The Guardian (USA)

Waterstone­s owner buys US chain Barnes & Noble

- Gwyn Topham

The hedge fund owner of the UK’s largest book chain, Waterstone­s, has bought Barnes & Noble, the biggest chain in the US, in a $683m (£537m) deal heralded as a boost in their battle to preserve real-world bookshops.

The UK arm of the $35bn Elliott Management hedge fund plans to install James Daunt, the Waterstone­s boss, in New York as chief executive of both chains, with the two brands retained and operated separately.

Elliott, which has a reputation for aggressive investment strategies, said the firms would benefit from sharing best practice under Daunt. The deal includes Barnes & Noble’s debt and values it at $6.50 a share, a 43% premium to the average figure in the 10 days before rumours of a merger first appeared.

Barnes & Noble is far larger than Waterstone­s, with more than twice as many stores and seven times the revenue.

The US bookseller has 627 stores, with a presence in all 50 US states, and recorded sales of $3.7bn (£2.9bn) in the 2018 financial year.

Waterstone­s has a total of 293 bookshops, including Foyles and Hatchards, and revenue of £402m last year. It also operates shops in Ireland, the Netherland­s and Belgium.

Barnes & Noble’s founder and chairman, Leonard Riggio, said Waterstone­s and Elliott were “uniquely suited to improve and grow our company for many years ahead” and promised to work with Daunt for a smooth transition.

The deal represents a big leap for Daunt, 55, who quit a job in banking in his 20s to build a six-strong chain of upmarket Daunt bookshops in London. In 2011, when the music group HMV sold Waterstone­s to the Russian billionair­e Alexander Mamut, he was hired to run the chain, even though he had always voiced scepticism about large book chains.

However, Daunt turned around the loss-making chain and stayed on last year when Mamut sold the business to Elliott.

In March Daunt had to defend pay policies at Waterstone­s when 1,300 writers, including David Nicholls, Sally Rooney, Michael Rosen and Val McDermid, backed a campaign for the chain’s shop staff to be paid the living wage.

Their support followed a staff petition, signed by more than 6,000 people, which called on Daunt to pay bookseller­s a starting living wage of £9 an hour, or £10.55 for the Greater London area. Daunt said he would like to increase wages, but the chain could not afford to do so.

In a statement confirming the Barnes & Noble deal, Daunt said traditiona­l bookshops faced “fearsome challenges from online and digital, a complex array of difficulti­es that for ease and some evident reason we lay at the door of Amazon”.

He said his job was “to create, by investment and old-fashioned booksellin­g skill, bookshops good enough to be a pleasure in their own right and to have no equal as a place in which to choose a book. We counter thereby Amazon’s siren call and defend the continued existence of real bookshops.”

Elliott’s head of European private equity, Paul Best, said the investment in Barnes & Noble demonstrat­ed “our conviction that readers continue to value the experience of a great bookstore”.

The deal, subject to regulatory and shareholde­r approval, is expected to be completed in the third quarter of this year.

 ??  ?? A Barnes & Noble store in Los Angeles. Photograph: incamerast­ock/Alamy Stock Photo
A Barnes & Noble store in Los Angeles. Photograph: incamerast­ock/Alamy Stock Photo
 ??  ?? James Daunt. Photograph: Martin Godwin/The Guardian
James Daunt. Photograph: Martin Godwin/The Guardian

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