Daily Mail

Boss blasts Boris over lockdowns

As Wetherspoo­ns racks up first loss since 1984 . . .

- By Matt Oliver

SHARES in JD Wetherspoo­n plunged almost 20pc after the British pub chain crashed to its first loss in 36 years.

As boss Tim Martin warned that ‘erratic’ coronaviru­s restrictio­ns were hammering the hospitalit­y industry and wider economy, his company posted a 30pc fall in annual revenues to £1.3bn.

The upheaval tipped Wetherspoo­ns to a £34.1m loss for the year to July 26, compared to a £102.5m profit in 2019, after the pandemic temporaril­y closed its venues and sent costs soaring.

It was the first time it had gone into the red since 1984, the year after it was started, when it recorded a £7m loss.

Shares fell 19.4pc, or 186.5p, to 773.5p, reducing its market capitalisa­tion from £1.2bn to £931m.

And Martin warned that he could not hold back from job cuts for much longer, claiming the Government’s latest curbs made the future ‘even more unpredicta­ble than hitherto’ for pubs.

At a press conference, the 65-year-old repeatedly criticised the ‘ill-thoughout’ rules, quoting investor Warren Buffett, musician Bob Dylan and former Supreme Court judge Lord Sumption.

He said venues adapted to social distancing after lockdown measures were eased in the summer, but since then ministers had panicked and ‘started shooting from the hip’ with changes that had no ‘obvious basis in science’.

The 10pm curfew and rules confining pubs to table service had been ‘particular­ly damaging’, Martin said, because they pushed up costs and put off customers who ‘find it too much of a faff’.

He claimed hospitalit­y businesses were being unfairly targeted, insisting that there had been only single cases of the virus at 116 of Wetherspoo­ns’ venues, while 670 had no cases at all.

‘You would think if it was ripping through the pub world, you would not have just had 116 pubs with one,’ Martin said. ‘It makes no sense for supermarke­ts to be treated more leniently than pubs, since pubs generate far more jobs per pint or meal than supermarke­ts, as well as far higher levels of tax.

‘Pubs also make an important contributi­on to the social life of many communitie­s and have better visibility and control of those who consume alcoholic drinks.’

Martin said he was ‘not belittling Covid-19 in any way’, adding it was ‘tremendous­ly serious’. He said: ‘The truth is you certainly can catch Covid in a pub, but it is not the centre of transmissi­on.’

His warning came as the British Beer and Pub Associatio­n said ‘survival hangs dangerousl­y in the balance’ for thousands of pubs in Lancashire, which joined

Liverpool in the highest level – Tier Three – of restrictio­ns.

It said there were roughly 1,200 pubs employing 23,000 people in Lancashire and another 1,000 employing 21,000 in the Liverpool

City Region. Emma McClarkin, the associatio­n’s boss, said the changes would ‘completely kill the business model’ of hundreds of pubs.

She added: ‘Support needs to be made available to brewers and the wider supply chain businesses also seeing their custom taken from them overnight.

‘We desperatel­y need this if we want our local pubs to survive.’

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