Gap to close all 81 stores in UK and Ireland
Estimated loss of more than 1,000 jobs but San
Francisco-based firm will continue to operate online
Stores are due to close between late August and the
end of September.
Sarah
Butler
@whatbutlersaw
Wed 30 Jun
2021 22.58 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/jun/30/gap-to-close-all-81-stores-in-uk-and-ireland
Gap Inc has
confirmed plans to close all 81 of its stores in the UK and Ireland with the
estimated loss of more than 1,000 jobs.
The US
retailer said the stores would close between late August and the end of
September this year but it would continue to operate its online store in the UK
and Ireland. Gap did not confirm the number of jobs that would go but is
estimated to have employed at least 20 people in each outlet.
The
decision is the result of a strategic review of the San Francisco-based firm’s
European operations that began in October last year. Gap said earlier this
month that it would close just 19 stores in the UK and Ireland as they came to
the end of their lease.
Gap said on
Wednesday that it is also aiming to sell off its stores in Italy and France, to
be run by different franchise operators, as part of the review.
“We believe
in Gap’s global brand power. We are executing against Gap’s power plan and
partnering to amplify our global reach. Through a strategic review begun last
fall of our Gap European business, we conducted a thorough evaluation of each
market and potential partners,” the company said in a statement.
The latest
closures come after Gap’s parent group closed all its Banana Republic stores in
the UK in 2016. The US brand has struggled to find distinctive appeal in the
highly competitive UK market.
Gap is the
latest fashion chain to exit the UK high street as shoppers rein in spending on
clothing during the pandemic.
Worldwide
sales for Gap Inc, which also includes Old Navy and Athleta, sank 16% to
$16.4bn last year, despite online growth.
Topshop,
Debenhams, Oasis, Warehouse, Karen Millen and Laura Ashley have all disappeared
from the high street in the past 18 months while even Marks & Spencer,
Next, House of Fraser and John Lewis have reduced their store estate.
The shift
to working from home, cancellations of events from theatre trips to weddings,
combined with health fears and economic worries, put a further dampener on an
industry that was already suffering from rising costs and tough competition
from online specialists such as Asos and Boohoo.
Spending on
technology and experiences has also diverted money away from clothing, while
consumers have begun to question the fast-fashion industry and its
environmental and ethical impact.
In April, a
study by the Centre for Retail Research found that almost 190,000 jobs had been
lost in retail between the start of the pandemic and 31 March 2021.
The
industry has warned that action is needed by the government to adjust business
rates, a property tax which they say unfairly burdens high street retailers and
helps online rivals.
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