The Daily Telegraph

Parcel courier Yodel is saved in last-minute rescue deal

- By Matt Oliver

STRUGGLING parcel courier Yodel has been saved from collapse in a lastminute rescue deal that will see it join forces with rival operator Shift.

YDLGP, a new company formed by Shift executives and the merchant bank Solano Partners, stepped in to buy Yodel for an undisclose­d sum early yesterday.

The deal was struck in time to save Yodel from entering administra­tion.

It is expected to save thousands of jobs, with the Liverpool-based delivery company employing about 10,000 people nationwide.

Under the shake-up, YDLGP has also agreed terms to buy Shift, a tech-focused logistics company founded by entreprene­ur Jacob Corlett in 2017.

Mr Corlett is the only director of YDLGP, according to filings at Companies House. The company was incorporat­ed on Feb 10.

In a statement, YDLGP and its backers said the tie-up would create “a disruptive logistics powerhouse”.

Mr Corlett added: “At the heart of this merger is Shift’s revolution­ary artificial intelligen­ce-driven technology platform, promising a future where efficiency and automation become the backbone of logistics operations.”

Mike Hancox, chief executive of Yodel, said: “Our customers have always been our priority and the transactio­n announced today allows us to ensure continuity for them, as well as our employees and wider stakeholde­rs.”

Yodel had been controlled by the Barclay family, the owners of The Telegraph, since 2010. The courier’s customers include John Lewis, Argos, Zara, AO World and Very Group, the online shopping company that is also owned by the Barclays. However, Yodel has struggled in the face of fierce competitio­n.

Britain’s parcel market is dominated by five carriers – Royal Mail, Evri, Amazon Logistics, DHL and UPS.

Together, they account for 71pc of the 14m parcels shipped in 2022, according to the Pitney Bowes Parcel Shipping Index.

Yodel’s reported market share is 6pc. It has also repeatedly fared badly in customer satisfacti­on polls.

Yodel was named joint-worst courier company in the country last year, along with Evri, by Citizens Advice in its annual league table of couriers.

A total 40pc of recipients reported problems with Yodel – the highest of all.

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