The Scotsman

Rangers suffer loss of £24.15m as cost of Covid is laid bare at Ibrox

- By STEPHEN HALLIDAY

have posted a loss of over £24 million in their latest annual accounts, with their revenue slumping by 19 per cent amid the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Scottish champions were sustained by £21m of loans from shareholde­rs and investors through the period to June 30, 2021. Anothrange­rs er £8.5m in loans has been received since then and Rangers have confirmed they require further loans of £7.5m by the end of this season to meet their financial obligation­s. Club chairman Douglas Park and his deputy John Bennett have already committed to providing those funds.

Rangers’ total loss of £24.153m was a sharp increase on the £17.462m total loss they recorded the previous year.

Revenue decreased by 19 per cent to £47.7m, from £59m in 2020, mainly due to the loss of matchday and hospitalit­y revenues with matches being played behind closed doors. Despite being unable to attend games, however, Rangers supporters still provided £17m of income for the club with a record number of season-ticket sales. The run to the last 16 of the Europa League accounted for £11.7m of turnover.

The club’s first-team wage bill increased from £29.7m to £33.5m, amounting to 70 per cent of turnover, with total operating expenses reduced slightly from £76.9m to £74.6m.

Rangers say that during the course of the year, they received a number of “investment proposals” from the “private equity and family office sphere” but those were rejected.

“We are extremely fortunate to have an investor group that is able and willing to match or better the indicative terms from such groups whilst retaining the ownership in the hands of dedicated Rangers supporters,” they state.

Since the end of the accounting period, Rangers also say they have repaid former chairman Dave King’s £5m loan and have secured a bank loan facility with a major UK high street lender for the first time since the South Africa-based businessma­n oversaw regime change at Ibrox in 2015.

King’s successor Park has indicated that he believes it

will be 2025 before Rangers achieve the model of financial sustainabi­lity they are striving for.

“At this juncture, I repeat my analysis from late 2015,” said Park. “When the current board wrestled back control of our club, I viewed this as a ten-year project.

“In 2021, I still believe that analysis to be accurate. The condition in which our club was left cannot be underestim­ated.

“Yet, painstakin­gly and with unerring resolve, we have rebuilt and we will continue to do so. Despite the challenges, we have consistent­ly and noticeably improved. As our club’s recovery has progressed, it has been our intent to strengthen from a position of strength and the past year’s transfer activity demonstrat­es that.

“Our necessary recovery investment and player acquisitio­n programme, combined with the damaging effects of Covid-19, have had clear effects on our financial statements.”

Rangers will hold their annual general meeting at the Clyde Auditorium in Glasgow at 10.30am on Tuesday, November 30.

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