The Herald (South Africa)

Edcon gets offer for parts of Edgars

● Legit owner Retailabil­ity bids for some of struggling group’s assets

- Katharine Child

The owner of Legit, Beaver Canoe and Style stores, Retailabil­ity, has made an offer for parts of Edgars, the business rescue practition­ers said yesterday.

Retailabil­ity bought Legit clothing stores from Edgars for R637m in 2016 and runs more than 460 clothing stores across SA, Namibia, Botswana, Lesotho and Eswatini (Swaziland).

The Edcon business rescue practition­ers said they had signed a heads of agreement to sell parts of Edgars to Retailabil­ity, but the sale would be subject to various conditions precedent and regulatory approvals, including the competitio­n authoritie­s.

Edcon, owner of Jet and Edgars, and employer of 17,200 people, was placed in business rescue at the end of April after it could not pay suppliers because of weak January sales and a loss of R2bn in trade when stores were closed during the Covid-19 lockdown.

Edcon owes secured and unsecured suppliers more than R8bn.

Business rescue practition­ers Lance Schapiro and Piers Marsden did not say how many Edgars stores were being sold and which ones would be closed, nor did they disclose the value of the deal.

They also did not specify which parts of the group were being disposed of, amid reports that Jet, which has a low-cost offering, was regarded by analysts as a prized asset.

The details of the transactio­n would be finalised on the signing of definitive agreements and fulfilment of conditions.

The pair said the sale of Edgars would “ensure the growth and continuity of a proudly South African Edgars brand” and also save a significan­t number of jobs.

The terms of the potential sale had been presented to stakeholde­rs at various business rescue committee meetings.

Schapiro and Marsden said they were unable to find a single buyer for all of Edgars.

However, their media release suggested they were in “complex transactio­ns” to sell parts of the Edcon business that were at advanced stages.

The speed of the process is to ensure new owners of the clothing brands can order summer stock in good time.

BusinessLI­VE reported on June 28 that any would-be buyer interested in Edcon would consider the Jet brand the prize asset because of its low-price-point entry and could seek to acquire it separately from Edgars.

The problem, though, was disentangl­ing Jet from the less attractive Edgars, which independen­t analyst Chris Gilmour said at the time would be nearly impossible because their systems were so inextricab­ly linked. —

 ?? Picture: SIPHIWE SIBEKO/REUTERS ?? UP FOR GRABS: Shoppers walk past an Edgars store at a shopping centre in Soweto
Picture: SIPHIWE SIBEKO/REUTERS UP FOR GRABS: Shoppers walk past an Edgars store at a shopping centre in Soweto

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