Sean Dyche claims to know no more than Burnley’s fans on the latest reports of a £200million club takeover.

It was reported this week that Egyptian businessman Mohamed El Kashashy and lawyer Chris Farnell were currently in talks with Burnley’s hierarchy.

American consortium ALK Capital have also been linked with a takeover at Turf Moor, but Dyche said he was unable to offer any further insight.

“I know what you know,” he said before Saturday’s home Premier League game against Chelsea. “I’ve been reading different stories. It’s not really my domain, I focus on the team.

“The chairman and the board will make the big decisions at the club. I have no power over that side of things.”

Dyche, the longest-serving Premier League manager, who will mark eight years in charge of Burnley on Friday, said he had not been involved in any talks regarding prospective new owners.

“No, not in this case, I don’t know whether that’s standard or not,” he said.

“I don’t know of any ownership, as far as I know they are all stories in the papers and they seem to be growing, getting more detailed over the last few weeks.”

Dyche has made no secret of his desire to strengthen his squad in recent seasons, but Burnley, renowned for running a tight ship, have refused to invest heavily in new players.

Half a dozen first-team players left in the summer, while only two players were signed, including Dale Stephens from Brighton for a reported £1million.

“Investment is a tricky thing, clubs have different models, different ways of working,” Dyche said. “We’ve had one for a long time here.

“Our parameters and guidelines that we work to are very stringent, hard and tight at times when the market doesn’t care for that.

“But that is the way the chairman and the board want to run the club. I’ve worked and will continue to work hard with whatever guidelines I’m given and I’ll continue to do that.

“If that changes, whether with this current chairman and board, or if that changes we’ll see, but until there is some fact to it, then it is all conjecture and hypothetical.”