The Scotsman

Investors tapped for £350m as All Bar One stays shut

- By SCOTT REID

Mitchells & Butlers, the owner of All Bar One, Miller & Carter and scores of popular Scottish pubs, is raising £350 million from its largest investors to shore up its finances as pubs and bars remain closed.

The group, which has more than 1,600 pubs and brands including Harvester and Toby Carvery, said it will issue about 167 million new ordinary shares with a subscripti­on price of 210p per share.

A consortium of three of M&B’S largest investors has said it will be able to make the whole £350m available.

Piedmont, Elpida Group and Smoothfiel­d have joined forced to create a new holding company, Odyzean, holding 55 per cent of the company.

The firms said the new entity will help address “the significan­t capital needs of Mitchells & Butlers”.

Odyzean said it is fully supportive of the current management team but that it plans to review the current compositio­n of the board of directors.

A spokesman said: “Without this major equity injection, the prospects for the business, its 1,600 venues, and over 40,000 UK employees would be bleak.

“Our significan­t financial commitment will help to secure the future of the business and provide a platform for the strong management team to restore the company’s operations to good health when circumstan­ces allow.”

M&B, which also runs scores of well-known Scottish watering holes including Edinburgh’s historic Sheep Heid Inn, also told investors that it has secured an agreement with banks for a new £150m credit facility as part of the financial shake-up.

Last month, the pub owner said it had £125m in cash reserves and was burning through between £35m and £40m each month its sites remain shut due to coronaviru­s lockdowns.

Chairman Bob Ivell said: “We are pleased to have received the support of our major shareholde­rs and key creditors.

“Mitchells & Butlers was a high-performing business going into the pandemic and this capital raising and refinancin­g will provide the business with the certainty of funding that it needs in order to emerge in a stronger position to take advantage of its strong property portfolio, well known brands and operationa­l expertise in order to win market share and continue its long-term strategy of deleveragi­ng and driving value creation for shareholde­rs.”

The fundraisin­g move came as the chairman of pub chain Wetherspoo­n called on ministers to allows pubs to open at the same time as non-essential shops. Tim Martin warned that the pub industry was “on its knees” and needs to reopen to save jobs.

Mark Lynch, partner at corporate finance house Oghma Partners, said: “The M&B fundraise highlights the continued need to provide liquidity in the hospitalit­y sector until trading can re-open and companies can start generating cash again.

“There will be some hope that a government roadmap will set out the best and worst case scenario for re-opening in the coming weeks. At that point we would not be surprised to see more M&B type funding activity.

“It will be the smaller companies, with less access to liquidity, that are likely to struggle the most to survive and this will lead to further consolidat­ion across the sector.”

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