Daily Mail

More tears for Boohoo backers as crisis grows

- by Francesca Washtell

BOOHOO investors were given another kicking after the company admitted it had suspended orders with a number of suppliers over sweatshop allegation­s.

Shares in the group sank by as much as 17pc in afternoon trading after the reports were published.

An investigat­ion found the fast fashion retailer, which is one of the biggest companies on AIM, was selling clothes made by at least 18 factories in leicester that may have been paying workers less than the minimum wage.

Boohoo is thought to account for up to 80pc of the output from the city’s 1,000 factories.

third-party audits of the suppliers failed to confirm what they were paying workers - and in some cases it appeared they were making as little as £3 or £4 an hour.

in response to the findings, made by the Guardian, Boohoo said it had drawn similar conclusion­s about an unspecifie­d number of suppliers and had suspended business with them.

the online retailer, which also owns American clothes brand Nasty Gal, has been rocked by claims first made in July its clothes were being packaged in sweatshop conditions. the crisis undid an astonishin­g rally in its share price since the pandemic took hold – when online retailers virtually across the board excelled – and sent investors including Standard life Aberdeen packing.

it is still in the process of putting together its own independen­t investigat­ion, led by top business barrister Alison levitt QC, and has said it cannot comment further until that is completed.

the latest developmen­t in the sorry saga sent Boohoo shares down 9.3pc, or 29.8p, to 289.5p by the close. investors in Lloyds Banking Group were undeterred that the bigwigs at Mayfair hedge fund Marshall Wace have made the biggest bet against the lender’s shares on record.

the fund has built up a 0.51pc short position – worth around £100m – and will make money if lloyds’ share price falls.

lloyds’ stock was up 0.5pc, or 0.15p, to 28.35p last night.

the move by Marshall Wace indicates that people in the City think banks are set to suffer even more in the coming months, despite having a terrible first half that saw them put billions on one side for bad loans.

Marshall Wace has also got short positions on a number of other firms hit hard by the pandemic, including Tui ( whose shares dropped 1.5pc, or 5p, to 329.7p last night), Rightmove (up 0.2pc, or 1p, to 633.8p) and ailing shopping centre owner Hammerson (up 0.3pc, or 0.13p, to 48.43p).

it was a mixed day for london’s biggest indexes, which were thin on corporate news.

the FTSE 100 dropped by 0.61pc, or 36.42 points, to 5963.57, while the FTSE 250 rose 0.15pc, or 26.3 points, to 17788.33.

the mid-cap index was pushed higher by Russian gold miner

Petropavlo­vsk, whose shares rose 9.2pc, or 3.1p, to 36.65p. the group has been embroiled in a very bitter – and very public – spat between investors and management. the investors won, and have now named Maxim Meshcherya­kov as interim chief executive. Struggling cruise company Carnival was given a boost as it announced a number of its German cruises will resume later this year. the first will be a seven-day voyage to the Canary islands.

Shares in the group rose 3.5pc, or 35.5p, to 1054.5p after weeks of announceme­nts of pushbacks and cancellati­ons.

Greggs, on the other hand, moved into the red, falling 1.6pc, or 23p, to 1417p after it was forced to close its distributi­on centre in leeds for a deep clean after a Covid-19 outbreak. it is thought 20 staff there have tested positive for the illness.

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