Formation and purchase of the club The Exeter City Supporters' Trust was formed on 6 May 2000, following the club's 2–1 home defeat to
Shrewsbury Town, after hearing of the work of the
Northampton Town Supporters' Trust. However, it soon became obvious that the directors of the club only saw the Trust as a "cash cow" and had no intention of giving up any real power or allowing any insight into how the club was being run. This led to a change of the Trust's constitution in February 2003 from supporting the club to owning it. The Trust had originally been set up to raise enough money to sign forward
Gary Alexander, who had previously been at the club on loan. At the time of the change, the Trust had 211 members and around £11,000. On 14 May 2003, shortly after Exeter City's relegation to the
Conference, John Russell and Mike Lewis (the chairman and vice-chairman at the time) were arrested over allegations of financial irregularities at the club. It later emerged that
Uri Geller (who was co-chairman of the club at the time) was one of the people who had contacted the police. After Russell and Lewis' arrest, then Trust chairman Ian Huxham, chief executive Terry Pavey and Julian Tagg, all of which were prominent members of the Supporters' Trust at the time, were appointed as directors of the club. At this point, it seemed likely that then owner Ivor Doble would be asked to hand over his shareholding to the Trust. Shortly after, Doble asked the Trust to take over the day-to-day running of the club. In September 2003, Dr David Treharne (who would later become the chairman of the Trust), his solicitor Simon Armitage, Ed Probert and Martin Ellicott, on behalf of the Supporters' Trust, went to Doble's jewellers in
Exeter in their lunch break and handed over a cheque for £20,000 to purchase the club, which was
"pretty much everything the Trust had". Russell was sentenced to 21 months in prison, whilst Lewis was ordered to complete 200 hours of community service. In February 2008, both Russell and Lewis were permanently suspended from football by the
FA.
Debt free era (2005–2014) On 8 January 2005, Exeter City drew 0–0 against
Manchester United at
Old Trafford in the 3rd round of the
FA Cup. City eventually fell to a 2–0 defeat in the televised replay at
St James Park 11 days later, with
Cristiano Ronaldo and
Wayne Rooney scoring the goals. The income from these two games, just under £1 million, In 2012, the Trust membership reached its peak at over 4,000 members, but it has since dropped to just over 3,000. In May 2012, the Trust was criticised for changing its funding of the club from a loan to a donation. This was done due to rule changes in
League Two which stated that clubs could not spend more than 55% of turnover on player wages. Loans were considered as turnover, whereas donations were not. As a result, former chairman Treharne called for the Trust to be more transparent in the way it makes decisions. In October 2013, as part of the 10 year anniversary of the Exeter City Supporters' Trust taking control of the club, Kevin Rye told the BBC:
PFA loan and re-structuring of the club board In June 2014, the club received a short-term loan for £100,000 from the
PFA (which comes with a transfer embargo) in order to help with the running costs. The club stated that the short-term loan was needed due to a fall in attendances and a lower than expected uptake of season ticket renewals. Both the club and the Trust were heavily criticised following the news, with the Trust being accused of not monitoring the club well or reporting back to its members. This led to a restructuring process at the club, with the chairman and chief executive resigning over the summer and the secretary (who was also a director of the Trust) leaving both of his roles. In light of the changes at the club, the Trust increased its representation on the club board to 50%, with it now being made up of four Trust board members and four club directors. Prior to these changes, the Trust's stake entitled it to elect two of its board members to the club board. The loan was repaid on 15 August 2014, lifting with it the club's transfer embargo.
Club loan repaid On 10 February 2021 it was announced that the long-term financial loan provided to the football club had been repaid to the Supporters' Trust. A total of £830,058 was paid back to the Trust, with a proportion of the money to be invested and the club retaining access to the same amount of working capital. The Trust also announced that it had suspended payment of its annual £100,000 donation to the club since the autumn of 2020. On 5 May 2021, Exeter City were named top of the Fan Engagement Index table for the second year running. In response to both the accolade and the
2021 attempts by elite European clubs to form the
European Super League, chairman Nick Hawker told the BBC: On 23 March 2023, the club were named top of the Fan Engagement Index table for the fourth consecutive year. Think Fan Engagement owner, Kevin Rye, said after the club's fourth successive victory: == Fundraising ==