Olmo, who is currently with the Spain squad preparing for the World Cup, scored eight goals and contributed ten assists in 51 appearances across all competitions this season as Barcelona won La Liga for the second consecutive year.
He has a contract running until 2030 and an automatic salary improvement clause built into that deal which activates from the 2026-27 season — a financial upgrade tied to performance targets he has now met.
Marca reports that no offer from any of the three clubs was given serious consideration. Olmo's position has been consistent throughout the interest period: he came to Barcelona to succeed there and believes the conditions are in place for him to do exactly that under Flick.
The club's own position aligns with his. Although Barcelona are aware they could generate significant transfer income from a sale — estimates suggest he would command at least €80m — the club have not sought to force his departure and are not open to losing a player Flick regards as central to his system.
The temptation to cash in is real. Barcelona have signed Anthony Gordon from Newcastle United this summer and are actively pursuing a striker and defensive reinforcements, with Marc Casadó expected to leave as part of planned squad restructuring. But Olmo is not part of that outward planning.
His public and private position have been identical throughout the speculation. He wants to be at Barcelona, and Barcelona want him to stay.
