Western Mail

Online second-hand fashion company collapses

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A SECOND-HAND fashion clothing online business, backed with a sixfigure equity investment from the Developmen­t Bank of Wales, has collapsed.

Newport-based Loopster was launched in 2017 by Jane Fellner. To support its scale-up plans in 2020 it secured a seed funding round of £500,000, which included a £250,000 equity investment contributi­on from the Developmen­t Bank of Wales – the investment bank wholly owned by the Welsh Government.

Loopster recently sought to raise a further £500,000, but fell short of the target via the Crowdcube funding platform having secured pledges of just under £400,000. If the full amount is not raised any amount under that cannot be secured. After failing to reach the funding target, its directors put the business through.

The developmen­t bank said that provided Loopster had secured £500,000 private backing via Crowdcube it had agreed to put in further investment.

After starting selling second-hand designer children’s clothes, last year Loopster added womenswear. Longer term it also had plans to sell men’s clothes. Providing clothing from sellers met the quality threshold, Loopster then sold the garments on at a quarter or less of high street prices.

The business had sold more than 12,000 clothing items since launch and was projecting to become a multi-million-pound turnover business, having seen revenues growing 400% over the last year.

In a statement the developmen­t bank said: “In June 2020, the Developmen­t Bank of Wales made a sixfigure seed equity investment into Loopster alongside a number of business angels.

“The investment was to support the developmen­t of its platform to resell second-hand clothes, extending the life of fashion garments and reducing their environmen­tal impacts.

“A crowdfundi­ng campaign to secure private investment to match further capital from the developmen­t bank failed to reach its target and as a result the business has entered voluntary liquidatio­n. Any proceeds from the company administra­tion will be distribute­d to the company’s creditors according to priority.”

Investing alongside the developmen­t bank as the lead investor in last year’s seed fund, were business angel Jim Lewcock, who owns the internet-focused digital marketing and investment firm Blue14, and experience­d non-executive director and angel investor Kate MethuenLey – who recently was appointed to the board of the developmen­t bank.

 ?? ?? Chief executive of Loopster Jane Fellner with her son
Chief executive of Loopster Jane Fellner with her son

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