RANGERS have called a general meeting of shareholders to finally approve a new fund-raising share issue.

Chairman Dave King said in May that he was to launch a share issue which could bring in £6 million in fresh revenue.

The total number of shares to be bought in the fresh issue is 63,147,137, meaning the value of the offer is £12.6m.

The new issue would increase the number of ordinary shares in Rangers International Football Club plc from  81,478,201 to 144,625,341.

Rangers International Football Club plc has now called a meeting at the end of August where final approval will be sought for the issue of shares.

In a general meeting notice, the club said: "The issue of shares will improve the capital base of the company and ensure the ongoing funding of the company is both secure and compliant with all rules affecting football clubs."

It comes after shareholders approved the issue of new shares at the 2017 annual general meeting.

The board said it was now seeking approval now that the "identities of the participants of the issue and the price of 20p at which shares are to be issued have been finalised".

The Herald:

The RIFC plc's recommendation states: "Your board believes the resolution is in the best interests of the company and is most likely to promote the success of the company for the benefit of its shareholders as a whole.

"The board recommends that shareholders vote in favour of the resolution.. as each director intends to do so in respect of his own beneficial holding."

The move is separate from the Rangers' chairman's judge-ordered £11 million bid for most of the club's shares which Mr King says has been held up because he has to get funds from South Africa to the UK.

Lord Bannatyne issued a warning to Mr King last month to make good his obligation required under Takeover Code rules at a hearing at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.

The Rangers chief has already been told he is in breach of takeover rules by failing to make the bid.

In December Lord Bannatyne ruled in favour of the Takeover Panel that Mr King acted in concert with other shareholders when he bought a controlling stake in 2015 ousting a board of directors said to be allied to Sports Direct founder Mike Ashley.

The Herald:

That supported the Takeover Panel's view that a formal takeover should have been triggered after the Three Bears group led by Mr King secured more than 30 per cent of the voting rights in Rangers.

Under Takeover Code rules, a written offer to shareholders had to be made within 28 days of a bid announcement being made on March 29. 

The general meeting notice confirms  the issue will be made to existing shareholders named as: Barry Scott, John Bennett, Andrew Ross, Club 1872, Borita Investments Limited, New Trace Limited, Andrew Hawkyard, Neil Hosie, Paul Redbourn, New Oasis Asset Limited, Douglas Park, George Letham and George Taylor.

Mr King's New Oasis Asset Limited is listed as taking the biggest stake, 9,199,089 shares and will remain the biggest shareholder at Rangers with 21,068,594 shares and 14.57% of RIFC, if the issue is approved.

Rangers fans shareholder group Club 1872, would remain the second biggest shareholder, with an extra 5,000,000 from the issue for a total of 13,732,254 shares, giving them 9.5% of RIFC.

A new name amongst the major shareholders at Rangers is Borita Investments Limited, who would get 7.5m shares from the new issue bringing the company's total to 11,132,500 and 7.7% of RIFC. The company is believed to be the investment vehicle of Julian Wolhardt, the chief executive of Hong Kong-based Dehong Capital Partners.

Hong Kong-based George Taylor, a Glasgow-born managing director with Morgan Stanley, would strengthen his position at RIFC with an extra 5,870,768 shares, bringing his total to 13,445,768. With 9.3% of RIFC, he remains the shareholder with the third biggest stake.

Former Rangers director Barry Scott will receive the second biggest stake from the new issue with 7,645,000 shares.  The Hong Kong-based business was named in January 2016 as one of three benefactors who had contributed to the £6.5 million loan paid to Rangers in a bid to pay off Mike Ashley and help pay for the day-to-day running costs.

The Herald: 17/12/14.IBROX - GLASGOW .Rangers shareholder Sandy Easdale arrives at Ibrox. (36492386)

The biggest loser from the prominent Rangers shareholders appears to be former Rangers chairman Sandy Easdale, who left the boardroom after Mr King's Blue Knights took control three years ago but had remained the fourth biggest shareholder.  He has no new stake, meaning he would remain on 5,256,110 shares but he will have a much smaller slice of the RIFC pie, with 3.6%, down from 6.45% before the share issue.

A statement on the Premiership club's website said: “Rangers International Football Club PLC has today called a General Meeting (GM) of its shareholders at 9.30 a.m. on Friday 31 August 2018 to approve an issue of shares."

The Herald: