One of the main concerns of the franchises is that the franchise fee they pay to the PCB every year is in US dollars – the value of the Pakistani rupee against the dollar has plummeted, however, over the last six months. The first owners of the Multan franchise, who pulled out after one season, cited the dollar fluctuation as one of the main reasons for their leaving. The Multan Sultans are believed to have made a loss of approximately PKR 400 million in the one season they played in 2018.The other big concern is the taxes paid on the franchise fee. According to the figures in the letter, franchise fees made up anywhere from 30% to 91% of a franchise’s total costs in 2016 and 2017.”The PCB is currently invoicing franchises by adding up Sales Tax [16%] amount which is recovered by PCB from the franchises…,” explains the letter, sent in early December by the PCB’s chief operating officer Subhan Ahmed.”In addition to the above, the Federal Government’s withholding tax currently chargeable at 10% of the franchise fee is also levied by the PCB and deposited with the Federal Board of Revenue. The amount of franchisee fee plus taxes adds to the financial hardships of the franchisee who in addition to these, also incur costs of players’ match fees, logistics etc in the UAE and Pakistan. Thus it adds to their financial burden since they are incurring heavy losses.”PSL is still in its nascent years and unless measures/steps are taken to protect the brand there is a risk that the franchisees will start pulling out of the PSL. We have already have one such instance when Multan Sultans team’s contract had to be terminated on account of failure to meet their financial obligations.”The PCB makes the case that once the league moves back to Pakistan properly – they are planning to play eight games in Pakistan this season – then not only will the franchises be able to move towards breaking even (because of lower costs), but it will also generate “higher economic activity in the country”.

Until then, the PCB has asked the Punjab government to provide tax relief to the franchises, sponsors and rights holders for a period of five years.The Multan franchise has since found a new owner, a consortium led by Ali Tareen agreeing to pay a franchise fee of USD 6.35 million – 144.5% more expensive than the Karachi franchise – when the PCB’s base price was set at USD 5.21 million. That indicates, if nothing else, that investors still see value in the brand.The five original franchises have a 10-year ownership agreement with the PCB, while Multan have a seven-year agreement (the PSL model doesn’t allow perpetuity rights). For teams, the major sources of earning are the central pool revenues from media rights and central sponsorships, and gate money – which is shared out equally among the franchises. The sale of TV rights and title sponsorship this year – for USD 36 million and USD 14 million respectively – should, according to one PCB official, help at least two low-valued franchises start making profits.

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