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BackWH Smith High Street Stores to Close After Restructure Approved
WH Smith High Street Stores to Close After Restructure Approved
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Guardian Business4d agoBusiness2 min readUnited Kingdom

WH Smith High Street Stores to Close After Restructure Approved

Quick Look

  • Up to 150 WH Smith high street stores will close after the high court approved a significant restructure.
  • The plan, which involves debt write-offs and rent cuts, aims to make TG Jones (formerly WH Smith) a more sustainable business, though it faced criticism for its speed and valuation.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

WH Smith, now rebranded as TG Jones and owned by private equity firm Modella Capital, has undergone a high court-approved restructure involving significant debt write-offs and rent reductions for landlords.

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Up to 150 former WH Smith high street stores are to close after the high court approved a swingeing restructure that could affect thousands of jobs.

The retailer, which has 450 stores and employs about 5,000 staff, was bought last year by the private equity firm Modella Capital, which also owns Hobbycraft, and rebranded as TG Jones.

It had warned it could have to call in administrators if the restructuring plan, which involves writing off debts to suppliers and cutting rent for many landlords, was not approved.

On Wednesday Alex Willson, the chief executive of TG Jones, said: “We welcome the court’s approval of our restructuring plan. This decision allows us to move ahead with our turnaround strategy.

“The plan protects the substantial core of the store estate and makes TG Jones a stronger, more sustainable business. We are incredibly grateful to all the colleagues, partners and stakeholders who engaged constructively throughout the process, and to Modella Capital for its continued financial commitment.”

The high court judge Mr Justice Hildyard approved the restructure, despite criticising the short amount of time given for the court to consider the matter.

TG Jones’s lawyers told the court on Monday that the retailer’s financial position was “horrendous”. The court heard the business faced a cash shortfall of almost £8m by the end of this week as it faced deadlines on rent, pay for workers and tax.

The judge also said it was “difficult to swallow” the valuation Modella put on TG Jones after the restructure – of no more than £3m – compared with its acquisition value of about £40m only a year ago.

Hossein Dabiri, the head of court reporting in Europe for credit analysis firm Debtwire, said the approval of the restructure under what is known as a “cram down” model that allows courts, in certain circumstances, to impose a restructuring on dissenting classes of creditors “has made it easier for companies to pursue faster and more aggressive restructurings, particularly when renegotiating retail leases”.

More than 80% of landlords controlling TG Jones’s top stores voted to support the deal last week, with most other classes of landlords, who will face steep rental cuts under the plan, voting against it.

Several different classes of creditor voted over two days last week on the restructure but the plan required approval – judged as backing from 75% or more – from just one class of creditor and from a high court judge to go ahead.

Only 72% of business rates creditors, mostly local councils, backed the plan and less than a third of general creditors, who include card makers and pen brands, gave it the thumbs up.

No landlords owning unwanted stores where rent will be cut to zero or stores will be closed backed the plan.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Further store closures beyond the initial 150

    Possible · Within months

Open Questions

  • How many jobs will ultimately be lost?
  • What is the long-term viability of TG Jones?
  • Will this 'cram down' model be widely adopted in retail restructures?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian Business.

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