Connect with us

Published

on

Wilko will shut the doors on its last remaining high street stores for the final time after the chain’s collapse.

The 93-year-old retailer has been closing each of its 400 UK stores over the past month after collapsing into administration in August.

Forty-one stores now remain but will close on Sunday. The shelves have already become bare while the firm sells off its last remaining products to recover cash to cover its outstanding debts.

Almost all of Wilko’s 12,500 workers are being made redundant.

The retailer collapsed after being hit hard by inflationary pressures, competition from rivals and supply chain challenges.

The shutters close on the final day of trading at the Wilko store in Barking, east London, one of the first set of Wilko stores to close down as the dramatic collapse of the high street chain takes shape. The historic retailer will shut 24 stores across the UK in the first phase of closures, with hundreds of workers at the shops set for redundancy. Picture date: Tuesday September 12, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story CITY Wilko. Photo credit should read: Yui Mok/PA Wire
Image:
The shutters close on the final day of trading at the Wilko store in Barking, east London, last month

Administrators PwC were called in but talks with interested firms failed to secure a rescue deal for the whole company with a potential takeover by HMV owner Doug Putman collapsing.

Although more than 120 Wilko stores – just over a quarter of its estate – were sold to discount retailing rivals, as many as 12,000 high street and head office jobs are expected to be lost.

More on Wilko

Roughly 70 stores were sold to the owner of Poundland, with a further 51 Wilko sites sold to B&M European Value Retail.

Read more:
Wilko creditors face vast losses
‘Death knell’: All Wilko stores to close

Those deals did not, however, protect the jobs at those stores.

The Range, another value retailer, bought Wilko’s brand and online assets.

Administrators for Wilko confirmed in filings last week that the business owed around £625m when it went bust.

The documents also showed the retailer’s pension fund was left more than £50m in deficit and is unlikely to receive more than £4m following the insolvency process.

Continue Reading

Business

Pound drops as 30-year gilt yields at highest level this century

Published

on

By

Pound drops as 30-year gilt yields at highest level this century

The value of the pound has sunk – as the cost of 30-year government borrowing reached a high last seen in 1998.

The so-called spot rate saw one pound buy $1.336 on Tuesday, a low last seen in early August, and down from $1.353 earlier in the day.

Despite the dip, it’s still higher than the vast majority of the past year: in early September 2024, a pound bought $1.31.

Money blog: ‘She didn’t get me a wedding gift – even though I spent thousands on her’

The decline, however, means sterling is on course for the biggest one-day drop since April, when Donald Trump’s announcement of country-specific tariffs spooked markets.

The drop was similarly steep against the euro, with a pound momentarily buying €1.1486, a low not seen since November 2023, nearly two years ago. It’s also a fall from €1.1586 earlier in the trading session.

Before the so-called liberation day announcement, £1 equalled nearly €1.19.

It comes as the yield – the interest rate demanded by investors – on 30-year government bonds – loans taken by the state – hit 5.72%, the highest rate this century.

Why?

Yields are rising across the globe in the face of weak economic growth and the US trade war.

Investors are also concerned about UK government finances as Chancellor Rachel Reeves battles to stick to her fiscal rules to bring down debt and balance the budget.

High inflation and increased public debt from the pandemic have left a deficit between state spending and income.

There have been high-profile government U-turns on winter fuel payments and welfare spending cuts that have meant the chancellor has to look elsewhere to meet her self-imposed fiscal rules.

Read more:
Thames Water creditors offer £1bn ‘sweetener’
Empty flats that developers say sum up UK’s housing crisis

More expensive interest payments from rising bond yields have meant the country is stuck in a cycle of rising debt.

Today’s rises to the cost of government borrowing could not have come at a worse time for the public finances.

While a £14bn sale of new 10-year government debt – a record sum – was completed, it was achieved at the highest yield since 2008.

Lale Akoner, global market analyst at investment platform eToro, said of the auction: “For the government, this creates a paradox – market confidence in UK debt is robust, but financing that debt is increasingly expensive, constraining budget flexibility and raising the stakes for fiscal discipline ahead of the autumn budget.”

The yield on 10-year gilts, as they are known in the UK, later rose to its highest since January at 4.825%, up on the day but in line with their transatlantic equivalent, US Treasuries.

The global bond sell-off was also being reflected on stock markets.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average and tech-focused Nasdaq were both down by more than 1% at the open on Wall St.

In Europe, Germany’s DAX was 2% lower while the FTSE 100 was just 0.6% down as it is less exposed to declines in technology stocks which have accounted for much of the value growth seen over the summer.

The flight from risk also saw the spot price of gold, traditionally a safe haven for investors in times of uncertainty, briefly climb to a new record high of $3,578.40 per ounce.

Continue Reading

Business

Nestle fires CEO after ‘undisclosed romantic relationship’ with employee

Published

on

By

Nestle fires CEO after 'undisclosed romantic relationship' with employee

Nestle shares opened down more than 2.5% after the maker of Nescafe, Cheerios, KitKat, and Rolos dismissed its chief executive after an investigation into an undisclosed romantic relationship with an employee.

On Monday night, Nestle announced that the immediate dismissal of Laurent Freixe, effective immediately, following the investigation into the relationship, with a direct employee, which had breached the company’s code of business conduct.

Money blog: ‘My best friend didn’t give me a wedding gift – what should I do?’

The replacement for Mr Freixe was announced as being Philipp Navratil, a long-time Nestle executive and former head of Nespresso, the brand of coffee machines owned by Nestle.

It’s the second CEO departure from the Swiss food giant in a year.

Nestle's chief executive, Laurent Freixe. File pic: Reuters
Image:
Nestle’s chief executive, Laurent Freixe. File pic: Reuters

Mr Freixe’s predecessor, Mark Schneider, was suddenly removed a year ago, and in June, the longstanding chair, Paul Bulcke, announced he would step down in 2026.

No further detail on the relationship was released by the company, nor was additional information on whom the person Mr Freixe had the relationship with.

Mr Bulcke, who led the investigation, said: “This was a necessary decision. Nestle’s values and governance are strong foundations of our company. I thank Laurent for his years of service at Nestle.”

Mr Freixe had been with Nestle since 1986, holding roles around the world, including chief executive of Zone Latin America.

Read more:
Thames Water creditors offer £1bn ‘sweetener’
Empty flats that developers say sum up UK’s housing crisis

Nestle’s shares, a bedrock of the Swiss stock exchange, lost almost a third of their value over the past five years, performing worse than other European stocks.

The appointment of Mr Freixe’s had failed to halt the slide, and the company’s shares shed 17% during his leadership, disappointing investors.

Continue Reading

Business

Cote restaurant’s owner cooks up fresh capital injection

Published

on

By

Cote restaurant's owner cooks up fresh capital injection

The owner of the Cote restaurant chain is exploring the option of injecting new funding into the business and retaining control after two months of talks with potential buyers.

Sky News has learnt that Partners Group, the Swiss-based private equity firm, is seriously considering providing millions of pounds of new capital to finance a turnaround plan which would be likely to involve the closure of loss-making sites.

Partners Group hired Interpath Advisory during the summer to sound out prospective bidders.

A number of those discussions are said to be ongoing.

Cote was bought out of administration by Partners Group in the autumn of 2020 in a deal reportedly worth £55m.

The chain trades from about 70 restaurants, down from close to 100 shortly before it collapsed into insolvency five years ago.

Sources close to the sale process said that Interpath had been marketing the company based on last year’s turnover of over £150m.

Roughly 60 of the sites are said to be profitable, implying there could be scope for further closures.

The sale process comes at a time when hospitality venue operators continue to face severe financial pressures, with the industry’s leading trade body recently warning of a further jobs bloodbath in the months ahead.

“If we carry on with these trends and the situation doesn’t improve – and clearly Rachel Reeves’s statements are giving a signal to consumers that it is not going to get better any time soon – then I would see this accelerating,” said Kate Nicholls, chair of UK Hospitality.

“Unless there is a change of tack by the government, we are looking at 150,000-200,000 fewer workers in hospitality during the first full year of [employer national insurance contribution] changes.”

Partners Group and Interpath declined to comment.

Continue Reading

Trending