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Who's
Gone Bust in UK Retailing 2005-8?
November 2007
Legal Note: this listing of UK retailers
who went into receivership between 2005 to 2008 is based on research
carried out at the time and our understanding of their business
affairs then. Some of these companies recovered and came out of
administration; some were bought by other businesses; some were
sold as going concerns but changed their name; for some, the name
was bought and this is still used, but under different ownership;
and others ceased to exist. The presence of any business in this
historical listing must not be taken to imply that it no longer
exists, its name is not used or that such business, if still trading,
is impaired in anyway.
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2007
- Ravel: Goodbye Ravel. After five years of losses, Clarkes
announced in May that it is finally closing the 50-store shoe
chain that trades as Ravel.
- Goodbye Robbs Department Store, Hexham. Closing after
189 years of trading, its owners (Owen Owen) notified employees
they had lost their jobs by sounding the fire alarm and holding
an al fresco staff meeting in the car park.
In Administration
- Nevsport, a Scottish supplier of outdoor and snow sports
equipment with 12 stores, went into administration in October.
It is now owned by billionaire Mike Ashley.
- ePlay, the 123-store games chain, went into administration
in Sept 2007.
- RONIT ZILKHA, the designer fashion retailer with five
standalone stores and eight concessions, went into administration
in September.
- ChoicesUK, the DVD retailer with retail, local and direct
operations went bust in August. Its local and direct arms were
sold to Findtel and Blockbuster bought 59 of its shops in September.
Kwik-Save,
the downmarket grocery chain, collapsed in July 2007. 90 stores
were immediately closed and 1,100 people lost their jobs. These
people had all have been working without pay for the last 6 weeks,
as they responded to appeals by management which was unable to
pay their wages. The other 56 stores may be saved and rebranded
as FreshXpress by Irish businessman Brendan Murtagh. Don't
hold your breath, though. Over the last year Kwik-Save (once the
doyen of the discount operators established by Welsh entrepreneur
Albert Gubay in 1959) has been in a mess. Previously part of Somerfield,
it was 'saved' in 2006, but had a terrible Xmas and Jan 2007 with
gaps on the shelves because it did not pay its bills. It apparently
secured a £50 million rescue deal in February 2007, but whether
the money was actually paid seems doubtful. Poor trading, high
debt, and refusal to supply by food manufacturers created more
problems in May/June and the Company closed 76 of its 228 stores.
IN May/June 2007 it was in and out of court, fighting administration.
It succumbed finally on 6th July.
- Hawkeshead, the clothing retailer rescued from bankruptcy
in 2006, is to be broken up and sold off. It employed 400 staff,
had 20 stores and T/O was around £25 million.
Fopp,
the 3rd largest UK music store, closed half its stores on Friday
22 June 2007 to carry out an urgent stocktake, announced a strategic
review of the business, but went into administration a week later,
blaming internet and supermarket sales of CDs and intense price
competition. All 105 stores closed on 29 June 2007 and 700 staff
lost their jobs.Fopp was a private company that had bought one-half
of Music Zone a few months previously, which cannot have
helped. HMV bought the name and some of its best stores
over summer.
- The Natural World, the eco-gift retailer, has been unable
to find a buyer since it went into administration in January.
- Klaussner, the furniture retailer with 29 stores and
turnover of £27 million, went into administration for the second
time in May 2007. 250 staff have lost their jobs. The sites are
up for sale.
- Only2, the store chain set up by former Poundland
boss that sold everything for £2, went into liquidation in April
2007. The six shops in Brierley Hill, Keightley, Swansea etc closed
before Easter.
- Elle, the ladies fashionwear chain rescued
from administration (as Actif) in 2006 and now operating as L
Wear, went into administration again in March 2007, blaming cash-flow
problems. 32 of its 40 outlets have been closed by the administrator
and concessions in HoF have all closed. The business is likely
to be sold by the Administrators in May in some form.
- Toyworld, with 22 stores and 223 staff, went
into administration in March 2007, blaming poor trading. The Company's
parent is Youngsters.
- Owen Owen, which runs Lewis's in Liverpool, Esslemont
& MacIntosh in Aberdeen, Robbs in Hexham (Northumberland), and
Jopling's in Sunderland went into administration at the end of
February. By May there was hope of reconstituting it as 'son of
Allders'.
- Filmnight, the DvD rental business with 60 stores, was
placed in administration. 14 stores have been purchased by Christopher
Simpson.
- David Flatman , the discount book retailer that trades
as Bookworld, Bargain Books and bw! went into administration in
mid-February 2007.There were 50 stores (turnover £30 million)
with 397 staff. Eight stores closed immediately with four more
due to shut at the end of February.
- Stationery Box, the Warrington-based chain
of 140 stationery stores, went into administration on 31 January
2007 blaming stiff competition from supermarkets and the internet.
Theo Paphitis (Dragons' Den) had bought the company name
and 61 stores only a few days beforehand.
- Right Price Tiles, the Swansea-based company
with 53 stores, went into administration at the end of January.
An earlier version of this company called Tiles-R-Us had done
the same last year until being bought by the Irish concern, Railway
Tile Store (note: imaginative company names in this sector
of retailing).
- The Peak Store, a small walking/adventure clothing
business with shops in Bakewell, Derby and Nottingham went out
of business losing 30 jobs blaming mild weather, high costs and
competition from multiples.
- H Plumb & Son, the Wigan-based electrical chain
with 10 stores and 100 staff, is also in administration. It has
closed 8 shops and dismissed three-quarters of the existing employees.
- Greeting Card Group, the second-largest UK
greeting card store, went pop on 2 January 2007. It has 470 stores
trading mainly as 'Cardfair' or 'Card Warehouse' and 2,500 employees.
The turnover was £70 milllion.
- Music Zone,the independent music store chain,
which sold itself as a cut-price alternative to Virgin and HMV,
went into administration in early January affecting 1,100 staff
and 103 stores. Fopp have now bought the company name, 67 stores,
3 warehouses and the rest is for sale.
- Little Chef, the ubiquitous roadside restaurant
chain with several previous owners, went into administration at
the beginning of January 2007, having failed to obtain new funds
over Christmas. 196 of the chain's 236 restuarants were later
sold to a new owner in January, saving most of the 3200 jobs.
The company is to be sold in July for £20 million the Benetton
family (who own Autogrill in Italy).
Who else has problems?
- ILVA, the Danish furniture store group that (last year)
"could take on Ikea", is reported to have made significant losses
and suffered quality/delivery problems. It has stores in Thurrock
Lakeside, Manchester and Gateshead. Its backer Advent International
has refused it any more funds.
- Focus, Britain's third-largest DIY firm, was bought by
Cerberus, the US hedge fund, for £1 in June. It had been in urgent
debt-restructuring talks with creditors since the beginning of
2007 as its private-equity group owners decided to sell out. After
several false dawns, Cerebus (the new owners) of the debt-heavy
business agreed to pay off £174 m debts and pay the bondholders
£40m (40%). Bill Grimsey and Bill Hoskins (known as 'the Bills'),
the retail double act who revived DIY chain Wickes in the 1990s,
became the new management team.
- Adams, the childrenswear retailers, needed
new backers in Jan 2007 following poor trading and high debt.
A number of its shops were closed and stock seized when it unilaterally
revised rental agreements. In February the chain was bought for
£20 million by John Shannon (former chairman of Country Casuals
and Stead & Simpson).
- Ethel Austin, the 300-store value clothing
business, seems near to a sale because poor trading and may be
bought by Credit Suisse.
- Budgens Stores,the 182-outlet grocery chain with 6000
staff, owned by Irish-based Musgrave, is to be sold off as individual
shops to local entrepreneurs and community shops
Who Went Down in 2006?
- Olan Mills Photography
Olan Mills, the photography business, has gone into administration.
Administrators for the company, which collapsed with debts of
£6mn in December 2006, were writing to an estimated 100,000 customers
saying that it was "unlikely" that the photographs they ordered
would be delivered in time for Christmas.
- Glyn Webb
Glyn Webb, the DIY and home furnishings retailer, went into administration
in December 2006. About 200 staff faced redundancy.
- Aftershock
Aftershock, the womenswear retailer, went into administration
early in 2006 and later handed its UK stores over to Winway Trading
(its SA franchisee).
- Ilkeston Consumer Coop
Again not bust exactly, but forced to merge with the Midlands
Cooperative Society Ltd. Ilkeston Co-op was notorious in the Cooperative
Movement for being uncooperative, avoiding partnerships with other
Co-operative organisations and prone to giving them its advice.
- MFI
Not bust exactly, but MFI sold the 200-store business to new owners
for one pound in September and renamed their company Galiform.
The new owner is the private equity business Merchant Equity Partners
(MEP), which will continue to operate MFI as a going concern.
A further injection of capital into MFI will be made by the former
owner. MFI originally operated out of a single shop in Edgware
from 1964 as "Mullard Furniture Industries". It rapidly became
the national leading flat-pack retailer by the late 70s and took
over Hygena. Loved by British retail academics and case-study
writers, it merged with ASDA in 1985 to give it additional mass,
creating ASDA-MFI. Galiform will now concentrate on the joinery
business.
- Mikey
The contemporary jewellery retailer with 28 outlets, which included
standalones and concessions in Topshop and Selfridges, went into
administration in July. Former New Look Director, Alan Wood and
his wife Lisa bought the business for £ 621,000.

- PowerHouse
The tough climate in the UK electricals retailing market was blamed
by New Zealand-based owner PRG Group for its decision to put PowerHouse
into administration. All 50 remaining PowerHouse stores were closed,
with 500 of the retailer's 650 employees made redundant. Powerhouse
was created out of the old Electricity Board showrooms (eg MEB
and London Electric for older readers). Although it was the third
largest electrical retailer in Britain, its market share was miniscule.
- Toymaster Kingdom
Toy retailer Toymaster Kingdom called in administrators in September
after falling victim to rising costs and tough trading. This Ipswich-based
retailer operated 14 stores and employed 150 staff. The business,
which is officially known as TM Kingdom is continuing to trade
as normal and pay suppliers.
- Actif
Retail group Actif, owner of the Elle brand in the UK, went into
administration in April. The company ran out of cash just before
quarter-day rents were due. In January, the group had run 16 stores
and 40 concessions across the UK.
- Morgan UK
Another
icon went into administration in June 2006. The retailer's business
model of licensing clothing from French parent company Morgan
SA meant it was unable to compete on price with its high street
rivals, such as Topshop and Jane Norman, which use the cheaper
method of sourcing product directly. A tough consumer environment
on the high street in general compounded its problems. Trading
for the first six months of the financial year to June was poor,
with like-for-like sales down 19.1 per cent to £11.8 million.
In the end Morgan SA withdrew the distribution agreement with
immediate effect (same as Kookai). Morgan operated 19 company-owned
stores, 50 department store concessions and supplied 40 franchise
stores in the UK. 600 staff were made redundant.
- Miller Brothers
The family-run electrical business went into administration in
May. A fast rescue deal enabled a management team led by the former
CEO to purchase the Doncaster site together with the Miller Brothers
Group's internet business www.millerbros.co.uk and several other
internet brands. This saved over 100 jobs across the store, internet,
warehousing and head office functions. As part of the rescue package,
the new company continues to trade under the "Miller Brothers"
banner.
- Baron Jon
Baron Jon, the menswear retailer, went into administration in
March.
- Dewhurst gets the chop
Dewhurst
Master Butcher was a great shop. It was the UK's biggest chain
of butchers, operating 1,400 butcher's shops in Britain in the
late 1970s (an owned by the famous/infamous Vestey family), but
only 95 by 2006 with 400 staff. The directors called in administrators
in March, blaming intense competition from the supermarkets and
significant increases in costs. It closed 60 branches and enlisted
administrator BDO Stoy Hayward to sell the remaining 35 stores.
- Silverscreen
The DVD specialist backed by private equity giant Apax, went into
administration in March just hours after approaching Richard Branson's
Virgin Megastores chain about a sale or merger. The retailer was
a victim of a tough market hit by fierce competition from free
product given away with papers, supermarkets and pirated goods.
There were 65 stores and 50 staff.
- Bewise and QS
These value fashion chains which employed about 4,500 staff across
343 UK stores went into administration in February (poor trading).
Since then, they have been rescued from administration, closed
163 of their stores, shut down the head office in Brighton and
consolidated management operations at their Solihull warehouse.
By November 2006, the 'Times'' Anne Ashworth was claiming QS could
become the next Primark. Difficult to believe but this illustrates
the strength of the company's turnaround. In January 2007, QS
was bought by Alok Group, the Indian textile manufacturing company
- Sock Shop
With 13 stores and around 100 concessions, this once iconic business
of the early 80s (founded in 1983 by Sophie Mirman) that had once
owned 150 shops went into administration (again) in February 2006.
It was bought from the Harris Watson Group by Osan Ltd, part of
Ruia Group.
- Capo Man & Woman
This multi-brand fashion retailer closed 12 of its high street
and shopping centre outlets in February making 130 staff redundant.
Civic Enterprises, its ominously-titled parent holding company,
was in administration after suffering losses of several millions
of pounds. Five shops were left trading, pending finding new buyers.
- Kookai
The French fashion brand retailer went into administration in
January (the French parent withdrew support and obviously felt
the UK chain showed poor retail acumen), but was later sold to
Maurice and Michael Bennett, who had previously built up the Warehouse
chain.
- MVC
Music and DVD retailer previously owned by Woolworths with 67
stores was the first failure of 2006. Music Zone bought 41 stores
from MVC which now trade under its own name.
NEWS OF 2005
During 2005, the retailers that collapsed or went into administration
included:
- Past Times
- Allders Department Store (Croydon store rescued by Jaeger and
still bears the name)
- Unwins Wine group
- All:Sports
- Furnitureland
- The Sofa Company
- Ciro Citterio
- the Gadget Shop
- Index
- Etam
- Pilot Clothing

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