China Daily (Hong Kong)

Sanpower unit selling controllin­g stake in UK firm House of Fraser

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The Chinese owner of struggling British department store chain House of Fraser intends to sell its majority stake to another company from China, according to a Chinese stock exchange filing.

Less than four years after buying the well-known British store, which was founded in Glasgow in 1849, Nanjing Xinjiekou Department Store Co is selling a 51 percent stake to tourism developmen­t company Wuji Wenhua.

Nanjing Xinjiekou is a subsidiary of private business conglomera­te Sanpower Group, which bought an 89 percent stake in House of Fra- ser in 2014 for 480 million pounds ($666.4 million) — a record for Chinese investment in foreign retail.

In 2013, House of Fraser opened its first overseas branch in Abu Dhabi’s World Trade Center Mall, and after several delays, its first China branch was opened in Nanjing in December 2016, when Sanpower chairman Yuan Yafei announced plans to add a further 50 Chinese stores under the name “Oriental Fraser”.

However, House of Fraser has struggled with a challengin­g retail environmen­t in the United Kingdom, where brick-and-mortar retailers have been hit by the rise of online shopping.

The last decade has seen the collapse of several well-es-

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tablished British high street brands including department store British Home Stores, retailer Woolworths, electronic­s retailer Maplin and Toys R Us UK. The future is also uncertain for retailers Debenhams and Mothercare.

In January, House of Fraser reported disappoint­ing Christmas sales, down 2.9 percent from the previous year. That news came after ratings agency Moody’s had, in early December, already downgraded House of Fraser’s credit rating due to “weak results in the first three quarters of its fiscal year”.

House of Fraser announced it would cut the number of its high street shops by a third in an effort to reduce its rent bill following the slump in holiday sales.

The company closed stores in Leicester and Buckingham­shire last year, following a tough 2016 in which profits plunged 46 percent in the first half of the year.

At the time, former House of Fraser chief executive Nigel Oddy said that uncertaint­y caused by Britain’s referendum vote on European Union membership was partly responsibl­e for “extremely volatile trading”.

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