The Scotsman

Carpetrigh­t kicks off turnaround funds plan

Flooring firm is also embarking on a store closure programme

- By RAVENDER SEMBHY

Carpetrigh­t has kick-started efforts to raise £60 million in emergency funding as the struggling retailer pushes through a painful restructur­ing.

The flooring firm, which is also embarking on a store closure programme, said that it has strong support from shareholde­rs and other investors for the proposal, which will see it issue 232.5 million new shares at 28p each.

However, the move is dependent on approval at an annual meeting and the completion of Carpetrigh­t’s Company Voluntary Arrangemen­t (CVA), an insolvency procedure which will allow the retailer to shut 81 stores and secure rent reductions on others.

Chief executive Wilf Walsh said: “We are delighted to have received such strong support from our shareholde­rs and other investors in achieving this fully underwritt­en fundraise.

“The £60m proceeds from the placing and open offer will give us the resources we need to complete our restructur- ing and accelerate our recovery plan.

“As well as funding implementa­tion of the CVA to create a right-sized estate of stores on sustainabl­e rents, it will provide the necessary capital to refurbish and modernise the ongoing store estate and to upgrade our digital platform – both vital investment­s in our future.”

Carpetrigh­t recently took out a high-interest £15m loan from Meditor to help the company with short-term working capital requiremen­ts.

Meditor also provided an unsecured loan to Carpetrigh­t worth £12.5m in March, which will be repaid through the proceeds of the equity fundraisin­g.

A total of £6m of the new funding will cover the costs associated with implementi­ng the CVA and £33m will bankroll the group’s capital expenditur­e requiremen­ts.

“We believe that a recapitali­sed market leader will ultimately be better for customers, suppliers, landlords and shareholde­rs,” Walsh said.

Last month, the company said it was expecting to book a full-year, underlying pre-tax loss of between £7m and £9m, compared with a £14.4m profit last year.

The group also bemoaned difficult trading in the final quarter, which saw like-forlike sales plummet 10.5 per cent. For the full year, comparable sales dipped 3.6 per cent.

The retail sector has already seen thousands of jobs axed following the collapse of wellknown names Toys R Us and Maplin.

High street retailers have been hit by a drop in consumer spending, soaring costs and the increasing threat of online competitor­s.

businessde­sk@scotsman.com

 ??  ?? The group recently said it was expecting to book a full-year, underlying pre-tax loss of £7m to £9m
The group recently said it was expecting to book a full-year, underlying pre-tax loss of £7m to £9m

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