Beales department store at risk of collapse with 1,000 jobs in danger

Shops on the high street have faced a decline in footfall
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Ellena Cruse13 January 2020

Department store chain Beales has warned it could collapse into administration if it fails to find a last-minute buyer.

Around 1,000 jobs would be at risk if a deal cannot be secured by the Bournemouth-based retailer.

Beales, which has 22 stores nationwide, is the latest retailer to feel the pressure of soaring business rates and declining high street footfall amid an increasingly brutal period for the sector.

Last month, Beales hired advisers at KPMG to lead a strategic review in order to find a profitable future for the business.

Shops on the high street have faced a decline in footfall
PA Wire/PA Images

The company is currently in talks with landlords over rent reductions and it has been reported that the firm also spoke with two potential buyers, including a venture capital investor and a rival retail business.

Chief executive Tony Brown told local newspaper The Daily Echo that the retailer has struggled with difficult trading conditions and criticised the “lunacy” of high business rates.

He said: “We are confident that we have a solution for the business that will create a stronger if leaner Beales.

“We hope to have a stronger business at the end of the process. I can’t predict which stores will stay and which stores won’t because it all depends on landlords and local government.

“We’re going through a process and we hope to be able to restructure the business for a profitable future.”

The retailer was taken into private ownership by Mr Brown in 2018, 23 years after the company was floated on the London Stock Exchange.

The retailer’s uncertain future comes as rival Debenhams pushes ahead with the closure of 19 stores this month, as part of the chain’s restructuring process after entering administration last year.

Mothercare UK is another retailer to suffer from the decline of the high street, shutting all of its 79 remaining stores on Sunday after the firm’s UK business went bust.

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