The Everton manager is going to need every penny of it with so many of his players leaving and doubts still over the futures of multiple others.
A number of first-team stalwarts have already departed, leaving even more gaps in a squad that was already one of the Premier League's smallest.
Before the summer window opened, the Toffees needed strengthening in nearly all positions, and particular focus was apparently going to be on bringing in new players at full-back, out wide, and up front.
Meanwhile, among others, both Moyes' reserve goalkeepers, one full-back, two wingers, and a midfielder have moved on (with another one, Idrissa Gueye, still to sign a new deal). And the Blues are likely to lose centre-forward Dominic Calvert-Lewin and defender Michael Keane.
Moyes will therefore need as much money as possible to secure all his targets and improve both the quality and, crucially, the depth of the squad.
Worryingly, though, so far the only new face Everton have brought through the door is Carlos Alcaraz, whose January loan has been turned into a permanent deal.
At the start of the summer, the Blues were heavily linked with several exciting players, most of all striker Liam Delap of Ipswich Town, who was virtually certain to move on after the Tractor Boys' relegation.
Although Everton made a strong offer to the player, he chose Champions League-bound Chelsea instead and signed for the London club.
It was the sort of snub that Toffees supporters are used to these days after the chaos and frankly embarrassing decline in the club and the team's fortunes over the last few years of the Farhad Moshiri era.
Everton have new owners now, though, after Dan Friedkin's group took control of the club at the end of last year, and they have paid off debts and stabilized the club financially.
However, so far, the only new signings, Alcaraz apart, have been behind the scenes with the Blues having brought in several new people in the club's corporate structure.
While all these backroom changes, which seem to be muddying the waters around who is in charge of Everton's transfer strategy, might well bring long-term improvement, in the end, it will be the players on the pitch who will ultimately decide the club's fortunes.
A lot of players are being linked with the club, but very little of it seems to be solidly based, and so far, no further signings seem imminent.
There are complications, particularly around PSR, and it appears that the Toffees have to wait for the end of June and a new financial year comes into force before any really substantial fees can be paid.
That is just a few weeks away, and then hopefully we will start to see some real action to strengthen that threadbare squad and some substance to all these increasingly disparate rumours.