Manchester City chief exec Ferran Soriano insists they're not guilty of Uefa's Financial Fair Play breaches.
Soriano also is adamant their name will be cleared in time to play in next season's Champions League.
City's chief executive has spoken out for the first time since the Premier League champions were banned from European competition for two years.
The club are taking an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, where Soriano is convinced their name will be cleared once and for all.
“Well the most important thing I have to say today is that the allegations are not true," said Soriano.
“They are simply not true.
“The owner has not put money in this club that has not been properly declared. We are a sustainable football club, we are profitable, we don't have debt, our accounts have been scrutinized many times, by auditors, by regulators, by investors and this is perfectly clear."
In an interview with City's official website, Soriano added: “We are looking for an early resolution obviously through a thorough process and a fair process so my best hope is that this will be finished before the beginning of the summer and until then for us, it is business as usual.
“All we are looking for is a proper adjudication in an independent and impartial body that is going to take the time to look at all the evidence and look at it without preconception.
“I am also looking for the end of this process maybe to put a pen under this undertone that we are hearing all the time that anything that we do, any result that we get is based only on money and not on talent and effort. The 100s of people that work at this club know this is not true that it is about effort and talent so maybe in the end, this is an opportunity."