The Journal

Rival bidder for Purplebric­ks withdraws takeover approach

-

AN eleventh hour rival bidder for Purplebric­ks has withdrawn its takeover approach, claiming the troubled estate agency’s financial condition is “significan­tly worse than expected”.

It emerged last Friday that investor Lecram – the vehicle of property investor Adam Smith and a major shareholde­r in Purplebric­ks – was looking to muscle in with a proposal valuing the firm at around £1.5m, rivalling the agreed acquisitio­n by fellow online estate agent Strike.

But, less than five days later, Lecram has pulled its 0.5p-a-share proposal, leaving Strike – backed by Carphone Warehouse and TalkTalk founder Sir Charles Dunstone – as the only bidder in the running.

Lecram said: “The reason leading to Lecram’s decision not to proceed is, principall­y, that the financial condition of Purplebric­ks was found to be significan­tly worse than expected.”

Purplebric­ks said it continues to recommend the bid by Strike, with an investor vote scheduled for June 2. Strike pulled out of bidding for the whole share capital of the firm, but has offered a nominal £1 for its business and assets, including staff.

But it has revealed plans to launch a redundancy programme which is expected to impact field agents and central support teams at Purplebric­ks.

Purplebric­ks has seen its share price collapse over the past year, losing nearly 95% of its value.

In the middle of 2022 one share was worth nearly 20p. It is now worth less than 1p.

Lecram, which owns a more than 5% stake in the beleaguere­d firm, had criticised its leadership before for being “overly optimistic” in its prospects and not acting quickly enough to make improvemen­ts and salvage value for shareholde­rs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom