Scottish Daily Mail

Could this be the end of Fraser’s f lagship?

Chinese owners to shut 29 town centre stores to save the chain

- By Dean Herbert

FEARS are growing for the future of House of Fraser’s flagship Glasgow store as the company prepares to sacrifice dozens of outlets in an attempt to save the business.

As many as 29 of its 59 shops are earmarked for closure, with many of its famous high street stores to shut, insiders claimed yesterday.

It means its department store Frasers in Glasgow, where the business was founded 169 years ago, and the site in Oxford Street, London, could both close.

The retailer said last month it would launch a company voluntary arrangemen­t (CVA), which allows firms to close lossmaking shops and reduce rents.

House of Fraser has 59 stores in the UK and Ireland, more than 6,000 employees and 11,500 concession staff.

The company needs 70 per cent of its creditors, including landlords, to back its plan and has been seeking the approval of the Pensions Regulator.

However, landlords are not thought to be supportive of the plan.

Landlord groups have accused retailers of ‘abusing’ company voluntary arrangemen­ts and using them ‘solely to reduce rental liabilitie­s’.

However, the department store chain needs to seal the deal so it can access £70million in funding pledged by a new investor.

House of Fraser was founded in 1849 in Glasgow as Arthur and Fraser, a small shop selling textiles.

The retailer fell out of family ownership in 1981 when Professor Roland Smith – who went on to chair Manchester United – took over as chairman.

Most recently, Chinese conglomera­te Sanpower bought the chain for £480million in 2014 and it had planned a vast expansion of the retailer into China.

A spokesman for House of Fraser said: ‘As we highlighte­d over the weekend we are on track with our plans to propose a CVA.’

HOUSE of Fraser is preparing to shut half its stores – largely those on the High Street – in a drastic attempt to save the business.

As many as 29 of its 59 shops are earmarked for closure with many of its famous stores to shut, insiders claim.

Those being kept open under the restructur­ing plan, which is set to be announced by the firm’s Chinese owners today, will be mostly in more modern, largescale shopping centres.

It means its famous department store Frasers in Glasgow, where the business was founded 169 years ago, and the site in Oxford Street could both close.

And it underlines the crisis which is currently engulfing the High Street.

It is predicted more than 10,000 shops will disappear this year – the most in a decade.

Toys R Us and Maplin have collapsed into administra­tion and Marks & Spencer, Mothercare, Carpetrigh­t and New Look are all closing shops. Analysts warned the crisis will likely continue.

House of Fraser is racing to agree a rescue plan with landlords and other creditors, which is expected to be announced today. It is trying to push through a controvers­ial restructur­ing process called a company voluntary arrangemen­t, which will allow it to close stores and get rent reductions on others.

However, landlords are not thought to be supportive of the plan and have called it ‘highly insensitiv­e’. Landlord groups have accused retailers of ‘abusing’ company voluntary arrangemen­ts and using them ‘solely to reduce rental liabilitie­s’. House of Fraser needs 70pc of its creditors – including landlords – to back its plan.

The department store chain needs to seal the deal so it can access £70m in funding pledged by a new investor.

The Chinese owner of Hamleys, C. Banner, has made access to the funds conditiona­l on a restructur­ing deal being done. Failure could see House of Fraser plunged into administra­tion, putting the jobs of 17,000 staff at risk. Even if a deal is approved, C. Banner is expected to wait two months to see how the pared back group fares until granting House of Fraser the cash.

A spokesman for House of Fraser said: ‘As we highlighte­d over the weekend we are on track with our plans to propose a CVA.’

 ??  ?? Icon: Frasers in Glasgow has been popular for generation­s
Icon: Frasers in Glasgow has been popular for generation­s
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