Daily Mirror

BAILOUT BID TRIGGERS SHARE SLUMP

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ONE of Britain’s biggest shopping centre owners is to ask investors for up to £1billion to cut its debts.

Struggling Intu Prpopertie­s is worth £311million yet its borrowing stands at £4.7billion.

The firm that owns Lakeside in Essex and Manchester’s Trafford Centre yesterday confirmed it would ask shareholde­rs for extra cash, with reports suggesting a figure around the £1bn mark.

The admission triggered a near 10% slump in its share price at one stage yesterday, although they closed down 1%.

Intu has been hit by the shift to online shopping and a wave of retailers going into administra­tion, closing stores or demanding rent reductions.

The firm said: “Intu

NET BLOW Trafford Centre properties continues to make progress in its strategy to fix the balance sheet. Consistent with previous announceme­nts, this now includes targeting an equity raise alongside its full year results at the end of February.” An equity raise involves issuing new shares to bring in extra cash – but this tends to push the share price down, which could upset current investors. Matthew Roberts, Intu chief executive, insisted: “We are making good progress with fixing the balance sheet.”

He added that shopper numbers to Intu’s UK centres were flat during the Christmas period compared with a year earlier.

Intu said around 95% of its shopping centre space was occupied by tenants, with 97% of rent collected for the first quarter of 2020.

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