Perez added: "Real Madrid takes about £340m a year, the fruit of three sources of income — a third from ticket sales, a third from television rights and a third from merchandising."
Within 24 hours of his arrival as president at the start of the month, the 62-year-old presented Manuel Pellegrini as Madrid's new coach and seven days later the capture of Kaka from AC Milan was completed.
Ronaldo's arrival now seems imminent, while discussions regarding Valencia striker Villa are believed to be at an advanced stage.
"I want to recreate a Real Madrid that makes history," Perez added.
That history could include Clichy after Pellegrini urged Perez to strengthen Madrid's rearguard.
Both big-money deals for Kaka and Ronaldo were in place before Pellegrini took the job and the former Villarreal coach has told Perez to suspend his Galactico spending and concentrate on other areas of the pitch.
Before departing to Santiago in his native Chile for his summer holidays, Pellegrini stressed that current left-back Gabriel Heinze will not figure in his plans and has put forward a formal request that Perez oversees the purchase of 23-year-old Clichy.
If the Gunners are reluctant to sell the player, Real could then turn their attention to Manchester United defender Patrice Evra.
The champions will be equally unwilling to let Evra go and are themselves focused on signing Bayern Munich winger Franck Ribery as a replacement for Ronaldo.