Proposed Capital Reorganisation & Other News

Ross Group PLC 2 March 2000 Ross Group PLC ('the Company') Proposed Capital Reorganisation followed by Proposed Rights Issue of up to 50,233,402 Rights Shares on a basis representing 17 Rights Shares for every 2 New Ordinary Shares at 5.5p per Rights Share and Proposed Purchase of New Preference Shares and Proposed Issue of Share Warrants Introduction Your Board is pleased to have announced today that it proposes to raise approximately £2,300,000 net of expenses by way of a rights issue. Your Board also announced today that the holders of the Preference Shares have agreed to the elimination of the entire preference share capital of the Company by way of the Preference Capital Reorganisation and purchase by the Company of New Preference Shares. These proposals are conditional on shareholders' approval at an extraordinary general meeting of the Company ('EGM') and a separate class meeting of the holders of the Ordinary Shares ('Class Meeting') to be held on 27 March 2000. Before proceeding with the Rights Issue, the Company's Ordinary Shares are to be reorganised. This reorganisation will involve a sub-division, re- designation and consolidation of the Company's Ordinary Shares with the result that, for every 25 existing ordinary shares of 5 pence, each shareholder will hold one New Ordinary Share and 25 Deferred Shares, subject to fractional entitlements as described below. The Rights Issue involves the issue, after the Capital Reorganisation, of up to 50,233,402 Rights Shares at a price of 5.5p per Rights Share on a basis representing 17 Rights Shares for every 2 New Ordinary Shares. The Rights Issue has been fully underwritten by The Alpha Capital Limited ('Alpha Capital'). As Alpha Capital is an associated company of Escalating Investments Limited ('EIL') (EIL holds approximately 13.5 per cent. of the issued Ordinary Shares) and the consideration to be paid by the Company to Alpha Capital, in respect of such underwriting is more than the usual commercial underwriting consideration the Underwriting Agreement has been deemed a related party transaction under the Listing Rules and is therefore conditional, inter alia, upon the approval of Shareholders (excluding The Grande Holdings Limited ('Grande'), Alpha Capital, EIL, William Welch, Paul Binney, Michael Binney and Adrian Ma ('the Related Parties')), which is to be sought at the EGM. In connection with Alpha Capital agreeing to fully underwrite the Rights Issue the Company proposes to grant Alpha Capital certain warrants to subscribe for shares in the Company at the issue price. The Directors believe that the grant of the warrants at the Issue Price is appropriate because Alpha Capital was prepared to underwrite the Rights Issue only if such warrants were granted at that price. Due to the fact that Alpha Capital is an associated company of EIL the grant of the Share Warrants has been deemed a related party transaction under the Listing Rules of the London Stock Exchange and is therefore conditional, inter alia, upon the approval of Shareholders (excluding the Related Parties), which is to be sought at the EGM. The Company has also agreed with all the holders of Preference Shares that the Preference Shares should be re- organised and subsequently eliminated through: (i) the conversion of the Preference Shares into a total of 10,909,092 New Ordinary Shares, which have an aggregate value, at the Issue Price, of £600,000, and 220,454,540 New Preference Shares; and (ii) the purchase and cancellation of all the New Preference Shares for an aggregate cash consideration of £300,000. It is intended that £1,500,000 of the net proceeds of the Rights Issue will be used to repay part of the Group's bank indebtedness, which was approximately £4,500,000 at the year ended 31 December 1999. In addition, and subject to this repayment being made, as part of the restructuring of the Company's debt arrangements £1,200,000 of the Group's existing bank indebtedness will be retired. The Group has also arranged new banking facilities with a single bank, subject to certain conditions some of which can only be satisfied if Shareholders approve all the proposals to be voted on at the EGM and the Class Meeting. The Directors (or, in certain cases, Peter Mottershead, Marcus Evans, Michael Jeans and David Powell ('the Independent Directors')) recommend that you vote in favour of the Resolutions to be proposed at the EGM and Class Meeting. The Preference Shareholders will also be entitled to attend and vote at the EGM as their preferential dividend is more than six months in arrears. Shareholders should note the statements made in the section entitled 'Working Capital' below. Background to and reasons for the Rights Issue Earlier this year, the Board entered into discussions with various parties with a view to securing greater financial stability for the Company. These discussions resulted in a proposal to raise approximately £800,000 net of expenses by way of a rights issue, underwritten by the Group's Chairman, Marcus Evans, in addition to a capital reorganisation. This capital reorganisation and rights issue proposal was presented to, and rejected by, shareholders at an extraordinary general meeting on 3 September 1999. Since these proposals were rejected, the Company has been carefully considering other available options. On 21 December 1999 the Company announced that it had reached agreement in principle with a major shareholder, controlled by Grande, the Preference Shareholders and the Company's bankers to a proposal that would achieve the Company's objective of greater financial stability. Under the terms of this agreement, Alpha Capital (a wholly owned subsidiary of Grande) will underwrite a new rights issue to raise £2,300,000 net of expenses. In addition, Grande procured the issue of the Standby Letter of Credit to the Company in the sum of £400,000 under the terms of the Letter of Credit Agreement. Details of which are set out in the document sent to shareholders today ('the Prospectus'). At the time of the appointment of the current Board in 1995 the bank debt stood at over £14 million and the Group was experiencing severe cash flow difficulties. The Group's bankers have been supportive since that time but have set demanding targets to bring the Group's borrowings to a more acceptable level. These demanding targets led to a reduction in the Group's borrowing facilities during 1998 of £1.6 million. However, as a result of the rejection by Shareholders on 3 September 1999 of the then proposed rights issue, the Group's borrowings increased by £400,000 during the second half of 1999 and stood at approximately £4.5 million at the year end. The Group's borrowing facilities are mainly in the form of bank overdrafts. As is normal for bank facilities of this type, their terms include repayment on demand and regular review. Under the proposals outlined in this document, the current Group borrowing facilities, which are provided by a consortium of three banks, are expected to be replaced by new borrowing facilities with a single bank. The steps taken to allow the Group to reduce its borrowings to meet the demanding targets set by the Group's banks, combined with a difficult trading environment since the end of 1998, resulted in a pre-tax loss of £874,000 for the six months ended 30 June 1999. In the Company's interim statement for this period, made on 2 September 1999, the Company stated that the outlook for the second half of the year was looking more promising. However, the general uncertainty resulting from the rejection of the rights issue proposed at the extraordinary general meeting held on 3 September 1999 left the Company unable to reassure external parties of its long-term future. This has resulted in significant market and financial pressure on the normal business of the Group. As a result the Company is expecting to report a significant loss in the second half of 1999. Further details are set out in 'Current trading and prospects' below. The Board has been reviewing opportunities to improve the working capital position of the Company and the net proceeds of the Rights Issue will be applied to: (i) reduce bank borrowings by approximately £1,500,000; (ii) acquire all the New Preference Shares in consideration of the payment of £300,000; (iii) increase the Group's investment in product development and marketing; and (iv) provide additional working capital. Board Changes On 18 February 2000 the Company announced the appointment of four new Executive Directors, who are employed by members of the Grande Group and are members of the Concert Party (the Concert Party being Grande, Alpha Capital, EIL, Paul Binney, William Welch, Michael Binney and Adrian Ma). The new Directors are: Paul Francis Gregory Binney, Executive Director Mr Binney, aged 40, is a commerce graduate of Birmingham University, England and a member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales. He is currently Managing Director of Grande in Europe which includes Nakamichi Europe Limited. He has also worked for Digital Equipment and Salomon Smith Barney. William Borland Welch, Executive Director Mr Welch, aged 42, is a business graduate and a member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland. He is currently Chief Financial Officer for Grande in Europe. He previously worked for Deloitte & Touche and Salomon Smith Barney. Adrian Chi Chiu Ma, Executive Director Mr Ma, aged 55, graduated from Birmingham University, England with a Bachelor of Commerce degree. He is a member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales and a fellow of the Hong Kong Society of Accountants. He has more than 18 years experience in the finance and operations of the computer and electronics industry. He is an executive director of the Grande Group in charge of the electronics operation and he is also a director of Toyo Holdings Limited. Michael Andrew Barclay Binney, Executive Director Mr Binney, aged 40, studied accountancy at Coventry University, England. He is a fellow member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales and a fellow of the Hong Kong Society of Accountants. He has extensive experience in manufacturing and operations of the consumer and computer electronics industry. He is the managing director of the Grande Group's world wide branded sales and distribution he is also a director of Toyo Holdings Limited. If the Resolutions are passed at the EGM and the Class Meeting then immediately on Admission (anticipated to be the day following the EGM), Marcus Evans and the Company's current non-executive Directors, Michael Jeans and David Powell, will resign from the Board without compensation and Mr Michael Simon will be appointed to the Board as a non-executive director. Michael Simon, aged 40, is an economics graduate of the University of Cambridge and a fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales and of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants. He is a sole practitioner in public practice. Ordinary Capital Reorganisation The Company has a substantial deficit on its profit and loss account, which will prevent it from paying dividends until that deficit is eliminated. It is an objective of the Board to substantially reduce this deficit at the appropriate time through a further restructuring of the Company's capital, and proposals to this effect will be put to shareholders in due course. In order to facilitate such a restructuring and in order to enable the Rights Shares to be issued at the Issue Price, the Directors are proposing to reorganise the ordinary share capital of the Company before the Rights Issue is implemented. This will involve the sub-division of each existing ordinary share of 5 pence each into one new ordinary share of 0.2 pence and one deferred share of 4.8 pence. Every twenty-five ordinary shares of 0.2 pence each will then be consolidated into one New Ordinary Share of 5 pence. This will result in each Shareholder holding one New Ordinary Share of 5 pence and 25 Deferred Shares for every 25 existing ordinary shares of 5 pence currently held, subject to fractional entitlements as described below. The New Ordinary Shares will have the same rights (including voting and dividend rights) as the existing Ordinary Shares. Since certain Shareholders' holdings of Ordinary Shares are not divisible exactly by 25 and fractions of shares cannot be held, fractional entitlements to New Ordinary Shares arising under the Ordinary Capital Reorganisation will be rounded down to the nearest whole number. Consequently, Shareholders holding less than 25 Ordinary Shares will not be entitled to any New Ordinary Shares under the Ordinary Capital Reorganisation. Fractional entitlements to New Ordinary Shares resulting from this rounding down will be aggregated and those shares sold for the benefit of the relevant Shareholders, save that net proceeds of less than £3.00 otherwise payable to a Shareholder will be retained for the benefit of the Company. The Deferred Shares will not be listed. The Deferred Shares will carry minimal rights and will have little or no economic value. Further details of the rights attached to the Deferred Shares are set out in 'Proposed alterations to the Articles' below. Certificates for New Ordinary Shares resulting from the Capital Reorganisations will be despatched to Shareholders on 3 April 2000 and CREST accounts will be credited with shareholders' new entitlements to such New Ordinary Shares on 28 March 2000. Any existing certificates for Ordinary Shares will become valueless and should be destroyed following receipt of certificates for New Ordinary Shares. Terms and Conditions of the Rights Issue Subject to the fulfilment of various conditions, the Company is proposing to offer up to 50,233,402 Rights Shares by way of rights to Qualifying Shareholders at 5.5p per share payable in full on acceptance. The Rights Issue will be made on the basis of 17 Rights Shares for every 50 Ordinary Shares held by Qualifying Shareholders on the Record Date, and so in proportion for any other number of Ordinary Shares then held, which is equivalent to: 17 Rights Shares for every 2 New Ordinary Shares after the Ordinary Capital Reorganisation and otherwise on the terms and conditions as set out in the document sent to shareholders dated 2 March 2000 ('the Prospectus') and the Provisional Allotment Letter. Shareholders holding less than 25 Ordinary Shares on the Record Date will not rank for the Rights Issue. The entitlements of such persons to Rights Shares, and fractional entitlements to Rights Shares, will not be allotted to Qualifying Shareholders but will be aggregated and sold and the net proceeds distributed for the benefit of the concerned Shareholders (save that individual entitlements to proceeds of less than £3.00 will be retained by the Company). The Rights Shares will, when issued and fully paid, rank pari passu in all respects with the then issued New Ordinary Shares. No dividend is payable to Shareholders for the year ended 31 December 1999. The Rights Issue has been fully underwritten by Alpha Capital. The Rights Issue is conditional, inter alia, on Admission becoming effective on or before 28 March 2000 (or such later date as Alpha Capital and the Company may agree, being not later than 3 May 2000) and on the Underwriting Agreement becoming unconditional in all respects and not having been terminated in accordance with its terms. Alpha Capital will receive an underwriting commission in respect of Rights Shares the subject of the underwriting, calculated by reference to the Issue Price for each Rights Share underwritten by it. Application has been made to the London Stock Exchange for the New Ordinary Shares (including the Rights Shares) to be admitted to the Official List. For Qualifying Shareholders, Provisional Allotment Letters in respect of Rights Shares are expected to be despatched on 27 March 2000 and dealings in the Rights Shares, nil paid, are expected to commence at 8.00 a.m. on 28 March 2000. Provisional Allotment Letters are not being sent to certain Overseas Shareholders to whom the Rights Issue is not being extended, nor to Shareholders holding less than 25 Ordinary Shares on the Record Date. The Provisional Allotment Letters will show the number of Rights Shares provisionally allotted to Qualifying Shareholders and certain instructions regarding acceptance and payment, renunciation, splitting and registration in respect of the Rights Shares. The Provisional Allotment Letters are expected to be be renouncable until 3.00 p.m. on 18 April 2000. The Concert Party The Rights Issue is being underwritten by Alpha Capital out of existing cash resources of the Grande Group. Alpha Capital is an associated company of EIL by virtue of the fact that both companies are controlled by Grande. In addition four of the Directors, Paul Binney, Michael Binney, Adrian Ma and William Welch are directors and employees of companies within the Grande Group, as well as directors of the Company. Under the terms of the Takeover Code and by the nature of the proposed rights issue and related transactions, Alpha Capital, EIL, Grande and Paul Binney, Michael Binney, Adrian Ma and William Welch are deemed to be acting in concert with each other in relation to the Company. Information on the Concert Party including, inter alia, financial information and information on their business activities and shareholdings is set out in the Prospectus. In connection with The Alpha Capital Limited agreeing to fully underwrite the Rights Issue, the Company proposes, subject to approval at the EGM and to the Underwriting Agreement, to grant Alpha Capital the Share Warrants. The Share Warrants will only be capable of exercise if following the Rights Issue and the matters contemplated in the Preference Option Agreement and the Underwriting Agreement the Concert Party holds in aggregate less than 29.9 per cent. of the New Ordinary Shares then in issue. In such circumstances it is proposed that Alpha Capital will be entitled to subscribe at 5.5 pence per share for such number of New Ordinary Shares as would, following such subscription, result in the Concert Party and any other member of the Grande Group holding, in aggregate, 29.9 per cent. of the New Ordinary Share capital of the Company (as enlarged by the subscription for the Warrant Shares). Rule 9 of the Takeover Code Pursuant to Rule 9 of the Takeover Code, any person, or group of persons acting in concert, holding shares carrying less than 30 per cent. of the voting rights of a public company may not normally acquire shares which would take his or its holding of shares to a level at which such holding carries 30 per cent. or more of the voting rights of a public company without making a general offer to all equity shareholders in that company. EIL is interested in 19,948,000 Ordinary Shares, representing 13.25 per cent. of the issued voting share capital of the Company (including the Preference Shares which currently carry voting rights). Alpha Capital is obliged to subscribe for up to 50,233,402 Rights Shares pursuant to the Underwriting Agreement in the event that such shares are not otherwise subscribed for pursuant to the Rights Issue and Grande has agreed to procure that Alpha Capital does so. If all such Rights Shares were allotted and issued to Alpha Capital in connection with the Rights Issue, then Alpha Capital and EIL would hold in aggregate 51,031,322 New Ordinary Shares, representing 76.1 per cent. of the Company's enlarged issued voting capital after the Capital Reorganisations, the Rights Issue and the New Preference Share Purchase. In addition, pursuant to the Preference Option Agreement the holders of the Preference Shares have agreed with Grande that: (i) Grande has an option, exercisable for one month after the Preference Capital Reorganisation becomes effective, to acquire from the Preference Shareholders up to 3,636,363 New Ordinary Shares (representing one third of the New Ordinary Shares derived from the Preference Capital Reorganisation) at the Issue Price; (ii) if any of them wish to sell any of the remaining New Ordinary Shares derived from the Preference Capital Reorganisation (amounting to a further 7,272,729 New Ordinary Shares) during the period of one year after the Preference Capital Reorganisation becomes effective, Grande will have the right to acquire those shares at the then prevailing mid-market price; and (iii)they will, for a period of one year after the Preference Capital Reorganisation becomes effective, exercise all the voting rights attaching to the New Ordinary Shares held by them which are derived from the Preference Capital Reorganisation, amounting initially to 10,909,092 New Ordinary Shares in aggregate, in accordance with the directions of Grande. Accordingly in addition to the maximum aggregate holdings of 51,031,322 New Ordinary Shares of Alpha Capital and EIL, on the basis set out above, Grande will control voting rights under the Preference Option Agreement in respect of 10,909,092 New Ordinary Shares. The Concert Party would therefore potentially have aggregate interests in 61,940,414 New Ordinary Shares representing 92.38 per cent. of the Company's enlarged issued voting capital after the Capital Reorganisations, the Rights Issue and the New Preference Share Purchase. In the event that following the Capital Reorganisations, the Rights Issue and the matters contemplated by the Preference Option Agreement and the Underwriting Agreement, the Concert Party has aggregate holdings of less than 29.9 per cent. of the then issued New Ordinary Shares (including those New Ordinary Shares the voting rights of which Grande controls pursuant to the Preference Option Agreement) Alpha Capital has indicated its intention to exercise its right to subscribe for Warrant Shares pursuant to the Warrants such that following the exercise of such rights the Concert Party will have an aggregate holding of 29.9 per cent. of the issued New Ordinary Share Capital of the Company (as enlarged by the exercise of such Warrant Rights). Under the terms of the Warrant Instrument Alpha Capital may only exercise its right to subscribe for Warrant Shares at any time during the 14 day period immediately following the date on which Alpha Capital is obliged, in accordance with its obligations under the Underwriting Agreement, to subscribe for Rights Shares not otherwise taken up under the Rights Issue. Following the Capital Reorganisations, the Rights Issue, the New Preference Share Purchase and the issue to Alpha Capital of the Warrant Shares it is likely that Grande, Alpha Capital and EIL, all members of the Concert Party, will have in aggregate a controlling shareholding in the Company. EIL currently has a shareholding in the Company of 19,948,000 Ordinary Shares representing 13.25 per cent. of the issued voting share capital of the Company. Alpha Capital, although currently holding no Ordinary Shares, is underwriting the Rights Issue and, depending on the level of takeup of Rights Shares by the Company's Shareholders could potentially have a shareholding after the Capital Reorganisation, the Rights Issue and the Preference Share Purchase of over 50 per cent. of the issued ordinary share capital of the Company. In addition, if the Concert Party's aggregate holding of New Ordinary Shares following the Capital Reorganisation, the Rights Issue and the transactions contemplated by the Preference Option Agreement and the Underwriting Agreement is less than 29.9 per cent. and Alpha Capital exercises its right to subscribe for Warrant Shares pursuant to the Share Warrants in full, the Concert Party will following such exercise have an aggregate holding of 29.9 per cent of the then issued New Ordinary Shares. Grande, being the ultimate holding company of EIL and Alpha Capital, would have an interest in the aggregate of EIL's and Alpha Capital's shareholdings, as well as any New Ordinary Shares acquired by holders of Preference Shares as described above, and as such would also be deemed a controlling shareholder. The Group is not currently a party to any material transactions or relationships with any members of the Concert Party or any associates of any of them other than trading relationships on a normal commercial basis and arms length terms, the provisions of the Standby Letter of Credit, the Underwriting Agreement and the proposed grant of the Share Warrants. The Company currently carries on its business independently of the Grande Group. Grande has entered into an agreement details of which are set out in the Prospectus in which Grande has agreed that the Company shall be at all times capable of carrying on its business independently of the Grande Group and that all transactions and relationships between the Company and the Grande Group will be at arms length and on a normal commercial basis. The Board has adopted a resolution to the effect that any directors of the Company appointed at the request of or who is an associate of Grande (including all the Concert Party Directors) should not participate in any discussions relating to nor vote upon any resolution relating to any transaction, relationship or dispute with Grande or any subsidiary of Grande or any other associate of Grande and in particular any dispute arising from a breach or alleged breach by Grande of the agreement described in the Prospectus. In the light of the above resolution and agreement the Directors are of the opinion that the Company shall be at all times capable of carrying on its business independently of the Grande Group and that all transactions and relationships between the Company and the Grande Group will be at arm's length and on a normal commercial basis. In the event that the Concert Party holds over 75 per cent. of the Company's enlarged issued ordinary share capital following the Rights Issue and the Capital Reorganisations, Grande has undertaken to make appropriate arrangements for immediately reducing the Concert Party's shareholding to below 75 per cent. Were the Concert Party to hold more than 50 per cent. of the issued voting share capital in the Company immediately following the Rights Issue (in aggregate or individually), then Rule 9 of the Takeover Code would not again require the Concert Party to make a general offer to all voting and equity shareholders in the Company should the Concert Party increase further its aggregate shareholding, unless that increase involved an increase by an individual member of the Concert Party in its own holding to a level at which it carried 30 per cent. or more of the voting rights of the Company. The Takeover Panel has agreed, subject to the approval of Resolution 2 by independent shareholders voting on a poll, which for the avoidance of doubt does not include members of the Concert Party, to waive any obligation that any members of the Concert Party might otherwise incur under Rule 9 of the Takeover Code, as a consequence of the subscription by EIL and Alpha Capital for Rights Shares in connection with the Rights Issue and the acquisition by Grande of control of the voting rights of the New Ordinary Shares arising as a result of the Preference Capital Reorganisation and the acquisition of New Ordinary Shares pursuant to the Preference Option Agreement on the basis set out above to make a general offer for the New Ordinary Shares not already owned by the Concert Party. Resolution 2 described below will, if passed, provide the necessary approval. In the event that, but for the waiver referred to above, the underwriting of the Rights Issue by the Concert Party were to give rise to an obligation to make an offer pursuant to that rule, Grande has informed the Company that its intentions would be to continue the Group's existing business activities and to make no major changes to the business, including any redeployment of its fixed assets, or the employment of its staff pending the finalisation of a review of the Group's businesses following completion of the Rights Issue. Grande has indicated that it is fully supportive of the Company and believes that the proposed Rights Issue is in the best interests of the Shareholders. Removal of Preference Shares The Company has a total of 2,750,000 Preference Shares in issue, which were allotted in 1991 as part of the consideration for an acquisition. These shares, which are not listed on the Official List of the London Stock Exchange, are held by a small number of private individuals and trusts, and no dividend has been paid on them for several years, resulting in accumulated arrears of dividends on these shares of approximately £577,500 at 31 December 1998. While the dividends on these shares remain in arrears, no dividends can be paid to ordinary shareholders and, because of the arrears of dividend, the Preference Shares currently carry one vote per share at general meetings of the Company. The holders of all the Preference Shares have unanimously agreed in writing that, subject to shareholders' approval, part of the Preference Shares will be converted into New Ordinary Shares and the balance of their preference shareholdings will be purchased by the Company, on the basis set out in Resolution 3 described below. This resolution provides for the sub-division and redesignation of all the issued Preference Shares into a total of 10,909,092 New Ordinary Shares and 220,454,540 New Preference Shares. These New Ordinary Shares, which will rank pari passu in all respects with the other issued New Ordinary Shares save that they will not rank for the Rights Issue, will represent approximately 16.3 per cent. of the issued New Ordinary Shares following the Rights Issue. The resolution also provides for the cancellation of all the Company's authorised but unissued Preference Shares. The holders of the Preference Shares have undertaken to the Company, subject to shareholders' approval, to enter into an agreement for the purchase by the Company of all the New Preference Shares, representing the entire balance of the issued preference share capital of the Company arising from Resolution 3, for an aggregate cash consideration of £300,000. This amount would be funded out of the net proceeds of the Rights Issue. The agreement for the purchase of all the New Preference Shares by the Company is expected to be entered into immediately following the EGM and Class Meeting, assuming the necessary Resolutions are passed, and to be completed on 9 May 2000, upon receipt by the Company of the proceeds of the Rights Issue. Under these arrangements the Company will have no continuing liability in respect of the accumulated arrears of preference dividend of approximately £577,500 at 31 December 1998. In addition, approximately £1.9 million of the Company's preference share capital will be transferred to the capital reserves. Group Strategy It is anticipated that up to £250,000 of the funds raised will be used to increase the Group's investment in product development and marketing subject to sufficient working capital being available. The investment in these two areas should result in an improvement in the long- term prospects for the core businesses within the Group. The Company continues to divest its non-core activities and in December announced the sale of Giltpack Packaging Limited to a third party. The Company is currently looking to sell its interest in GEL (Rhayader) Limited and hopes to make an announcement shortly. The disposal of these two businesses will leave the Company focused on electrical and electronic engineering businesses and the Company intends to expand within these areas through organic growth and future acquisition. It is the Directors' intention to sell the Company's premises at Totton, Southampton, subject to agreeing a fair value for the property with a purchaser. A further announcement will be made in due course but it is indicative of the Company's strategy to review its current property portfolio and dispose of surplus property where deemed appropriate and in the best interests of the Company and its Shareholders. It is proposed that in the event of Company's property at Totton being sold the net proceeds would be used, to reduce the Group's bank debt at the time. As a result of the implementation of the proposals contained within this announcement and the Prospectus, although the Company will not be able to resume payment of dividends immediately, the Company will be in a better position to do so at an earlier stage. Current trading and prospects In the Company's interim statement for the six months ended 30 June 1999 made on 2 September 1999 the Company stated that the outlook for the second half of the year was looking more promising. However, the general uncertainty resulting from the rejection of the rights issue proposed at the Extraordinary General Meeting on 3 September 1999 left the Company unable to reassure external parties of its long term future. This has resulted in significant market and financial pressure on the normal business of the Group. As a result the Company is expecting to report a loss for the twelve months ended 31 December 1999 which will be significant and greater than £3.9 million loss before tax. Further details are set out in the Prospectus. The Automotive Division of the Group encountered major problems during the last quarter of 1999, as a result of the withdrawal of a distribution contract with a major supplier. This withdrawal coincided with the resignation of the Managing Director and Finance Director. Despite major efforts to recover the situation, the Automotive Division has been severely damaged and is currently undergoing a strategic review. The Company expects to see an improvement in trading performance in 2000 upon satisfactory completion of the proposals described in this document. Shareholders should note the statements made in relation to working capital below. Working Capital The Group has announced that it proposes to raise approximately £2,300,000 net of expenses by way of the Rights Issue. It is intended that £1,500,000 of the net proceeds of the Rights Issue and the proposed retirement of £1,200,000 of the current bank debt together with funds from the new bank facilities will be used to discharge the bank indebtedness with the Group's current bankers. The continuance of the existing bank facilities, until the Rights Issue proceeds have been received, is dependent upon the extension of a letter of credit supporting a guarantee provided by Grande to the Group's bankers, which is due to expire on 31 March 2000. Details of this guarantee are set out in paragraph 5(b)(iii) of section VI. In addition to the new bank facilities Grande have been requested to provide the Group with a line of credit should additional working capital be required. To date, Grande have only stated that they would consider making available such additional credit lines, should they be required. Should they be required and if time allows, this may take the form of a further fundraising from Shareholders. The aforementioned new bank facilities are subject to certain conditions precedent, some of which require actions by Grande. Whilst Grande have indicated their intention to meet the relevant conditions, no firm undertakings have yet been provided to the bank. Subject to the satisfactory outcome of the above matters, the Company is of the opinion that, after taking into account the net proceeds of the Rights Issue, the Group has sufficient working capital for its present requirements, that is for at least twelve months from the date of this document. In the event that: (i) Shareholders do not approve the Resolutions, and the Rights Issue does not proceed; and/or (ii) Grande does not provide the additional credit line should it be necessary; and/or (iii)Grande does not meet the conditions precedent; and/or (iv) Grande does not extend the letter of credit. it is likely that the Group's banks will withdraw the Group's banking facilities, in which case the Group would experience difficulties in continuing to trade and the Directors would be required to seek alternative sources of funding. Actions related to this might include: (i) a sale or sales of businesses and/or assets; (ii) the re-organisation and relocation of certain businesses in order to achieve appropriate cost savings, potentially releasing assets for disposal; and (iii) negotiation of alternative sources of finance. In the event that the Rights Issue does not proceed, and/or Grande does not fulfil its undertakings and the above actions are unsuccessful, the Group would be unable to continue to trade. Proposed alterations to articles Proposals to alter the articles of association of the Company pursuant to Resolution 1 of the EGM are set out in the Prospectus. Extraordinary General Meeting and Class Meeting An EGM and Class Meeting is to be held at the offices of Addleshaw Booth & Co at 60 Cannon Street, London EC4N 6NP at 10.00 a.m. on 27 March 2000 at which four resolutions will be proposed as follows. Resolution 1, which will be proposed as a special resolution, will, if passed: (i) sub-divide each Ordinary Share into one deferred share of 4.8p and one ordinary share of 0.2p and consolidate every 25 such ordinary shares of 0.2p each into one new ordinary share of 5p; (ii) adopt new articles of association of the Company, incorporating the changes described in the Prospectus; (iii)increase the authorised share capital of the Company by £3,565,545.40 to £18,064,545.40 by the creation of 71,290,908 New Ordinary Shares. The increase will represent a 36.56 per cent. increase in the Company's authorised ordinary share capital as compared to the Company's authorised ordinary share capital immediately before the Capital Reorganisations; (iv) authorise the Directors for the purposes of section 80 of the Act to allot relevant securities up to £2,511,670.10 in connection with the Rights Issue and otherwise up to £1,117,538.45 in nominal amount (representing 33.3 per cent. of the enlarged issued ordinary share capital of the Company after the Capital Reorganisations and the Rights Issue but before the Warrant Instrument). This authority shall expire on the earlier of 31 December 2000 and the conclusion of the next Annual General Meeting of the Company; and v) authorise the Directors to allot equity securities for cash, outside the pre-emption provisions of section 89 of the Act, for the purposes of the Rights Issue, the entry into of the Warrant Instrument in connection with any other offer by way of rights in the future and otherwise up to £167,630.75 in nominal amount (equivalent to 3,352,615 New Ordinary Shares and representing approximately 5 per cent. of the issued ordinary share capital after the Capital Reorganisations and the Rights Issue but before the Warrant Instrument). Resolution 2, which will be proposed as an ordinary resolution, will, if passed: (i) authorise the acquisition and holding by members of the Concert Party of the interests in the voting share capital of the Company described in Resolution 2 amounting to 30 per cent. or more of the voting rights currently exercisable at general meetings of the Company, without a requirement for a general offer for the Company under Rule 9 of the Takeover Code; and (ii) approve the Underwriting Agreement. Resolution 3, which will be proposed as a special resolution, will, if passed: (i) reorganise the issued Preference Share Capital of the Company; (ii) approve the New Preference Share Purchase; (iii) cancel the authorised but unissued Preference Shares; and (iv) make various further consequential changes to the Articles. Resolution 4, which will be proposed as an ordinary resolution, will approve the entry into of the Warrant Instrument and the issue of the Share Warrants. The Rights Issue is conditional, inter alia, upon the passing of these Resolutions. Following the Capital Reorganisation and the Rights Issue but before the Warrant Instrument, there will remain authorised but unissued at least 22,947,694 New Ordinary Shares (representing approximately 25.5 per cent. of the Company's enlarged authorised ordinary share capital). The Directors have no present intention of issuing any of such authorised but unissued share capital other than (i) in connection with options granted under the Share Option Scheme and (ii) in connection with the Share Warrants. Shareholders Voting Undertakings Alpha Capital and Grande are Related Parties in respect of Resolution 2 and the other members of the Concert Party are associates of those companies in respect of Resolution 2. Accordingly the Related Parties and all members of the Concert Party will abstain from voting on Resolution 2. Also, Alpha Capital is a related party in respect of resolution 4 and the other members of the Concert Party are associates of EIL in respect of Resolution 4. Accordingly all members of the Concert Party will abstain from voting on Resolution 4. EIL, Noel Hayes, Simon Hayes, Cheviot Capital, Vernon Burroway and Paul Lawrence, who together hold or control 43,384,000 Ordinary Shares in aggregate, representing approximately 29.36 per cent. of the issued Ordinary Shares, have irrevocably undertaken to vote in favour of a capital reorganisation materially on the terms of that proposed by Resolution 1 to be proposed at the EGM in respect of those shares. In addition, all the Preference Shareholders have irrevocably undertaken to exercise all the voting rights attaching to those shares, representing 2,750,000 votes in aggregate, in favour of this Resolution. These undertakings represent a total of 30.65 per cent. of the votes that may be cast on this Resolution. When taken together with similar irrevocable undertakings given by the Directors in respect of the votes attaching to their aggregate holdings of 6,737,960 Ordinary Shares, the Company has received irrevocable undertakings from shareholders to exercise a total of 52,871,960 votes in favour of a capital reorganisation materially on the terms of that proposed by Resolution 1, representing approximately 35.13 per cent. of the votes that may be cast on this Resolution. Noel Hayes, Simon Hayes, Cheviott Capital, Vernon Burroway and Paul Lawrence, who together hold or control 23,436,000 Ordinary Shares in aggregate, representing approximately 15.86 per cent. of the issued Ordinary Shares, have irrevocably undertaken to vote in favour of a whitewash for the purposes of Rule 9 of the Takeover Code, and which is included in Resolution 2 to be proposed at the EGM in respect of those shares. When taken together with similar irrevocable undertakings given by the Directors in respect of the votes attaching to their aggregate holdings of 6,737,960 Ordinary Shares, the Company has received irrevocable undertakings from shareholders to exercise a total of 30,173,960 votes in favour of a whitewash for the purposes of Rule 9 of the Takeover Code, and which is included in Resolution 2, representing approximately 23.11 per cent. of the votes that may be cast on this Resolution. EIL, Noel Hayes, Simon Hayes, Cheviott Capital, Vernon Burroway and Paul Lawrence, who together hold or control 43,384,000 Ordinary Shares in aggregate, representing approximately 29.36 per cent. of the issued Ordinary Shares, have irrevocably undertaken to vote in favour of Resolution 3 to be proposed at the EGM in respect of those shares. When taken together with similar irrevocable undertakings given by the Directors in respect of the votes attaching to their aggregate holdings of 6,737,960 Ordinary Shares, the Company has received irrevocable undertakings from shareholders to exercise a total of 50,121,960 votes in favour of Resolution 3, representing approximately 33.92 per cent. of the votes that may be cast on this Resolution. Recommendation The Independent Directors (who, for the avoidance of doubt, do not include the Concert Party Directors, having been so advised by Beeson Gregory, consider that the Rights Issue, the Ordinary Capital Reorganisation (and the related proposals set out in Resolutions 1, 2 and 4) and the waiving of any obligation on the Concert Party to make a Rule 9 offer to be in the best interests of the Company and its Shareholders taken as a whole. In providing advice to the Independent Directors in relation to the waiving of the obligation on the Concert Party to make an offer pursuant to Rule 9 of the Takeover Code, Beeson Gregory has placed reliance on the Independent Directors' commercial assessments. The Independent Directors (who, for the avoidance of doubt, do not include the Concert Party Directors), having been so advised by Beeson Gregory, consider the entry into of the Underwriting Agreement is fair and reasonable and in the best interests of the Shareholders taken as a whole. Owing to the fact that the consideration to be paid by the Company to Alpha Capital (in respect of Alpha Capital underwriting the Rights Issue) is more than the usual commercial underwriting consideration the entry into of the Underwriting Agreement constitutes a related party transaction and accordingly the Concert Party Directors have not participated in the giving of the recommendation of the Independent Directors to approve the Underwriting Agreement. In addition the Related Parties will abstain (and have undertaken to take all reasonable steps to ensure that their associates will abstain) from voting on Resolution 2. The Independent Directors (who, for the avoidance of doubt, do not include the Concert Party Directors), having been so advised by Beeson Gregory, consider the entry into of the Warrant Instrument and the grant of the Share Warrants is fair and reasonable and in the best interests of the Shareholders taken as a whole. Owing to the fact that EIL is a major shareholder of the Company and Alpha Capital is an associated company of EIL the entry into of the Warrant Instrument and the grant of the Share Warrants are each a related party transaction and accordingly the Concert Party Directors have not participated in the giving of the recommendation of the Independent Directors to approve the entry into of the Warrant Instrument and the grant of the Share Warrants. In addition the Related Parties will abstain (and have undertaken to take all reasonable steps to ensure that their associates will abstain) from voting on Resolution 4. Accordingly the Independent Directors (not including the Concert Party Directors) recommend you to vote in favour of Resolutions 1, 2 and 4 to be proposed at the EGM and Resolution 1 at the Class Meeting, as they intend to do in respect of their own beneficial shareholdings amounting to 6,737,960 Ordinary Shares and representing approximately 4.56 per cent. of the issued ordinary share capital of the Company. The Directors (including the Concert Party Directors) unanimously consider that the Preference Capital Reorganisation and the New Preference Share Purchase (including the related proposals set out in Resolution 3) are in the best interests of the Company and its Shareholders taken as a whole. The Directors (including the Concert Party Directors) unanimously recommend you to vote in favour of Resolution 3 to be proposed at the EGM and Resolution 2 at the Class Meeting, as they intend to do in respect of their own beneficial shareholdings amounting to 6,737,960 Ordinary Shares and representing approximately 4.56 per cent. of the issued ordinary share capital of the Company. EXPECTED TIMETABLE OF EVENTS Record Date for the Rights Issue Close of business on 20 March Latest time for receipt of forms of proxy 10.00 a.m. on 25 March Extraordinary General meeting 10.00 a.m. on 27 March Separate Class Meeting 10.10 a.m. on 27 March Despatch of Provisional Allotment Letters 27 March Credit CREST accounts from the Capital Reorganisations 28 March Dealings to commence in the Rights Shares, nil paid, and other issued New Ordinary Shares 28 March Despatch of definitive certificates for the Capital Reorganisations 3 April Latest time for splitting Provisional Allotment Letters, nil paid 3.00 p.m. on 14 April Latest time for acceptance and payment in full and registration of renunciation 3.00 p.m. on 18 April Dealings in the Rights Shares to commence, fully paid 19 April Credit CREST accounts from the Rights Issue 2 May Complete purchase of New Preference Shares 2 May Despatch of definitive certificates for the Rights Shares 9 May Enquiries: Matthew Smallwood College Hill 020 7457 2020

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Ross Group (RGP)
UK 100

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