Scottish Daily Mail

Cheers! Marston’s deal saves 1,300 jobs

As lockdowns push Welsh brewer to very brink . . .

- By Tom Witherow

MARSTON’S has rescued 1,300 jobs after striking a deal to take on more than 150 pubs in Wales.

The future of 139-year- old rival SA Brain & Co had been thrown into doubt by a series of stringent l ockdowns in Wales, forcing it to take ‘drastic action’ to survive.

Marston’s, a FTSE 250 pub group, will take on the leases of 141 pubs for 25 years and pay £5.5m per year in rent to Brains.

The Cardiff group, which has been owned by the same family for 139 years, was forced to close its doors from December 4 as the Welsh Government banned the sale of alcohol i n pubs and enforced a 6pm curfew.

Chairman John Rhys, greatgrand­son of founder Samuel Brain, said the deal would safeguard Wales’s biggest brewer and hospitalit­y business as an independen­t business for ‘generation­s to come’. He said: ‘We know and trust Marston’s to be excellent custodians of our pubs and, whilst this is not a decision we have taken lightly, we are confident that both our pubs and teams will thrive.’

Marston’s will take on the 141 pubs under the Brains brand on 25-year leases, while a further 15 will be run under management contracts. Brains will retain the freeholds to the pubs as well as its brewing business.

Marston’s boss Ralph Findlay hailed the ‘iconic brand’, which adds to its estate of 1,400 pubs, including 106 in Wales. He said: ‘Lockdowns and restrictio­ns have been very difficult for the sector and Brains had been quite public, saying it had put them under immense financial pressure. They would have been in a difficult situation. We’ve been able to give a more positive outlook.’

The pubs were taking £14m in earnings before the pandemic, and analysts estimate Marston’s earnings will benefit by £8m by 2023 thanks to the deal. Its shares rose 8.6pc, or 5.9p to 74.8p.

The hospitalit­y sector is experienci­ng the bleakest Christmas in its history with tens of thousands of businesses forced to shut in their busiest period. New restrictio­ns from Boxing Day will mean that 24m people in England, or 43pc of the population, will be in Tier 4.

An extra 4m people will go into Tier 3, taking the total to 25m.

Thousands more businesses heading into tiers 3 and 4 in counties such as Suffolk and Northampto­nshire must close.

Nik Antona, chairman of the Campaign for Real Ale, said: ‘It’s clear there has not been enough support to protect even a wellestabl­ished business such as Brains. This could be the first of many hospitalit­y businesses to take drastic action to survive.’

Britain’s biggest hospitalit­y business Whitbread, the owner of Holiday Inn and Brewers Fayre pubs, has asked its landlords for a 50pc rent cut for the next three months, as it expects there to be a reduction in demand.

Data from consultant­s CGA and UK Hospitalit­y showed eight in ten venues – 74,000 businesses – had closed even before the new restrictio­ns were announced. Sales fell by close to two-thirds between December 13 and 19.

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