Manchester United chief executive Omar Berrada said the club are reaping the “positive financial impact of our off-pitch transformation” as profits rise, but their latest financial figures show the club’s debt is approaching £1.3billion.

Although United’s men’s team are without European football this season, they generated an operating profit of £32.6million in the first six months of the fiscal year, compared with a £3.9m loss for the same period last year.

The operating profit for the most recent quarter was £19.6m, compared to £3.1m in the same period last year.

Sir Jim Ratcliffe walks
Sir Jim Ratcliffe oversaw a widescale redundancy programme and restructuring of the club (Lucy North/PA)

Those numbers come after minority owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe oversaw a wide scale redundancy programme and restructuring of the club, and in announcing their latest figures, United said they were seeing “the positive impact of operating cost and headcount reduction programmes implemented in the prior year”.

However, the club also drew down a further £25million on their revolving credit facility, with that debt now standing at £295.7million.

In addition to the outstanding debt linked to the Glazer family’s leveraged takeover, and more than £500million worth of other listed liabilities, the club’s debts stood at £1.29billion at the end of last year.

United paid £13.9million to service those debts in the last quarter, down from £37.6million for the same period the previous year.

Those debts indicate the pressing need to return to elite European competition next season – with Michael Carrick having guided the men’s team back into the top four of the Premier League since Ruben Amorim’s sacking.

The women’s team under Marc Skinner sit second in the Women’s Super League, and have reached the quarter-finals of the Champions League.

Omar Berrada leaving a Premier League shareholders' meeting in London last year
Omar Berrada feels the results “demonstrate the underlying strength of our business” (Ben Whitley/PA)

“We are now seeing the positive financial impact of our off-pitch transformation materialise both in our costs and profitability,” Berrada said. “We continue to take a football-first approach and invest in both our men’s and women’s first teams.

“On the pitch our men’s team sits fourth in the Premier League and our women’s team are second in the Women’s Super League, as well as reaching the League Cup final and the quarter-final of the UEFA Women’s Champions League.

“Today’s results demonstrate the underlying strength of our business as we continue to push for the best football results possible for our men’s and women’s teams.”

United’s total revenues for the second quarter of the financial year were £190.3m, down from £198.7m for the equivalent period the previous year, with commercial revenue dropping from £85.1m to £78.5m and matchday revenues down from £52m to £49.5m.

United say they remain on track to record revenues of between £640m and £660m for the full fiscal year.