Arsenal transfer news
Transfer News: Arsenal Ready to Listen on Nwaneri and Lewis-Skelly
Transfer News: Arsenal are reportedly prepared to listen to offers for Ethan Nwaneri and Myles Lewis-Skelly, which does not mean either player is being pushed out, but does mean supporters cannot assume every Hale End talent is untouchable. This transfer news has unsettled a fanbase that watched both teenagers break records in the same Champions League semi-final against PSG less than a year ago.
The Financial Logic Behind the Transfer News
Reports suggest the club may listen to offers for both Nwaneri and Lewis-Skelly this summer, with a combined valuation of roughly £100 million being mooted for the pair, with selling academy graduates representing pure profit under the Premier League’s Profit and Sustainability Rules.
Arsenal spent approximately £250 million on permanent signings last summer, and there looks set to be outgoings following that spend to ensure the club meets the Premier League’s new squad cost ratio rules. Because both players graduated from Hale End, their book value on the balance sheet sits at zero, so every pound from a sale flows directly as profit.
Nwaneri has struggled to find a regular path into the starting XI during his loan at Marseille, while Lewis-Skelly has found himself third in the pecking order at left-back. That context cuts both ways, you can argue Arsenal are simply being realistic about two talented players whose short-term roles are not fully settled.
My View: What Should Arsenal Do Ahead of 2026/27?
Realistically, Arsenal will sell one and keep one this summer. Lewis-Skelly, valued at around €43 million by market trackers and currently earning just £45,000 per week, represents the more logical retention given his positional versatility and age. Nwaneri, meanwhile, has failed to nail down regular football even on loan, and Borussia Dortmund and Premier League clubs are already interested with genuine interest.
Transfer News: Arsenal’s £130m transfer gamble after Champions League final run
Cashing in on the 19-year-old for £45–55 million, reinvesting into a proven, top-flight winger, serves Arsenal’s title ambitions far better than stockpiling talented players who sit on the periphery. Arteta needs depth with certainty, not potential sitting idle. Keeping both would be an admirable sentiment; selling both would be commercially cold. The smart middle ground exists, and the Gunners would do well to find it before this transfer news window closes around them.