BURNLEY, ENGLAND - Wednesday, December 5, 2018: Liverpool's manager J¸rgen Klopp before the FA Premier League match between Burnley FC and Liverpool FC at Turf Moor. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

How Liverpool’s quiet January transfer window is part of a growing trend in the Premier League

Premier League clubs spent £180 million during the January transfer window – the first time the figure has fallen since 2012, according to football finance experts at Deloitte.

Nearly a third of the total expenditure was accounted for by Chelsea’s £55 million outlay for Christian Pulisic from Borussia Dortmund.

Last year’s winter transfer window saw top flight clubs shell out £430 million, with big money moves including Virgil van Dijk at £75 million and Aymeric Laporte for £50 million.

However, most of the major transactions this January saw players leaving Premier League sides, with Brahim Diaz moving from Manchester City to Real Madrid for £15.5 million, Mousa Dembele moving to Guangzhou R&F from Tottenham for £11 million and Schalke shelling out £9.6 million for Manchester City’s Rabbi Matondo.

Tim Bridge, director in the Sports Business Group at Deloitte, said: “As we approach a decisive phase of the season, Premier League clubs’ January transfer spending has been relatively muted in comparison to what we have seen in previous years.”

January spending was at £225 million in 2011 but fell to £60 million in the following year.

It doubled the following year, and remained steady at £130 million in 2014 and 2015, before jumping to £175 million, £215 million and £430 million over the last three seasons.

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp (left) and goalkeeper Alisson (Richard Sellers/EMPICS Sport)

The £180 million transfer bill means total gross spending by Premier League clubs in the 2018/19 season is an estimated £1.4 billion, the second-highest season ever following record spend of £1.9 billion in 2017/18.

Other findings from Deloitte included the so-called big six accounting for 43% of the January expenditure, lower than last January when this figure stood at 62%.

Equally, those in the bottom six of the table spent £20 million – compared to £70 million in the same period last season.

Championship clubs spent £60 million in the window, more than double last year’s total of £30 million, Deloitte added.

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