RST: Gers not attractive to buyers

16 June 2010 09:16
Rangers were taken off the market on Tuesday as fans expressed fears that the club is not an attractive enough prospect for potential buyers.[LNB] Owner Sir David Murray confirmed the Scottish champions are no longer for sale, eight months after Murray International Holdings revealed it was considering options regarding their controlling shareholding in the club.[LNB]The news will have come as a surprise to those who thought a takeover was imminent, after a consortium fronted by London-based property developer Andrew Ellis last week announced to the stock exchange that they were in "advanced negotiations" to buy a controlling interest in Rangers.[LNB]The Rangers Supporters Trust believe a buy-out failed to materialise because Rangers - and Scottish football in general - is simply not regarded as a lucrative enough business proposition.[LNB]RST spokesman David Edgar said: "The longer the prospective takeover by Andrew Ellis had been mooted without anything coming to fruition, the less chance there was of it happening.[LNB]"I think that this is a reflection on Scottish football. Sadly, it's just not a very attractive pitch to investors anymore. There is no money, really, to be made from Rangers and there is no money to be made from Scottish football."[LNB]Murray revealed that he has been unable to secure an offer which he believes is in the best interests of the club and, with manager Walter Smith and his backroom staff secured on new contracts, says he now wants to push ahead with a business plan following "positive talks" with the club's bankers, Lloyds Banking Group.[LNB]Edgar hopes the announcement will not derail plans to bolster the squad over the summer as Rangers prepare for another crack at the Champions League and their defence of the Clydesdale Bank Premier League title.[LNB]He told Sky Sports News: "This constant turmoil, this constant speculation does nobody at the club any good.[LNB]"What we need to do now is just get our heads down and plan for the new season.[LNB]"Hopefully we will still be able to bring in a couple of players - I think the bank has seen the folly of running the club with the bare minimum. If we don't have the funds to compete, we won't bring in any money.[LNB]"In Scottish football you really have to be getting to that Champions League pot of gold and cutting the squad to the bare minimum is never likely to do that."[LNB]A statement on the club's official website, www.rangers.co.uk, read: "MIH has received interest in its controlling stake from a number of parties. At this time, however, the board of MIH has not been able to secure an offer which it considers to be in the best interests of the club, its shareholders and its fans.[LNB]"Following on from the success of winning the 2009/10 SPL title, and thereby securing participation in the group stages of the Champions League during 2010/11, the club recently announced that the football management team had signed new contracts.[LNB]At the same time the board of directors of the club announced improvements in its financial position compared to the previous year stating: "'We believe the outcome of our recent positive discussions with the bank gives us a real platform for operational stability at the club and we thank Lloyds for their support. We have a clear business plan in place and will continue to maximise efficiencies and endeavour to increase our non-playing income.'[LNB]"The board of directors of MIH therefore considers that the interests of stakeholders are presently best served by providing the football management team and board of directors with an opportunity to implement its business plan which is supported by Lloyds Banking Group.[LNB]In these circumstances, MIH hereby announces that it is no longer actively marketing its controlling stake in the club for sale."[LNB]

Source: Team_Talk