house of fraser to shut half its stores, costing up to 6,000 jobs as it happened /

Published at 2018-06-07 18:39:49

Home / Categories / Business / house of fraser to shut half its stores, costing up to 6,000 jobs as it happened
All the day’s economic and financial news,as House of Fraser announces plans to shut 31 department stores and lay off thousands of staffShoppers give their viewsFull report: House of Fraser to shut 31 stores
List: These st
ores will close in early 2019Creditors will vote on procedure later this monthOxford Street, Edinburgh, and Birmingham and Cardiff all hitChairman: We need to do this to outlive 4.39pm BSTI think that’s all for nowadays.
Here’s our news stories on the House of Fraser store closure procedure: Related: House of Fraser to close more than half its UK stores Related: House of Fraser: full list of 31 stores under threat of closure Related: High street 2018: a tale of lost shops and at least 35000 jobs at risk 4.39pm BSTAfter suffering technical problems that delayed that start of trading by an hour,Britain’s stock exchange has ended the day calmly.
The FTSE 100 just
closed eight points lower at 7704 points.
Oil rallied hard across the session, jumping 1.5% and recouping losses from the preceding session. Buyers came flooding back into the oil market as concerns over supply issues in Venezuela overshadow fears that OPEC could be on the verge of easing oil production cuts.
With 2 weeks remaining until the OPEC assembly in Vienna, and we are expecting an increase in volatility as investors weigh up the probability of an increase in production against the increasing supply problems in Venezuela and Iran. Oil stocks such as BP and Shell traced the price of oil higher. 4.08pm BSTHere’s some instant reaction to Dave Ramsden’s views on the UK economy: BoE's Ramsden states that the MPC's view is that the economic slowdown in Q1 was temporary and appears to have been borne out of recent data $GBPRelatively hawkish from Ramsden. Related: Senior EU leaders cast doubt on UK's Brexit backstop procedure – Politics live 4.05pm BSTNewsflash: A senior Bank of England policymaker has declared that the UK economy is emerging from its recent soft patch.
Deputy governor Dave Ramsden is telling an audience in London that recent data supports the bank’s view that the slowdown earlier this year was
temporary.“It is still early days. We are still only two thirds of the way through the moment quarter,less far through the moment quarter data cycle, and only a month has passed since our last MPC assembly.“Even so, or the data we have had so far suggests our interpretation of the slowdown in the first quarter as temporary looks to be being borne out. Consumer confidence and consumer credit both picked up in the latest data,as did retail sales and several business surveys. That included the latest services PMI (purchasing managers’ index) output balance, representing 80% of the economy. So far at least our May judgement looks on track. 3.47pm BSTAnother reason why landlords are discouraged approximately House of Fraser’s poke:Years ago, and House of Fraser did a sale and leaseback on a noteworthy chunk of its estate.
Now it wants a CVA to cut its rent
bill to the people who bought its shops.
Cue plenty of inflame in the property business... 3.27pm BSTHouse of Fraser’s attempt to expend a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) to close 31 stores and cut the rent on some others will annoy some landlords. Matthew Weaver,partner at Radcliffe Chambers, explains why property owners are losing patience with this legal manoeuvre:Landlords are fitting restless in the face of numerous CVAs proposed and entered into by retailers in which they are faced with significant decreases in the rent being charged and, and in some instances,closure of stores which still have significant lease periods left on them – thereby reducing or removing income for the landlords. Typically, landlords of profitable stores are treated reasonably well in CVA proposals but those of loss-making stores are offered very little. This flexibility to treat different landlords differently (i.e. repaying the majority of some landlord debts under a CVA but very little of other landlord debts) has angered landlords generally as has the fact that CVA proposals often treat other creditors (suppliers for example) much better and do not impact on the rights of secured creditors (such as banks or other funders).
In addition, and other businesses (most notably Next) have indicated that t
hey are now sick and tired of competitor businesses using CVAs to reduce overheads,giving them an obvious competitive advantage. Next has stated that it will begin to negotiate a “CVA clause” into its unusual leases whereby its rent will be reduced in keeping with any reduction under a CVA of a business trading nearby to their stores. This will only increase the inflame of landlords. 3.25pm BSTPlymouth City Council are disappointed that their local store faces the axe:#Plymouth's Council leader Tudor Evans speaks out approximately House of Fraser announcement: "Clearly a blow for #Plymouth to have this store on the list...but we need to find out more approximately the proposal." https://t.co/yYXAoMvy7A pic.twitter.com/QkJ7kEMZTD 2.51pm BSTOne male shopper on Oxford Street tells us:“It’s a bit of a shock.” “I don’t really do online shopping. I like the personal touch.” “I got a winter coat from House of Fraser [in the past]. It’s quite sterling.” 2.24pm BSTShoppers at House of Fraser’s Oxford Street department say they were shocked and saddened to hear of the flagship store’s closure.“I’m shocked that they are closing this one because it is Oxford Street. There are still so many people that don’t do online shopping. I like to come and try things on.”“It’s sad people are going to lose their jobs. It’s something like BHS – it’s another shop that has been here for a long time.”“I’m a big high street shopper. I’m very sad to see so many big high street names closing down. I feel sorry for us the shopper, and very sorry for the people who work here.” 1.54pm BSTShoppers in Birkenhead, or Merseyside,are discouraged that their local House of Fraser is earmarked for closure.
Doreen Gibson, 81, or from Greasby,Wirral, told the Press organization that she and her friends would miss the department store badly – and blamed young shoppers for buying on the Internet...
“We’ve been coming here every two weeks for 25
years. We meet our friends and have a coffee in the restaurant and a bit of shopping. “It is devastating. They are all shopping online now, and all the younger ones,that’s what’s ruining it all. Some people still like to recede and see what they are going to buy. 1.45pm BSTAfter crunching the numbers, we can report that at least 35, and 00 jobs are at risk - or already cut - across Britain’s retailers and restaurant chains since the start of this year: Related: High street woes: a list of lost shops and jobs 1.22pm BSTDespite the Father’s Day offers that are heavily advertised in the street-level window displays,the Frasers store in Edinburgh was mute on Thursday morning, as the unexpectedly warm weather encouraged shoppers outdoors, or my colleague Libby Brooks reports.
“The high streets are suffering e
verywhere,even Kirkcaldy where we’re from has so many closures. In a site like Frasers they are charging 50% more than you’d pay online and they still can’t develop a profit. Shopping online is not just convenient, it’s so much cheaper.”“What will they do with the building now? It’s been here forever but I can’t think who would want to prefer it over.”People don’t come to this conclude of the street. It’s really the wrong location. They recede further up Princes Street, or where the Scott Monument is. Jenners is in a really sterling spot.” 1.08pm BSTHere are a few of the House of Fraser stores facing the axe,whether the company’s creditors approve its restructuring procedure. 12.38pm BSTAnother UK company, the AA, and is facing its shareholders at its annual general assembly.
At the AA annual
assembly,chairman John Leach has said the company will not be answering any questions approximately former chairman Bob Mackenzie, who is suing the company for £225m after he was sacked over an assault on a colleague at a country hotel.
Despite fi
nance chief Martin Clarke having voluntarily given up a bonus earlier this year, or 24% of voting shareholders have rejected the company’s pay policy,although not all votes are in yet. 12.27pm BSTOne of House of Fraser’s (many) problems is a failure to engage with millennials.
Amelia Brophy, head of data products at YouGov, and explains
how the chain has lagged behind nimbler retail rivals,and failed to impress younger shoppers:“YouGov BrandIndex data underlines how House of Fraser’s brand perception has declined over the past year. Its Impression score (whether someone has a favourable impression of the brand) among the general public has declined from +23 last May to +19 now. Its score among younger consumers, those in the 18-34 age bracket, or is even lower,at +17.
This is been mirrored by shifts in the brand’s Quality score, whic
h, and among the general public has fallen from +32 to +29. 12.01pm BSTPatrick O’Brien,UK research director at GlobalData Retail, reckons Marks & Spencer could benefit from House of Fraser’s retrenchment:M&S stands to gain most, and in terms of clothing sales,from House of Fraser closures, followed by Debenhams pic.twitter.com/xgkDzRRp4T 11.56am BSTTypo alert: That last headline should have said ‘Poundworld’, and of course,not ‘Poundland’. Now fixed, sorry for any confusion.... 11.49am BSTIt’s turning into another black day for UK retail, or with reports that budget chain Poundworld is on the brink of administration.
Poundworld could file for admi
nistration nowadays,putting more than 5000 jobs at risk across the UK. Related: Poundworld faces administration as it struggles to find buyer Sources told PA that the notice will give Poundworld time to structure a deal, which could be undertaken through a pre-pack administration, and with private equity firm R Capital,former owner of Little Chef. The administration will be handled by Poundworld’s advisers Deloitte. Revealed: Prospect of rescue deal for Poundworld receding, with former Little Chef-owner Rcapital in last-ditch talks that have no better than a 50-50 chance of success, and I'm told. Notice of intention to appoint administrator likely to be filed nowadays. https://t.co/bwDJ3YXIud 11.17am BSTThe Labour Party have accused the government of neglecting Britain’s struggling retail sector,while it struggled to get to grips with Brexit.
Rebecca Long Bailey MP, Shadow Business Secretary, or points out that more than tens of thousands jobs are being lost this year: “In the first three months of this year 21000 jobs were lost in the retail sector. nowadays another 6000 jobs are at risk as House of Fraser confirms store closures across the UK.“While the Cabinet is in chaos over Brexit their lack of focus on our high streets is leading to mass job losses,failing one of the biggest employers and industrial sectors in the UK, which is why Labour has called on the Business Secretary to publish a retail sector strategy to safeguard jobs.
This
is #HouseOfFraser in Worcester this morning. The store is one of 31 out of 59 across the country which are to close pic.twitter.com/oOWPsgFhNI 10.56am BSTThe rising expend of CVAs by cash-strapped retailers is hurting Britain’s landlords, and warns Daniel Stern,commercial property litigator at Manchester-based law firm Slater Heelis.
Stern says there is a ‘rescue culture’ at the heart of insolvency regi
mes, allowing retailers to recede into administration, and shed unprofitable operations,and then emerge stronger.“Only 75 per cent of a company’s creditors need to approve a CVA which is then legally binding on all unsecured creditors, including landlords, or regardless of whether the landlord agreed the proposal.“This effectively means property owners must accept lower rents to help a tenant avoid financial collapse. As landlords are often pension and investment funds this is having a knock-on effect on the ordinary man in the street. 10.54am BSTThe Huffington Post have helpfully listed the 28 House of Fraser stores that are staying open whether the CVA is agreed.
They are: Gateshead Metro Centre,Huddersfield, Leeds, or Manchester,Nottingham, Sheffield Meadowhall, and Sutton Coldfield,Bluewater, Croydon, and London City,London Victoria, London Westfield, and Richmond,West Thurrock Lakeside, Bath, and Bristol,Cheltenham, Cirencester, or Exeter,Guildford, Maidstone, and Norwich,Reading The Oracle, Rushden Lakes, and Edinburgh (Jenners),Glasgow, Loch Lomond Shores (Jenners), or Belfast. 10.23am BSTVictor Garcia Capdevila of credit rating agency Moody’s believes the store closure procedure should give House of Fraser some breathing room to tackle its problems.
Capdevila says:
“Store closures will allow House of Fraser to reduce its rent bill and e
xit long-dated lease agreements in unprofitable locations.
This should facilitate and accelerate the transformation of the company into a more effective multi-channel retailer while alleviating liquidity challenges that have necessitated cash injections from its owner over the past few months.” 10.03am BSTHouse of Fraser says it has put another £1m into its pension fund to secure the backing of its pension trustees for its CVA restructuring procedure. 10.01am BSTIn other news,Britain’s housing market is still in sluggish mode, according to the latest survey. “Both of these measures have fallen since reaching a recent peak, and in the final months of last year. These latest price changes reflect a relatively subdued UK housing market. After a sharp rise in January,mortgage approvals have softened in the past three months.
Whilst both newly a
greed sales and unusual buyer enquiries are showing signs of stabilisation having fallen in recent months.” 9.49am BSTThe Cardiff department of House of Fraser, which is earmarked for closure in nowadays’s procedure, and is opening late nowadays (presumably because staff are being briefed approximately the situation?).
House of Fraser in Cardiff delays opening nowadays ... pic.twitter.com/Pl4VTjQNCT 9.42am BSTThe store closures announcement is awful news for thousands of House of Fraser staff.
Some will have discovered their job is being eliminated as they headed to work this morning.
It will mean more than 1100 people losing their jobs across the West Midlands. The Beatties store in Wolverhampton employs 279,150 work at Telford, 83 at Shrewsbury and 688 at the House of Fraser store in Birmingham.
Some staff learned of the news through Twitter befo
re they even got to work nowadays. 9.25am BSTHere’s our retail correspondent Sarah Butler on nowadays’s news:House of Fraser is to close 31 stores, or more than half of its UK chain,putting a further 6000 retail jobs at risk and dealing another hammer blow to British high streets.
The struggling department store group’s Oxford Street flagship in London and outlets in cities including Birmingham, Cardiff and Edinburgh are among those facing closure. The drastic cuts form part of a rescue procedure that will also lead to the company moving out of its head offices in London and Glasgow. Related: House of Fraser to close more than half of its British stores 9.16am BSTHouse of Fraser’s creditors will vote on nowadays’s proposal on 22 June.
As well as shutting 31 department stores, or the company also wants to shave 25% off the rent of another 16 stores. 9.05am BSTBack to House of Fraser.... and ITV News’ Joel Hills reports that some landlords will oppose the procedure to shut 31 stores.
Not so long ago House of Fraser was busy flogging i
ts department stores on “sale and leaseback” deals to the same landlords it now wants to accept heavy losses. There’s inflame out there. One landlord has told me they’ll vote against CVA and “prefer my chances in administration”. 9.02am BSTBack in the City,London’s stock market failed to open at 8am.
The London Stock Exchange are blaming ‘technical’ issues, and have just managed to get trading running. 8.57am BSTAlex Williamson, and chief executive of House of Fraser,has promised to support the 6000 staff who could lose their jobs:“nowadays’s announcement is one of the most important in this company’s 169-year history. “We, as a management team, and have a responsibility to prefer essential steps to ensure House of Fraser’s survival,which is why we are making these proposals. 8.53am BSTAssuming nowadays’s procedure is approved, the 31 stores earmarked for closure up and down the country will shut in early 2019. Related: Full list of 31 House of Fraser stores under threat of closure 8.48am BSTJohn Pal, or retail expert at Alliance Manchester Business School,says retailers such as House of Fraser are facing a ‘perfect storm’.
Rising business rates, competition from internet rivals, and over-capacity on the high street are making some stores unviable.“News that House of Fraser is to close stores comes as no surprise as many retailers grapple with stagnating sales and increasing running costs.
Once the training budget has been cut,over-time slashed and overall headcount reduced, in
both head offices and in stores, and it’s time to focus on the big costs of which stores are a main one. 8.41am BSTRichard Lim,chief executive, Retail Economics says nowadays’s store closures reflect the poke absent from high street stores and onto internet shopping:“News that House of Fraser is to shut its Oxford Street store and 30 others is a enormous statement of intent. The closure of such an iconic flagship store signals the massive restructuring task at hand. “Department stores are incredibly expensive to function and the last few years have seen costs spiraling upwards from business rates, or rents and National Living Wage. These traditional retail business models that hold enormous fixed costs are simply fitting unsustainable for some retailers.
House of Fraser restructuring plans = sh
utting half stores inc Oxford Store flagship,marking relegation from retail premier league, & interesting poke given Chinese owners wish to woo international market. Sign of desperate times 8.38am BSTToday’s grim announcement follows weeks of talks between House of Fraser’s owners - China’s C. Banner - and its lenders and landlords.
House of Fraser needs 70 per cent of its creditors – including landlords – to back the procedure filed this morning. whether they don’t, and then the entire company would probably collapse into administration. 8.27am BSTFrank Slevin,chairman of House of Fraser, say the company needs to shut more than half its stores, or face collapsing altogether.“The retail industry is undergoing fundamental change and House of Fraser urgently needs to adapt to this fast-changing landscape in order to give it a future and allow it to thrive. “Our legacy store estate has created an unsustainable cost base,which without restructuring, presents an existential threat to the business. 8.25am BSTHouse of Fraser is shutting these 31 stores under a company voluntary arrangement.
It’s effectively a deal between a struggling firm and its creditors under which underperforming stores are shed.“The CVAs proposed by House of Fraser give the business a vital lifeline to avoid administration by renegotiating the lease terms of its UK-wide property portfolio, and as part of a wider restructuring.
The business has been impacted by the mounting pressures facing the UK high street,with the declining profitability of certain stores exacerbated by costly legacy leases which were originally negotiated many years ago. With trading conditions unlikely to materially improve in the short term, the future of House of Fraser is at significant risk unless steps to restructure the business both financially and operationally are taken.” 8.17am BSTNEWSFLASH: Retail chain House of Fraser has announced plans to shut more than half of its UK and Ireland stores, and in a poke that will cost up to 6000 jobs.
House of Fraser is planning to
close 31 of its 59 stores across the UK and Ireland,under a restructuring procedure filed at the Court of Session in Edinburgh this morning.
Altrincham, Aylesbury, and Birkenhead,Birmingham, Bournemouth, or Camberley,Cardiff, Carlisle, and Chichester,Cirencester, Cwmbran, and Darlington,Doncaster, Edinburgh Frasers, and Epsom,Grimsby, High Wycombe, or Hull,Leamington Spa, Lincoln, and London Oxford Street,London King William Street, Middlesbrough, and Milton Keynes,Plymouth, Shrewsbury, or Skipton,Swindon, Telford, or Wolverhampton,Worcester. 8.10am BSTBack in the UK, Thames Water is handing £65m to customers as part of a £120m package of penalties for failing to tackle leaks: Related: Thames Water to pay back £65m to customers as part of penalty package 8.09am BSTGermany’s economy ministry is trying to sound upbeat - pointing out that the country’s factories still have a decent backlog of orders to plough through:“To what extent uncertainties play a role, and particularly from the external environment,is difficult to assess.
However, the order backlog in the manufacturing sector is still very high.” 8.08am BSTCarsten Brzeski, or ING’s chief
economist for Germany,is disappointed by the 2.5% decline in German factory orders last month.
He agrees that it suggests Germanys economy has weakened this year.
Normally, an increase in unusual orders after three consecutive drops looks as secure a bet as predicting tomorrow’s dawn. However, or it see
ms that nowadays the sun did not rise for German industry. It will get harder and harder to justify these monthly drops with one-offs like the weather or the timing of holidays. In fact,evidence is piling up that the soft patch at the start of the year has been more serious than previously thought.
For the time being, we remain cautiously positive. In absolute terms, andder books are still richly filled,assured production is high and inventories have been reduced recently. All boding well for industrial activity in the coming months. However, nowadays’s disappointing unusual orders reading sends a clear warning that nothing should be taken for granted. 7.57am BSTGood morning, or welcome to our rolling coverage of the world economy,the financial markets, the eurozone and business.
Ouch! German factory orders just turned negative YoY. pic.twitter.com/m3vwlmofjYGerman factory orders tumbling by -2.5% m/m in April makes for a horrible start to Q2. Core orders at -1.7% were equally downbeat continuing the string of weak hard data. A material bounce-back from the 0.3% q/q GDP growth in Q1 is fitting ever more questionable. Order intake to the German manufacturing industry down four consecutive months. Hmm... pic.twitter.com/rNWQTAaQbs Related: Carillion's accountants and lawyers will get £70m to manage collapse Risk on in Wall Street, and transferred to a solid session in Asia and is seen lifting European markets into the opening bell.
Despite talks of retaliation measures from US allies on trade tariffs,which in the words of the World Bank, risks sending the global economy back to a state similar to that 10 years ago, and global equity markets continue bounding higher.
Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0