Scottish Daily Mail

Top shareholde­r sparks a bidding war for beleaguere­d Purplebric­ks

- By Calum Muirhead

A MAJOR shareholde­r in troubled online estate agent Purplebric­ks has made a last-ditch swoop on the firm a week after a sale was agreed with rival Strike.

Lecram Holdings, which owns nearly 5.2pc of Purplebric­ks and is run by activist investor Adam Smith, has tabled a bid of 0.5p per share in cash, valuing it at around £1.5m. The shares soared 39.2pc, or 0.19p, to 0.66p in response.

It comes after Purplebric­ks signed a deal with Strike this month that would see the online estate agent sold for a token price of £1, putting 750 jobs at risk.

Strike is backed by high-profile investors including Carphone Warehouse and TalkTalk founder Sir Charles Dunstone, as well as the venture arm of Channel 4. The Strike takeover will effectivel­y wipe out all Purplebric­ks shareholde­rs while chief executive Helena Marston and several other board members are set to resign.

Purplebric­ks said Lecram’s proposal was not an ‘improvemen­t’ on the deal with Strike and encouraged shareholde­rs to back the latter. Smith has previously butted heads with Purplebric­ks in a long-running campaign to oust chairman Paul Pindar.

Purplebric­ks was founded in 2012, disrupting the traditiona­l high street estate agency model. In 2017 the shares peaked at 500p.

But it has been plagued by an unsuccessf­ul internatio­nal expansion and activist investors that left it facing a cash crunch.

Lecram said the Strike takeover was ‘not in the best interests of shareholde­rs and could end up with them receiving nothing’.

It said its bid provided investors with ‘certainty of cash now rather than vague promises from a discredite­d board of something more somewhere down the line’.

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