logo
Major shortage of one of UK's favourite sweets after Marks & Spencer cyber attack

Major shortage of one of UK's favourite sweets after Marks & Spencer cyber attack

Scottish Sun30-04-2025

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
PERCY Pigs have been squished by the Marks & Spencer cyber attack.
The ever-popular pink sweets were hard to find in shops yesterday as the chain's IT systems have been crippled for more than a week.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
4
Percy Pigs are missing from Marks & Spencer shelves due to the cyber attack
Credit: Paul Edwards
4
The popular sweets are a favourite among customers
Signs next to bare shelves, which carried just a few veggie and low-sugar varieties, read: 'Please bear with us while we fix some technical issues affecting product availability.'
Percy Pig fans, who buy 16million bags a year, are furious.
One posted online: 'Lads, s**t just got real.'
Another said: 'This isn't just a cyber attack — it's an M&S cyber attack.'
The firm has battled to keep stores open since a hack began at Easter weekend.
However, it has had to shut off some computer systems, which has hurt its supply chain.
Staff are doing sales reports by hand, making it hard to get products from warehouses.
Wine, beer, drinks and chilled meats have been unavailable in some stores, along with the Percy Pigs and Colin the Caterpillar sweets and cakes.
Staff confirmed the shortages were caused by the cyber attack.
After photos circulated on social media of shelves without certain drinks and products — ranging from prepared chicken to salads and dips — an M&S spokeswoman yesterday confirmed that there were 'pockets of limited availability' in stores.
Marks and Spencer are recruiting 100 Percy Pig mega fans to decide on the future of the sweet
The shortages mean fresh headaches for M&S, which is already losing tens of millions of pounds in online sales because it has suspended orders via its website and app since last Friday.
The firm had tried to contain the hack by suspending contactless payments and click and collect orders but the criminals are deep within its IT systems.
It is working with an army of experts, including from the National Cyber Security Centre and Scotland Yard.
The attack has been blamed on hacking gang Scattered Spider, loosely described as a group of English-speaking crooks mostly aged under 25.
4
Percy Pig fans buy 16million bags a year
Credit: Alamy
4
M&S is already losing tens of millions of pounds in online sales due to the attack
Credit: EPA
Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

HMRC admits £47 million loss in breach of taxpayer accounts
HMRC admits £47 million loss in breach of taxpayer accounts

North Wales Chronicle

time32 minutes ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

HMRC admits £47 million loss in breach of taxpayer accounts

Two senior civil servants at HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) told the Treasury Committee that 100,000 people have been contacted, or are in the process of being contacted, after their accounts were locked down in what they said was an 'organised crime' incident which began last year. Taxpayers who are being affected will suffer 'no financial loss', according to John-Paul Marks, the chief executive of HMRC, the UK's tax authority. Mr Marks told the Committee: 'It's about 0.2% of the PAYE population, around 100,000 people, who we have written to, are writing to, to notify them that we detected activity on their PAYE account.' Asked if this applied to individual working people's PAYE accounts, not companies, he replied: 'That's right, individuals. To be clear, no financial loss to those individuals. Mr Marks added: 'This was organised crime phishing for identity data outwith of HMRC systems, so stuff that banks and others will also unfortunately experience, and then trying to use that data to create PAYE accounts to pay themselves a repayment and/or access an existing account.' An investigation into the matter, which took place last year 'including jurisdictions outside the UK', led to 'some arrests last year,' Mr Marks told MPs. Angela MacDonald, HMRC's deputy chief executive and second permanent secretary, added: 'At the moment, they've managed to extract repayments to the tune of £47 million. 'Now that is a lot of money, and it's very unacceptable. 'We have overall, in the last tax year, we actually protected £1.9 billion worth of money which sought to be taken from us by attacks.' Get your tax return done early and find out sooner if you're owed money. ⏲️ We'll let you know if you've overpaid tax after you file your Self-Assessment tax return and refund you. 💷 File today. 👇 Ms MacDonald stressed the breach was 'not a cyber attack, we have not been hacked, we have not had data extracted from us'. She later added: 'The ability for somebody to breach your systems and to extract data, to hold you to ransomware and all of those things, that is a cyber attack. That is not what has happened here.' HMRC said it had locked down affected accounts and deleted log-in details to prevent future unauthorised access. Any incorrect information has been removed from tax records and officials have checked to ensure no other details have been changed. People affected will receive a letter from HMRC over the next three weeks. Elsewhere, Mr Marks told MPs that HMRC phone lines were down on Wednesday afternoon, but said this was 'coincidental'. They will be 'back up and available in the morning', he added. Recommended reading: An HMRC spokesperson said: 'We've acted to protect customers after identifying attempts to access a very small minority of tax accounts, and we're working with other law enforcement agencies both in the UK and overseas to bring those responsible to justice. 'This was not a cyber-attack – it involved criminals using personal information from phishing activity or data obtained elsewhere to try to claim money from HMRC. 'We're writing to those customers affected to reassure them we've secured their accounts and that they haven't lost any money.'

Construction firms cut jobs at fastest rate since 2020 despite signs of recovery
Construction firms cut jobs at fastest rate since 2020 despite signs of recovery

Rhyl Journal

timean hour ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Construction firms cut jobs at fastest rate since 2020 despite signs of recovery

However, business in the sector also recorded the sharp rate of job cutting since August 2020 in the face of continued cost pressures. The latest S&P Global construction purchasing managers' index (PMI) showed a reading of 47.9 last month, improving from 46.6 in April. It was ahead of the 47.2 reading predicted by economists. Any reading above the 50 threshold indicates that activity in the industry is increasing while anything below means it is shrinking. The latest figure meant the sector shrank further but saw its rate of decline slow down compared with the previous month. Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said: 'The construction sector continued to adjust to weaker order books in May, which led to sustained reductions in output, staff hiring and purchasing. 'However, the worst phase of spending cutbacks may have passed as total new work fell at a much slower pace than the near five-year record in February. 'Housing activity was the weakest-performing segment in May as demand remained constrained by elevated borrowing costs and subdued confidence.' Business in housebuilding reported a reading of 45.1 for the month as subdued demand caused the downturn in the sector to accelerate last month. Civil engineering also reported a significant decline, with a reading of 45.9, while the commercial construction sector declined marginally, recovering to its strongest level since January. Across the sector, surveyed companies said they were reluctant to backfill job vacancies because of a lack of new work and also increased payroll costs, linked to increases in national insurance contributions and the minimum wages. As a result, the sector reported the fastest rate of 'job shedding' since August 2020, while subcontractor usage also dropped to a five-year-low.

Construction firms cut jobs at fastest rate since 2020 despite signs of recovery
Construction firms cut jobs at fastest rate since 2020 despite signs of recovery

South Wales Guardian

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Construction firms cut jobs at fastest rate since 2020 despite signs of recovery

However, business in the sector also recorded the sharp rate of job cutting since August 2020 in the face of continued cost pressures. The latest S&P Global construction purchasing managers' index (PMI) showed a reading of 47.9 last month, improving from 46.6 in April. It was ahead of the 47.2 reading predicted by economists. Any reading above the 50 threshold indicates that activity in the industry is increasing while anything below means it is shrinking. The latest figure meant the sector shrank further but saw its rate of decline slow down compared with the previous month. Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said: 'The construction sector continued to adjust to weaker order books in May, which led to sustained reductions in output, staff hiring and purchasing. 'However, the worst phase of spending cutbacks may have passed as total new work fell at a much slower pace than the near five-year record in February. 'Housing activity was the weakest-performing segment in May as demand remained constrained by elevated borrowing costs and subdued confidence.' Business in housebuilding reported a reading of 45.1 for the month as subdued demand caused the downturn in the sector to accelerate last month. Civil engineering also reported a significant decline, with a reading of 45.9, while the commercial construction sector declined marginally, recovering to its strongest level since January. Across the sector, surveyed companies said they were reluctant to backfill job vacancies because of a lack of new work and also increased payroll costs, linked to increases in national insurance contributions and the minimum wages. As a result, the sector reported the fastest rate of 'job shedding' since August 2020, while subcontractor usage also dropped to a five-year-low.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store