
Fears for Claire's UK as bidders are thin on the ground
A report by Sky News said the news organisation 'has learnt that advisers to Claire's Inc… are not expected to land a solvent bid for its UK chain'. The British operation trades from around 300 British stores and the Europe-wide workforce (including the UK) numbers around 5,000.
Claire's UK isn't expected to file for administration imminently, although it could happen this month, according to Sky's sources.
That prospect comes as potential bidders appear to have got cold feet 'as the scale of the chain's challenges has become clear', a 'senior insolvency practitioner' told Sky. Those interested inthe business had been believed to include Lakeland owner Hilco Capital.
There has also been speculation that as many as a third of the UK shops could be closed if the chain is to survive. Restructuring firm Interpath Advisory had been hired to find a buyer for the UK and European operations. It hasn't commented on the latest report.
Meanwhile, Julie Palmer, partner at insolvency specialist Begbies Traynor, told FashionNetwork.com: 'Claire's second bankruptcy in seven years is emblematic of the broader crisis gripping the high street, both at home and abroad. The once-popular budget jeweller has struggled to keep pace with the rapid shift to online shopping. Its reliance on physical stores — once a key strength — has become a major liability. With its core customers of young teenagers having the ability to shop around with their thumbs across an ever-expanding range of internet options for cheaper and more convenient alternatives, a wave of store closures in the coming months looks inevitable.
'Tariffs have added to the strain. Claire's is heavily reliant on low-cost Chinese imports and the [parent company's] prospect of repaying the $500 million loan in December next year will be looming heavily over management's minds. The message is clear: the structural changes impacting every retailer have only accelerated meaning other long-standing names will have to adapt quickly to avoid a similar fate.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
16 minutes ago
- Euronews
China's exports grow despite tariff turmoil as trade pivots to Africa
Despite Washington and Beijing locking horns many times this year, China's economy has remained mostly unshaken. According to data released on Thursday, the nation's exports surged 7.2% in July from a year earlier, while its imports grew at the fastest pace in a year. This came as businesses rushed to take advantage of a lull in President Donald Trump's trade war with Beijing, after both sides agreed to temporarily reduce tariffs until 12 August. The US tariff on Chinese goods had previously reached 145%. Analysts nonetheless added that the improvement looked particularly positive because exports were weak in July 2024. China redirects trade flows to Africa Exports to the United States sank nearly 22% year-on-year, while imports from America fell almost 19%. But exports to Africa and Southeast Asia surged at double-digit rates as Chinese businesses diverted sales to other markets. China has become Africa's largest trading partner, with bilateral trade worth around €141bn in the first half of this year, according to the Chinese General Administration of Customs. For now, US tariffs on Chinese goods are being considered separately from the new higher tariffs that took effect today for dozens of US trading partners. China's global trade surplus for 2025 rose to $683.5bn or around €586bn by the end of July, nearly a third higher than the surplus for the same period last year. The data showed that China's surplus in July was €84.3bn, while its exports to the United States were €20.3bn more than its imports of US goods. 'With the temporary boost to demand from the US-China trade truce already fading and tariffs on shipments rerouted via other countries now rising, exports look set to remain under pressure in the near term,' Zichun Huang of Capital Economics said in a report. The economy is holding up, for now Economists had been expecting China's dollar-denominated exports to grow less than 6% in annual terms in July, on a par with June's 5.8% rate. But improved trade with the rest of the world has helped offset the impact of Trump's trade war. Imports rose 4.1% last month from a year earlier, the most since July 2024, with higher shipments of crude oil, copper and soybeans. China's exports of rare earths that are vital for making many high-tech and other products and Trump has made ensuring US access to such vital minerals a key part of trade negotiations, leading Beijing to promise to loosen some controls. In July, China's exports of rare earths fell 17.6%, compared with a nearly 50% fall the month before. From January to July, its rare earths exports fell 24.2% in dollar terms, although they rose more than 13% by volume. Exports of vehicles, fertiliser, ships and auto parts also saw strong growth.


France 24
3 hours ago
- France 24
Siemens warns US tariffs causing investment caution
The group booked net profits of 2.2 billion euros ($2.6 billion) from April to June, up five percent from a year earlier, as strong orders at its division that makes trains offset problems at its factory automation unit. Sales grew by five percent to 19.4 billion euros, and Siemens's shares jumped over four percent in Frankfurt after the results were released. But chief financial officer Ralf Thomas cautioned that Siemens's sprawling global business was not immune from heightened global volatility unleashed by US President Donald Trump's tariff blitz. "Ongoing tariff uncertainties and trade tensions have dampened further recovery because of a rather cautious investment sentiment in important customer industries," he said. He pointed to industries such as the automotive and production of industrial machinery ones. CEO Roland Busch added that, in several key industries, "sales cycles have been extended and investment decisions are taking longer". Busch said the US levies were impacting the group's unit that deals with factory automation, which had already been facing problems. "Orders in the digital industry business recovered less strongly than anticipated due to the continuing high level of uncertainty regarding the future tariff environment and ongoing trade disputes," he said. The unit, which supplies robotics, other machinery and industrial software to factories, saw revenues fall by 10 percent in the quarter, with sales of software hit particularly hard. The division will bear the brunt of 6,000 job cuts, about two percent of Siemens's global workforce, that were announced in March. It has been affected by muted demand, particularly in China and Germany. Siemens had long been a producer of heavy industrial equipment but has in recent years sought to shift its focus towards digital technology and factory automation.


France 24
4 hours ago
- France 24
Germany factory output lowest since pandemic in 2020
Factory output in June fell 1.9 percent month-on-month, federal statistics agency Destatis said, steeper than a drop of 0.5 percent forecast by analysts polled by financial data firm FactSet. There were particularly heavy falls in the manufacture of machinery and pharmaceuticals, helping to drag overall factory output down to levels last seen in May 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic. Destatis also made a major revision to May industrial production data, saying the indicator fell 0.1 percent. It had previously reported a healthy rise of 1.2 percent. ING bank analyst Carsten Brzeski said the dire data could prompt a downward revision to an initial estimate showing the economy shrank slightly in the second quarter. "This is bad news," he said. "At face value, industry remains stuck in a very long bottoming out." A series of bright data releases since the start of the year had raised hopes that the worst might be over for Germany's economy. The eurozone's traditional export powerhouse shrank for the past two years, battered by high energy costs and fierce Chinese competition -- and now faces a massive extra hit from Trump's tariff blitz. A new baseline US levy of 15 percent on European Union exports took effect Thursday, with the EU among dozens of US trading partners facing higher tariffs. "It looks highly unlikely that exports could soon again be a significant growth driver for the German economy," Brzeski said. "The new tariffs will clearly weigh on economic growth." Data released Thursday also showed that German exports in June to the United States -- the country's biggest trading partner -- fell 2.1 percent, after having registered a steep decline in May. Overall exports in June rose 0.8 percent month-on-month however, Destatis said, more than the 0.5-percent increase expected in a FactSet poll of analysts.