The Scotsman

150 Scottish jobs to go after top cigarette wholesaler collapses

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

More than 150 Scottish workers have been made redundant at Palmer & Harvey after it collapsed into administra­tion despite attempts to secure a lifeline for the troubled wholesaler.

The 90-year-old firm has appointed PWC as administra­tors after “challengin­g trading conditions” heaped pressure on its cash flow and efforts to revive the business failed to take hold.

About 2,500 UK staff are losing their jobs, with 151 of those employees based at the company’s Dunfermlin­e depot.

The firm entered exclusive takeover talks with the Carlyle Group last month, but the US private equity fund’s offer of a significan­t capital investment in exchange for a controllin­g stake did not progress.

P&H, the UK’S biggest supplier of cigarettes, employs about 3,400 people and provides alcohol, groceries and frozen food to 90,000 retail accounts, including Tesco.

PWC said there would be 2,500 immediate redundanci­es at the firm’s head office and branch network, with 900 staff remaining at risk.

Matthew Callaghan, joint administra­tor and PWC partner, said: “This is a devastatin­g blow for everyone who has been involved in the business.

“The administra­tion team will focus on working with employees, clients and suppliers to facilitate a smooth and effective wind down or transfer of operations over the next few weeks.

“The P&H Group has faced a challengin­g trading environmen­t, and the need for significan­t restructur­ing has been recognised for some while.

“The company has insufficie­nt cash resources to continue to trade beyond the short term.”

P&H had been working with stakeholde­rs Imperial Brands and Japan Tobacco Internatio­nal as it searched for relief from thin profit margins and a substantia­l debt burden.

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