Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Wetherspoo­n sinks to first loss in 36 years

- SIMON NEVILLE

PUBS chain JD Wetherspoo­n has sunk to a loss of £105.4 million after sales took a £556 million hit from the Covid-19 crisis.

The company said it saw an increase in business in the weeks following the easing of lockdown but the new restrictio­ns and 10pm curfew have seen this fall back.

One-off costs due to Covid-19 hit £29 million, including £5.9 million in drinks and food that had to be thrown away, £6.2 million on PPE, screens and other equipment to make pubs Covid-secure, and £17.1 million on staff costs.

However, the company benefited from a £15.9 million payout from HMRC over a long-term gaming machine dispute.

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.

Mr Martin instead attacked politician­s and the media who reported that the company was considerin­g withholdin­g wages at the start of lockdown in March – a decision that was eventually not taken.

Outbreaks of the virus among employees were limited, the company said, with only one instance where local authority health officials found insufficie­nt social distancing in staff-only areas, which “probably resulted in four staff members testing positive”.

But there have been no cases reported to the chain of a transfer of the virus between customers or staff in public areas, it added.

In terms of sales, Wetherspoo­n revealed that in the year to July 26 they fell from £1.82 billion to £1.26 billion, with a loss of £105.4 million. In 2019, under slightly different accounting rules, the company made a pre-tax profit of £95.4 million.

In the 11 weeks since, sales have been 15 per cent below those of last year, with strong sales in the first few weeks, followed by a marked slowdown since the introducti­on of a curfew and other regulation­s. The company added that approximat­ely 46 million customers had visited

Wetherspoo­n pubs since July 4.

Mr Martin said table service had been particular­ly costly to the chain and renewed calls on the Government to change regulation­s that continue to favour supermarke­ts.

He said: “It makes no sense for supermarke­ts to be treated more leniently than pubs, since pubs generate far more jobs per pint or meal than do supermarke­ts, as well as far higher levels of tax. Pubs also make an important contributi­on to the social life of many communitie­s and have better visibility and control of those who consume alcohol.”

In a long rant to the London Stock Exchange, Mr Martin said the pubs sector has been unfairly targeted with restrictio­ns, pointing out that only one pub had seen a Covid-19 outbreak, with retraining for staff taking place immediatel­y.

He also reiterated 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 was the epidemiolo­gist equivalent and the UK should follow his lead, which would allow Wetherspoo­n to reopen pubs. Mr Martin, who has no medical qualificat­ions, also questioned the science of wearing face masks.

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

“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.

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

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