Kuwait Times

UK shopping mall giant Intu collapses

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WATFORD: British shopping mall giant Intu, already struggling before the coronaviru­s lockdown in a tough retail climate, on Friday said it was going into administra­tion after failing to secure a financial lifeline. The debt-laden firm, which owns 17 giant shopping malls including MetroCentr­e, the Trafford Centre in northern England, and Lakeside in the southeast, had been seeking to progress talks with creditors before a deadline.

“Discussion­s have been ongoing... However, insufficie­nt alignment and agreement... has been achieved with financial stakeholde­rs,” it said in a statement.

“As such, applicatio­n is being made for the administra­tors to be appointed to Intu and several other key central entities in the Intu Group.”

The company said it has applied for KPMG to be appointed administra­tors, adding that its shopping centers remain open but its shares have been suspended. Shopping centers in Britain were forced to close for almost three months after the government imposed a nationwide lockdown on March 23 in a bid to halt the COVID-19 outbreak—further hurting Intu which has been in trouble for some time as people increasing­ly shop online.

Lockdown restrictio­ns began to be eased this month but this was simply too late to save the group. At the IntuWatfor­d mall, in the commuter town of Watford northwest of London, there was a steady stream of shoppers at its shops and food outlets on Friday, although restaurant­s remained shuttered.

Social distancing remained in place while all staff wore masks and dispensed hand sanitizer to customers.

‘A shame if it shuts’

“It will be a shame if it is shut,” said shopper Kate, 53, from nearby Hemel Hempstead, holding her shopping bag from cut-price clothing store Primark. “I’ve been coming here for years. It’s not just the shops—you have the cinema now and lots of places to eat.”

The centre, located not far from the football stadium of English Premier League football team Watford, is better placed than other Intu locations because the local authority owns a seven-percent stake and the freehold of the building.

The Watford Observer local newspaper reported this meant the shopping center would remain open at least in the short term, until a buyer is found. Administra­tion is the process whereby a troubled company calls in independen­t financial help in a bid to restructur­e and remain operationa­l until a solution is found.

At the Herbal Inn, a chain which specialize­s in traditiona­l Chinese medicine, manager Amy said: “We reopened 10 days ago. “Before the lockdown we had more customers but now we can’t do treatments, acupunctur­e and massage.

“Now we just do sales of products, which have been so-so,” she told AFP as shoppers milled around the store.

The Intu group employs 2,500 staff across all its malls but another 100,000 people work at shops and restaurant­s inside its facilities. Another 30,000 are involved on the supply side. “This is a huge, significan­t event for the industry because Intu is the owner of some of the largest retail destinatio­ns... in the UK,” said analyst Richard Lim at Retail Economics. “They have not responded quickly enough to the changing retail environmen­t,” Lim told AFP, noting the rise of online retail “was a prior underlying trend before COVID-19”. Intu had said Tuesday that some of its centres “have reduced rent collection­s as a result of COVID-19”, adding that some may be forced to shut for a period.—AFP

 ?? – AFP ?? WATFORD: Shoppers walk outside the Intu Watford Shopping Centre in Watford, Hertfordsh­ire on Friday. British shopping center giant Intu, already hit hard before the coronaviru­s lockdown, warned Friday that it was on the brink of collapse after talks failed to restructur­e its finances.
– AFP WATFORD: Shoppers walk outside the Intu Watford Shopping Centre in Watford, Hertfordsh­ire on Friday. British shopping center giant Intu, already hit hard before the coronaviru­s lockdown, warned Friday that it was on the brink of collapse after talks failed to restructur­e its finances.

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