The Scotsman

Wetherspoo­n hits first loss since 1984

- By SCOTT REID sreid@ scotsman. com

Pubs giant JD Wetherspoo­n has sunk to its first loss in more than 30 years with its outspoken founder and chairman urging UK politician­s to follow the Swedish model of lighter Covid restrictio­ns.

The chain, which is one of the UK’S biggest hospitalit­y businesses with hundreds of pubs, fell £ 105.4 million into the red after sales took a £ 556m hit from the pandemic.

While the firm saw an increase in trade in the weeks following the easing of lockdown measures, more recent restrictio­ns and 10pm curfews have seen this fall back.

The loss is the first time founder and chairman Tim Martin’s chain has sunk into the red since 1984 but the company remains confident that it can continue to trade.

No details were provided on potential or recent job losses but two pubs were opened and nine were sold or closed. It has already warned of 450 job losses across its airport pubs business.

Martin eiterated his belief that 100 government­s around the world were wrong to follow scientific advice and impose restrictio­ns, instead telling shareholde­rs the UK should follow the Swedish model of lighter restrictio­ns.

Quoting business scion Warren Buffett from 1989, he claimed Swedish Professor Johan Giesecke is the epide

miologist equivalent and the UK should follow his lead.

Martin said: “The most damaging regulation relates to the 10pm curfew, which has few supporters outside of the narrow cloisters of Downing Street and Sage meetings.

“This has meant that many thousands of hospitalit­y industry employees, striving to maintain hygiene and social- distancing standards, go off duty at 10pm, leaving people to socialise in homes and at private events which

are, in reality, impossible to regulate. In marked contrast to the consistenc­y of the comparativ­ely successful Swedish approach, which emphasises social distancing, hygiene and trust in the people, the erratic UK government is jumping from pillar to post and is both tightening and tinkering with regulation­s, so we are now in quasi- lockdown which is producing visibly worse outcomes than those in Sweden, in respect of both health and the economy.

“Risk cannot be eliminated completely in pubs, but sensible social- distancing and hygiene policies, combined with continued assistance and co- operation from the authoritie­s, should minimise it.”

In terms of sales, Wetherspoo­n revealed that sales in the year to 26 July fell from £ 1.82 billion to £ 1.26bn, with a loss of £ 105.4m. In 2019, under slightly different accounting rules, the group made a pretax profit of £ 95.4m.

Adam Vettese, analyst at investment platform etoro, said: “Barely standing after the first lock down, at the moment the UK’S hospitalit­y sector resembles a weakened boxer praying that they see it through to the final bell.

“Following the government’s new restrictio­ns on pubs, there is a strong chance that the busy Christmas trading period, viewed as a lifeline by many in the industry, will be severely hampered.”

 ??  ?? 0 The vast JD Wetherspoo­n business empire has scores of Scottish watering holes including the Caley Picture House in Edinburgh.
0 The vast JD Wetherspoo­n business empire has scores of Scottish watering holes including the Caley Picture House in Edinburgh.

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