and third place in the Premier League and Women's Super League, respectively.
Looking Ahead
For fiscal 2026, Manchester United reiterated its revenue guidance of 640.00 million pounds to 660.00 million pounds, compared to analyst expectations of 655.34 million pounds. The company also maintained its adjusted EBITDA guidance in the range of 180 million pounds to 200 million pounds.
MANU shares were down 0.13% at $15.37 at the time of publication on Thursday.




