Business Day

UK retail suffers terrible 24 hours

• Failure of leading British store owners Arcadia and Debenhams puts about 25,000 jobs at risk

- Deirdre Hipwell and Katie Linsell

The UK retail industry has suffered one of the harshest blows yet after two of the country’s bestknown retailers collapsed, putting 25,000 jobs at risk in less than 24 hours. Debenhams said on Tuesday it is preparing to close its doors for good after failing to find a buyer. Late on Monday, the Arcadia Group, which owns brands including Topshop and Dorothy Perkins, began insolvency proceeding­s.

The UK retail industry has suffered one of the harshest blows yet after two of the country’s best-known retailers collapsed, putting 25,000 jobs at risk in less than 24 hours.

Debenhams said on Tuesday morning it’s preparing to close its doors for good after failing to find a buyer. Late on Monday, Philip Green’s Arcadia Group, which owns brands including Topshop and Dorothy Perkins, began insolvency proceeding­s.

Both retailers have anchored malls and main streets across Britain for decades and operate about 600 stores combined. UK retailers have suffered a double whammy: the pandemic hit as many were struggling to adjust to online competitio­n. The industry is set to lose 235,000 retail jobs this year, according to the Centre for Retail Research.

The failure of Arcadia and Debenhams is “truly devastatin­g” in a country where main streets are being increasing­ly hollowed out, said Richard Lim, CEO of consultanc­y Retail Economics. “We cannot overstate the significan­ce of the collapse given the vast property portfolio, the number of jobs affected and the reverberat­ions felt across the industry.”

Debenhams, a 232-year-old UK department store chain, has been struggling for years as consumers shifted to online shopping and store visits declined. In April, the company filed to continue operating under administra­tion while seeking a buyer.

The chain decided to wind up the business on Tuesday after talks to sell the business to JD Sports Fashion failed. Arcadia is the biggest concession partner of Debenhams, and after that retailer failed, the sportswear retailer said the purchase was no longer appealing.

Debenhams said it had no choice but to start winding down the business, given the prolonged effects of the pandemic. It’s still open for offers for all or parts of the company.

The decision is a blow to Debenhams’ lenders, a consortium of financial investors including Silver Point Capital and GoldenTree Asset Management, which took control of the chain in 2019 as it struggled under a £720m debt load.

At the time, the company rejected rescue offers from retail tycoon Mike Ashley, the founder of Frasers Group.

Ashley may now return once again as a suitor as Debenhams is liquidated. He acquired rival retailer House of Fraser out of administra­tion in 2018. The tycoon has also expressed interest in buying Arcadia.

Arcadia has appointed Deloitte to run the administra­tion and the consultanc­y now has eight weeks to draw up initial proposals for the business, which could include a sale of all or part of the group. No job losses have been announced yet but they are likely to start mounting in the coming weeks as unprofitab­le stores are closed by the administra­tor.

Arcadia employs 13,000 people across 466 stores, of which 444 are in the UK.

Its performanc­e suffered from the nimbler growth of online rivals, such as Asos and Boohoo, and a heavy cost burden, bogged down by expensive store rents and property taxes.

Arcadia creditors will now be lining up to get repaid from asset sales if no buyer or new financing emerges. Among them, the company has a £310m loan with Apollo Global Management secured on its flagship store on Oxford Street. The subsidiary that owns that property has hired KPMG to assess options for the 9,292m² site, which used to welcome 400,000 customers a week before the pandemic.

Another liability is Arcadia’s pension plans, which the company agreed to provide security for in 2019 to the value of £210m. The Unite union has warned that employees may lose their pensions as a result of the administra­tion. The Pension Protection Fund is now assessing whether the schemes can be rescued.

ANOTHER LIABILITY IS ARCADIA ’ S PENSION PLANS, WHICH THE COMPANY AGREED TO PROVIDE SECURITY FOR IN 2019

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Dominoes falling: The Debenhams flagship department store on Oxford Street in central London. On Tuesday, the 232-year-old retail chain said it was preparing to close its doors for good. Arcadia, its biggest concession partner, has begun insolvency proceeding­s.
/Bloomberg Dominoes falling: The Debenhams flagship department store on Oxford Street in central London. On Tuesday, the 232-year-old retail chain said it was preparing to close its doors for good. Arcadia, its biggest concession partner, has begun insolvency proceeding­s.

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