Rangers news

McCoist: Fans should be able to invest

October 12, 2012
By ESPN staff

Rangers' manager, Ally McCoist has stressed the importance of Rangers supporters being allowed to invest in the club.

Ally McCoist
PA PhotosAlly McCoist has stressed importance of fan investment

The club have announced that they will seek admission to the Alternative Investment Market of the London Stock Exchange, with the club hoping to raise in excess of 20 million pounds as they work to restore the once mighty club to the prestigious mantle in recently held.

The statement released by Rangers stated the funds generated will be used to "strengthen the playing squad, improving and developing the club's properties and providing additional working capital".

McCoist said the move was pivotal to the future of the club and a significant step in bringing the club back to its former glory.

"We must move forward and this is a big, big step in the club moving forward again. In the past three months the light in the tunnel has been coming close and then moved further away again but I believe we're just about there now. We've still got a massively long way to go on the journey but I do believe that this is a big step in moving forward. The really pleasing thing, not only being the manager but being an ex-player and supporter, is that it gives the supporters an opportunity to invest in the club which obviously means an awful lot to individuals and supporters throughout the world. It's vitally important that the supporters get an opportunity to invest."

Rangers' chief executive Charles Green, who values the club at £25-30million, hopes to have their admission to the AIM completed by the end of November and Green, has pledged to take up the slack in any shortfall in the share issue.

"It's also important that people understand that, of all the money raised in the next few weeks, none will go to any existing shareholders. Those shareholders will either put more cash in or be diluted down. But every penny raised will be put in the bank account. It's very, very clear what we want to do with those fund and here will be provisions for Ally."

"My personal view is that the figure is low. But if we don't raise £20m then I will buy whatever the shortfall is. I've listed or floated maybe 30 companies and done fundraising as well. There's not been anything underwritten in London in the past seven or eight years to my knowledge. Whenever it occurs someone takes a fee for it.

"I'd be happy to underwrite it but what will happen is in three weeks' time you lot (media) will have my trousers around my ankles saying 'Charles Green underwrites Rangers' and took a three per cent fee when it didn't need doing. The reality is we don't need to underwrite it as there will be no shares left over. But if they're not (taken up) of course we'll take them. Why wouldn't we take them? We did it in May when there was nothing to buy. There was no guarantee we would ever play football again," said Green.