Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Woolworths break-up wide of the mark


Shares in Woolworths, the high street retailer, gained more than 3 per cent this morning following a report that Baugur, the acquisitive Icelandic investment group, was planning a takeover bid followed by a possible break-up of the group.

However, it is understood that Baugur, which already holds a 10 per cent stake in Woolworths, has no imminent plans to launch an offer for Woolworths, which closed last night with a market value of just under £500 million.

It also has no current plans to push for a break-up of Woolworths, led since 2002 by chief executive Trevor-Bish Jones.

Baugur declined to comment on this morning's newspaper report, which it said was "pure speculation".

The shares put on 1.25p to 35.5p after it was claimed that Baugur wanted to sell off many of Woolworths 800 stores in UK towns and cities. It was also reported that it might spin off the joint venture with the BBC that produces DVDs of popular television series.

Its CD, DVD and book distribution business was said to be included in the break-up plan as well.

It is known that, as a significant shareholder, Baugur has held meetings with management at Woolworths in recent months. However, it is also known that the Icelandic firm has not pushed for a break-up of the retailer.

Leading retail analysts were sceptical about the imminence of a Baugur bid, suggesting it was already preoccupied with its £350 million takeover for House of Fraser, the department stores, launched recently.

Richard Ratner at Seymour Pierce said: "While we believe that it has not been happy with the performance of its 10 per cent holding - and, with its 'friends', we that the combined holdings are considerably higher than this - we would be surprised if an 'offer' was imminent."

Two months ago Baugur consolidated its holding in Woolworths via an alliance with with fellow Icelandic investor FL Group and Kevin Stanford, the retail entrepreneur.

Mr Ratner added: "While 'amicable discussions' are going on between Baugur and Woolworths, they might turn nastier if [the second half] doesn't show any improvement. Even in this instance, we would expect something other than a full 'offer'."

Mr Bish-Jones has been trying to stem falling sales at Woolworths in the face of stiff competition from supermarkets and bulk edge-of-town shopping outlets. As part of a bid to decrease Woolworths' reliance on the Christmas trading period, Mr Bish-Jones has put his faith in a concentrated internet strategy for the retailer.

A bid for Woolworths by Baugur would not have come as a particular surprise. Baugur owns a host of other retailers in the UK, including Iceland, the frozen food specialist supermarkets, Hamleys toy stores and fashion retailers Oasis, Principles and Karen Millen.

Woolworths to close on January 4 - with 29000 jobs lost


Woolworths will today announce all its British stores will be closed by January 4 - with the loss of 29,000 jobs.
Deloitte was unable to make a comment, but confirmed there would be a press briefing this afternoon.

Some staff were told in face to face meetings yesterday that the closures across the 813 stores will start on December 27.
Last week shoppers emptied shelves and snapped up bargains as closing-down sales were launched.


Huge queues built up after the sale was announced by administrator Deloitte following the failure to find a buyer for the struggling firm.

Deloitte had already warned some stores could close before the end of December if no offers for the business emerged.

Woolworths has been in business for almost a century but was forced to call in administrators three weeks ago as debts and losses mounted in a worsening high street climate.

If stores close before the end of December, the administrator said it would consult employees to discuss the support available in the event of redundancies.

Deloitte has held talks with the likes of former Woolworths chief executive Sir Geoff Mulcahy and Dragon's Den star Theo Paphitis but no deals have been struck.

The complexity of the group's leases and difficulty in restocking the business after Christmas has reportedly put off interested parties.

A Woolworths shop worker, who declined to be named, said he received an email today saying all stores would close by January 4.

He said the email from the firm's head office listed 200 stores that would close on December 27, followed by a second batch on New Year's Eve and the final batch on January 4.

He said: "The email said it was a delicate time for all employees and the administrators would do all they could to help.

"But we've heard nothing. We're just getting what we can off the internet."

Will Woolies shut up shop?


Most of the company’s profits come from its media and distribution arms. As the 825-strong chain of shops goes deeper into decline, a break-up bid could be on way.
WHEN Woolworths opened its doors on the British high street in 1909 it promised to be at the forefront of a retail revolution.

It pledged to provide good quality mass-produced goods that everyone could afford.

The store chain had started life in America and brought to Britain a dose of American pizzazz and when its Liverpool flagship store opened in 1923, it was nothing short of a retailing dream - fine mahogany counters were packed with all manner of wares from photo frames to luggage, buckets, bowls and stationery.

Now, more than eight decades later, that pizzazz seems to have disappeared. The company’s share price has collapsed, triggering renewed speculation of a break-up. And when the group unveils its full-year results this week, it is expected to slash its dividend.

Tucked inside the tatty shop doorway, customers were greeted with a torn cardboard Doritos crisp box hung with a white sign, perplexingly advertising multi-packs of Quavers for £1 - reduced from £2. Inside the box there was little sign of any discounted crisps - just a handful of lurid orange and purple plastic hand-held fans.

The wooden slatted flooring in the store was dirty and scratched. And the bizarre array of value products - from toys to childrens’ clothes to lightbulbs, paint, weed killer, picnic rugs, cards, pillows and pans - were merely scattered about, with no style and seemingly no logic to the way they were arranged.

An enquiry to the cashiers about whether the store had undergone any refurbishment in the past few years was greeted with a bemused smile. “If it has, we haven’t done a very good job,” one of them laughed looking around.

Richard Hyman, an independent retail analyst, summed up the experience perfectly: “It is like a slightly more organised jumble sale.”

Unsurprisingly the group’s descent from its heady beginnings in Britain 99 years ago has been mirrored in its stock market valuation.

Since it was demerged from parent company Kingfisher in 2001, the price of Woolworths shares has plunged by two-thirds to just 11p, destroying more than £250m in shareholder value in the process.

The collapse has brought with it the inevitable attentions of value investors - the Apax private-equity group made a takeover approach in 2005 but subsequently walked away.

Unity, a consortium led by Baugur, the Icelandic investment group, has amassed a 10% stake through derivatives. Baugur has made little secret of its desire for a break-up of Woolies.

Woolworths may be best-known for its 825-strong chain of shops but it has long expanded beyond its high street roots to incorporate two media and distribution businesses that generate most of the company’s profits.

The first is 2entertain, a DVD publisher that it owns in a joint venture with BBC Worldwide, and the second is EUK, a specialist distribution business that supplies CDs, DVDs, games and books to rival retailers - from major supermarket chains to small independent retailers.

When Woolworths announces its full-year results this week, the first signs will emerge that Baugur may be one step closer to getting its wish.

Woolworths will confirm that a stringent cost-cutting programme and margin improvements have helped its stricken high-street arm return to profit after a £13m loss last year. And that will effectively pave the way for a break-up of the business over the medium term.

It is the group’s 40% stake in 2entertain, which distributes music and DVDs, including BBC hits such as Doctor Who and Top Gear, that is expected to be first on the block.

It is forecast that Woolworths will confirm for the first time that it is prepared to consider seriously all options, including a sale of the 2entertain stake - which is valued in the region of £200m. A so-called “put and call” option - which allows the group to sell its stake in 2entertain to BBC Worldwide - becomes exerciseable this month.

Since the start of this year, hints about a break-up have been coming thick and fast. A recent debt restructuring saw Woolworths swap unsecured debts of £350m for a four-year asset-backed facility worth £385m.

Woolworths stated that its pension fund would receive the first £50m of the proceeds from any sale of its stake in 2entertain and in January Trevor Bish-Jones, group chief executive, instigated a management shake-up under which Steve Lewis, managing director for retail and distribution at Woolworths, was installed as managing director of EUK.

Simon Turner, a former Tesco executive, was appointed to work alongside Tony Page, previously with Asda, who is managing director of Woolworths’ retail arm.

One City source familiar with the Woolworths business said: “I think they are entirely open to a break-up; the question is how they do it. The high-street shops come with lease liabilities and it is how you extract the other businesses out of that structure.

“But over the course of this year I think it will happen. They need to do it if they are going to convince anybody that the business has a future because nobody thinks that just struggling on like this is particularly credible.”

Nevertheless, retail watchers close to Woolworths believe a broader break-up may take some time. Bish-Jones has never said that he is opposed to the idea - but he has always insisted that a restructuring is only possible when the retail business produces “consistent and sustainable profits”.

Although the retail arm will be back in the black at the full-year stage, analysts think it will be difficult to sustain that.

Hyman said: “I believe it will be a very difficult year for Woolworths. Even the strongest retailers are going to find this a tough year. Trevor Bish-Jones does a wonderful job of talking it up but it is a business model invented a hundred years ago, which proliferated all over the globe, but it is also a model that has been in decline for many years.

“It was the poor man’s department store but it has been superseded many, many times over.”

He added: “I don’t think it has a proposition and it faces more and more competition. Nobody would invent Woolworths today and that is one of the acid tests of retailing. There is far, far too much product. Products have to say something to the customer and be given room to breathe.”

Nevertheless, despite the widespread scepticism about the prospects for the high-street arm, it is likely that even in the current difficult market conditions it would attract some takeover interest - potentially from supermarket giants Tesco and Asda for stand-alone nonfood stores, or from Baugur.

Analysts believe that the Icelanders would seek to install a new dedicated management team and shake-up the product mix to reduce its dependence on toys and confectionery.

They suggest Baugur would make Woolworths more like the discount variety store Wilkinsons by relying less on seasonal goods and selling more home-ware and garden products. Even a range of dried foods is a possibility.

Of course, similar ideas were tried before, in the 1980s. In fact, there is little the group hasn’t tried in its recent history. But none of the initiatives - whether they be big out of town stores or a new catalogue - has provided the magic pill needed to save the business.

Woolworths rejects Baugur break-up attempt -- bid news and gossip



* Woolworths rejects an attempt by Baugur and former chief executive Malcolm Walker to break-up the group and take its stores


* Rival groups and infrastructure funds are preparing bid appproaches for UK airports owned by BAA as it completes a complex £13 billion refinancing package


* Manchester Airport owner confirms approach for Gatwick


* Brit Insurance has appointed Ernst & Young to advise it on a possible move out of the UK to a more favourable tax regime


* BHP Billiton set to use 40% profits rise to boost argument for Rio Tinto bid


* Vodafone completes the £483 million purchase of a 70% stake in Ghana Telecom


* HSBC has put on hold any plans to sell its specialist lending arm HFC UK


* Apollo Management of US seeks £1.1 billion for distressed debt


* Goldman Sachs launches Middle East fund


* Floors-2-Go sell-off raises hopes for survivors' future

About Woolworths Blog


Woolworths everyday rewards has a blog – but you can’t even have read only until you sign your life away.

hahahahaha – give a major supermarket chain a broadcast marketing channel and they make it impossible to get information from it. Well, enough access (for instance, to a blog), to convert from being ‘interested’ to ‘committed’.

You have to join before you can read the blog. That’s right – you have to sign up before you can get P.R. and marketing information.