Monday 6 July 2020

John Lewis to close several stores as Harrods cuts 700 jobs / Harveys and TM Lewin fall into administration with loss of 800 jobs.



John Lewis to close several stores as Harrods cuts 700 jobs

John Lewis staff unlikely to receive 2021 bonus because of coronavirus crisis

Sarah Butler
 @whatbutlersaw
Wed 1 Jul 2020 12.27 BSTLast modified on Wed 1 Jul 2020 12.50 BST

Harrods says ‘necessary social distancing requirements to protect employees and customers is having a huge impact on our ability to trade’. Photograph: Hollie Adams/Getty Images
John Lewis has confirmed it is to close a number of its shops and Harrods is cutting 700 jobs as department stores reel from the coronavirus pandemic.

In a letter to the retailer’s staff, the John Lewis chairman, Sharon White, also said the store chain is to shut down a London office and will probably ditch the annual bonus paid to all staff, which is regarded as a key part of the employee-owned group’s culture.

Harrods has told its staff that one in seven of its 4,800 staff would be affected by job cuts because of the “ongoing impacts of this pandemic”.

In a note to Harrods staff, the chief executive, Michael Ward, blamed the cuts on social distancing and lack of tourists: “The necessary social-distancing requirements to protect employees and customers is having a huge impact on our ability to trade, while the devastation in international travel has meant we have lost key customers coming to our store and frontline operations.”

Jobs in parts of the store that remain closed, including beauty services and cafes, are expected to be among those to go.

The John Lewis chairman told staff the retailer was in talks with some of its landlords about “ending some leases” and was trying to renegotiate the terms of some others. White said the closures would mean job losses and also warned that the group is highly unlikely to pay a bonus next year as it hoards cash.

White had warned previously that John Lewis might not reopen all of its stores. However, in a letter to staff first reported by the Evening Standard, she confirmed the plans. The shops likely to close were not named.

The group, which also owns the Waitrose chain, has reopened 22 of its 50 department stores since non-essential retailers were given the green light to restart on 15 June. Plans to open a further 10 were announced today, including Oxford Street in London on 16 July. The group has confirmed that more outlets will reopen in future. A handful are expected to be closed permanently.

In the letter, White said: “The difficult reality is that we have too much store space for the way people want to shop now. As difficult as it is, we now know that it is highly unlikely that we will reopen all our John Lewis stores. Regrettably, it is likely that there will implications for some [staff members’] jobs.”

John Lewis said no final decision had been made and any details would be shared with staff by the middle of July.

She said that trade had not been as bad as feared but the company needed to act to preserve cash as it expected trading to be tougher in the coming month. “There is clearly a lot of uncertainty but as things stand, it is hard to see the circumstances where we will be able to pay a bonus next year. I know this will be a blow for partners who have made sacrifices these past months,” White wrote.

M Lewin folds
At the opposite end of the retail scale, shirt maker TM Lewin – a top 250 retailer in the RXUK Top 500 – has also announced that it is withdrawing from the high street, closing all 66 of its stores and moving operations online.
In a statement, Resolve, which has been hired to restructure the retailer, said: "This acquisition secured the future of the brand at a time of unprecedented uncertainty within the retail sector. After considerable review, and due to the many issues currently being experienced by high street retailers, it has been determined that the future of the TM Lewin brand will be online-only."
The shirt makers assets have been sold to Torque Brands – and investment company set up by Simba Sleep co-founder James Cox and backed by Allan Leighton, former Asda CEO and Paul Taylor, who previously ran Harrods – in a pre-pack deal, which doesn’t include the retailer’s stores.
TM Lewin will be added to Torque’s growing stable of failing retail brands the company is looking to purchase and roll out globally as online-only retailers. Torque plans to take brands that have cache, but which are financially too insecure to survive the COVID-19 crash, and run them more economically by using the same IT, manufacturing and distribution systems to reap economies of scale.
A spokesman for Torque says: “The decision to significantly reduce the scale of the business in order to preserve its future will regrettably result in job losses as a direct result of the closing of the store network as we right-size the business."
Currently 650 of TM Lewin’s 700 staff are on the government-funded furlough. It is thought some 600 will lose their jobs.


Harveys and TM Lewin fall into administration with loss of 800 jobs

A further 1,300 jobs are at risk as more high street chains succumb to Covid-19 pandemic

Tue 30 Jun 2020 16.47 BSTFirst published on Tue 30 Jun 2020 14.12 BST

Furniture chain Harveys and shirt maker TM Lewin have both called in administrators on another bleak day for UK retailers, with the immediate loss of more than 800 jobs and more than 1,300 others at risk.

The collapse of the two familiar retail names is another blow for high streets already reeling from the closure of a number of of Debenhams outlets and the collapse of fashion retailers Cath Kidston, Laura Ashley, Oasis and Warehouse.

Scottish retail chain M&Co, which employs 2,700 people at 262 stores, has appointed advisers from Deloitte to consider options for the business, including a possible sale via a pre-pack administration, as first reported by Sky News on Tuesday.

Shirt maker TM Lewin, which has not reopened any stores since the lockdown on “non essential” retailers was lifted earlier this month, said all 66 of its outlets would be permanently closing with the loss of about 600 jobs, after the group called in administrators on Tuesday.

Administrators from PwC are seeking a buyer for about 20 Harveys stores and its three manufacturing sites. But 240 redundancies were made immediately at the chain and more than 1,300 jobs may go if a buyer cannot be found.

All its stores will continue to trade for now, but industry watchers believe a buyer is unlikely to materialise. The retailer has been struggling for years and is also heavily reliant on sister chain Bensons for Beds, with which it shares several sites.

Bensons was also put into administration on Tuesday. However, it has been bought out in a prearranged deal by its private equity owner Alteri Investors, with the aim of saving between 150 and 175 of the chain’s 242 stores, its Huntingdon manufacturing operation, and nearly 1,900 jobs.

The buyout involves new investment of £25m into Bensons by Alteri. All current Harveys and Bensons orders will be honoured by the ongoing business.

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Zelf Hussain, joint administrator at PwC, said: “The group had been facing increasingly challenging trading conditions in recent months, in particular the Harveys furniture business. This has resulted in cashflow pressures, exacerbated by the effects of coronavirus on the supply chain and customer sales. It has not been possible to secure further investment to continue to trade the group in its current form.”

Harveys and Bensons’ parent group appointed administrators from PwC on Tuesday morning after a tough period of trading for furniture retailers, which were suffering from a slowdown in the housing market and low consumer confidence even before the government-imposed high street shutdown forced them to temporarily close stores in March.

“The restructuring, whilst obviously difficult for Harveys’ employees, will safeguard more than half the group’s workforce and is a necessary milestone on Bensons’ journey to becoming a market-leading beds retailer with a strong omnichannel presence,” said Gavin George, the chief executive of Alteri.

“We will continue to work closely with the management team on the turnaround of the business which we believe can have a bright future, despite the challenges facing the retail industry, including the long-term impact of the coronavirus pandemic.”

Alteri bought Harveys, which was founded in 1966, and Bensons, which has been in business for 70 years, in November last year.

TM Lewin owner Stonebridge Private Equity, whose vehicle Torque Brands took over TM Lewin in May, has bought back the brand’s remaining assets, including its online business, in a pre-pack deal.

Stonebridge said it had formed the view that TM Lewin was no longer a viable going concern in its current format.

The group did not reopen stores last month as the company said it relied on services such as measuring which were not possible to deliver with physical distancing.

“The business is unable to sustain current rental agreements for its store network across the country. With all stores still remaining closed due to social distancing guidelines, our customers have been unable to shop in store for the past three-plus months; this has forced our hands to focus on a radical overhaul of the business model, rebuilding from the ground up in a fashion we deem fit for the years to come,” Torque said in a statement.

Thousands of job losses were announced in other sectors too this week, including:
Up to 700 jobs at Harrods
About 600 workers at shirtmaker TM Lewin
Up to 900 jobs at management consulting firm Accenture
300 roles at Virgin Money, Clydesdale Bank and Yorkshire Bank
1,700 UK jobs at plane-maker Airbus
And 1,300 crew and 727 pilots at EasyJet
WH Smith, Bensons for Beds, Wrights Pies, tableware-maker Steelite International, the Adelphi Hotel in Liverpool and Norwich Theatre Royal have also announced plans to reduce staff.


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