Of course I'm not an accountant, I might ask mine to take a look and see what he thinks.
Got my accountant to take a look and his response was 'more cause for concern than celebration' - he's London based and not a fan of CCFC or Wasps for what its worth.
Few points he raised:
attendance up 48% but ticket revenues only up by 19%, potential indicator of excessive number of free or cheap tickets not leading to paid ticket sales;
f&b spend for rugby seems low given pitch side drinking is allowed and the stadium is often open for several hours before and after games;
no clear identification of how improvements will be made and how will they increase the revenue to the level required;
everything being paid for either via increased debt or sponsorship, queried if this was because Wasps don't have the finance themselves;
ebitda currently compared to covenants of the bond, he lost me at this point to be honest but it seemed to be basically that the bonds have guarantees of how the business will perform and there will need to be an improvement to achieve that. apparently failing on any one of those would not be a minor issue.
in the longer term how will the bonds be repaid if 7 figure losses continue. I mentioned taking out another bond and he said that was like getting a new credit card as you can't pay the bill from your old one, the cost of borrowing increases and your overall debt goes up until you reach a point where you can't get another new card. also mentioned there being no guarantee what state the economy will be in if and when they need to refinance, potentially a higher interest rate may need to be offered.
Asked him what he would think if he was SISU's accountant and what he'd be advising and he said not to enter into any long term deals. That the accounts indicate its not a foregone conclusion the project will ultimately be a success so he would advise them not to enter into any agreements which could benefit Wasps in anything less than the immediate future.