logo
Poundland sold for £1 and set to shut shops in restructuring

Poundland sold for £1 and set to shut shops in restructuring

Glasgow Timesa day ago

The discount chain, known for primarily selling products for £1, had been put on the market earlier this year after a sharp downturn in trading.
Poland-based Pepco Group, which has owned Poundland since 2016, said on Thursday that it completed the sale of the business for a 'nominal' fee. Sources close to the process have said this was £1.
Poundland runs more than 800 shops across the UK (Isabel Infantes/PA)
Poundland's more-than-800 stores and roughly 16,000 employees will be transferred to the ownership of Gordon Brothers, which owns brands including Laura Ashley, as a result.
However, as part of the deal, Poundland is set to undergo a restructuring plan, which will go through the high court.
Poundland said the details will be communicated 'in due course'.
It is understood that full details of the shake-up will be sent out company creditors in the coming days.
The company is expected to seek around 100 store closures and a raft of rent reductions from landlords as part of the process.
As part of the restructuring plan, Pepco is set to retain a minority stake in Poundland.
Last month, Poundland reported that revenues dropped by 6.5% to 985 million euros (£830 million) for the six months to March, compared with a year earlier.
The brand suffered 'challenges across all categories' and had 18 net store closures over the period.
Pepco said the deal will help it shift away from food and drinks, improve its revenue growth and boost its profitability.
Stephan Borchert, Pepco Group chief executive, said: 'This transaction will strongly support our accelerated value creation programme by simplifying the group and focusing on our successful Pepco business.
'Poundland remains a key player in UK discount retail, with millions of customers annually and a well-loved brand and proposition.
'We want to sincerely thank all the Poundland team for their ongoing commitment and contribution to the group and wish Barry Williams and his team all the best for the future.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK edtech Pearson to raise India headcount by 43% in three years
UK edtech Pearson to raise India headcount by 43% in three years

Reuters

time12 minutes ago

  • Reuters

UK edtech Pearson to raise India headcount by 43% in three years

CHENNAI, June 13 (Reuters) - UK-based Pearson (PSON.L), opens new tab plans to boost its workforce in India by about 43% to 2,000, an executive told Reuters on Friday, months after the education firm named India one of its top three priority markets globally. "We will invest significantly in India. We have got three very strong locations and we want to grow in all of these different locations," said Vishaal Gupta, president of enterprise learning and skills division and chair of India at Pearson. Pearson India operates in education and assessment markets, targeting school goers, students aspiring for colleges overseas and corporate professionals. The company will hire across various functions, including local business operations and global tech, over the next three years, Gupta said, while ruling out the launch of any new office location. It currently has offices in Noida, Bengaluru and Chennai. Pearson's shares hit a 10-year high in February after the company reported a rise in profit and said deploying AI would help deliver more growth in 2025. India's ed-tech market, which was valued at $7.5 billion in 2024, is projected to grow more than three-fold to $29 billion by 2030, according to a Grant Thornton report. In India, Pearson competes with IDP Education ( opens new tab and Educational Testing Service in overseas education segment, and with Upgrad and Coursera in the digital-learning market. Gupta said the company will focus on government, Indian conglomerates and global capability centers, where a shortage of skilled workers poses a challenge amid growing demand for AI upskilling. Global capability centers, commonly known as GCCs, are local offices set up by large global companies in India to support their global parent in daily operations, finance, R&D and product development functions. GCCs are projected to contribute 2% to India's GDP by 2030, according to ICICI Securities, up from less than 1% currently.

We must put pragmatism before polarisation to build offshore wind industry
We must put pragmatism before polarisation to build offshore wind industry

Scotsman

time28 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

We must put pragmatism before polarisation to build offshore wind industry

Sign up to our Scotsman Money newsletter, covering all you need to know to help manage your money. Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... In 1975, millions of tonnes of rock were blasted out of a mountainside at Kishorn, a remote site on the west Highland coast. The purpose was to create a dry dock for the construction of drilling platforms as the world's oil and gas giants raced to tap an emerging North Sea hydrocarbons boom. One of them, Ninian Central, was the largest movable object ever created when Chevron towed the vast concrete structure out to a site off Shetland. Half a century later, the US energy company is winding down Ninian and other platforms as it quits the North Sea. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Now Kishorn Port is being reinvented as a manufacturing hub for offshore wind, leveraging its status as one of the largest dry docks in Europe. Highlands and Islands Enterprise last month pledged £24 million for expansion that would allow assembly of floating offshore wind platforms. Kishorn is emblematic of Scotland's attempt to harness the job-creation opportunities presented by the energy transition. Ed Miliband, energy secretary, is looking to Scotland to deliver the lion's share of the UK's target for 50 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind as part of a 'Clean Power 2030' plan. Back in the day, Kishorn employed 3,000 people. The hope is that if enough business can be won making concrete offshore wind foundations and other components, half that number could be working at the site eventually. Yet the big unknown for Scotland's energy workforce is whether such work will come in the volume needed to create enough green jobs to make up for an anticipated decline in employment as the North Sea basin comes to the end of its life. It's a situation faced not only by other ports across Scotland – Ardesier in the Moray Firth, Nigg in the Cromarty Firth - but Scotland's entire offshore wind industry. This includes developers in ScotWind, a mostly North Sea portfolio of 20 wind farms that are supposed to deliver 30GW of the UK's target. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The warning lights are already flashing. Last month, Aberdeen-based Robert Gordon University (RGU)'s Energy Transition Institute forecast that depending on how three scenarios play out, the direct and indirect UK oil and gas workforce could lose about 400 jobs every fortnight for the next five years – a 'Grangemouth effect', given this is the same number being let go with the refinery's closure. This matters because around 90 per cent of the UK oil and gas workforce is deployed in the supply chain, such as engineering and maritime services – precisely the feedstock of transferrable skills that offshore wind developers and ports need to build and maintain wind farms. The RGU reckons that close to £210 billion would need to be spent on offshore wind to meet the UK government's 2030 target. Yet only a fraction of this is currently approved for spending by ScotWind developers. Arguably the main barrier to progress is lack of clarity on connections to the grid, which must urgently be upgraded. The issue was brought into stark relief this week when the UK's National Energy System Operator said Scotland's 'constrained' network meant it had been forced to pay operators to disconnect wind farms at record levels. So far, so discouraging. The situation is made worse by the fact that 60 per cent of ScotWind is for floating wind farms designed for waters too deep for platforms fixed to the ocean floor. This is commercially unproven technology, on which Miliband's 2030 target heavily depends. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Moreover, banks and insurers are not yet sufficiently confident in the technology to commit to the scale of what's envisaged. Some ScotWind projects involve more than 200 wind turbines standing almost as tall as the Eiffel Tower. Three things need to happen to fix this. First, the UK government needs to bring forward a consultation due by 2030 on replacing the Energy Profits Levy (EPL), or 'windfall tax', with a more flexible mechanism would tax operators more fairly and at a time of unusually high prices. Gail Anderson, research director at energy consultants Wood Mackenzie, says this would incentivise companies to stay in the North Sea in the crucial next five years, preserving jobs. 'There's an upside case here but the government needs to act quickly,' she says. Second, floating wind urgently needs a pipeline of demonstrator projects that are fast-tracked, tested and a commercial case proven for them become bankable as quickly as possible. Only one commercial scale floating wind farm so far exists in the UK: Green Volt, a 560-megawatt floating wind farm planned by Flotation Energy and Vårgrønn. The good news is that GB Energy, the state-owned company whose £8.3bn in government funding was confirmed in this week's Spending Review, will focus its firepower on nascent technologies such as floating offshore wind. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'We want to be a market-maker for these new technologies,' its chairman, Juergen Maier, told a Glasgow conference last month. An extra £300m handed to GB Energy in the Spending Review for offshore wind should help. Finally, it's time to act on a recommendation in a jobs and innovation report out last week from Gordon Brown's think-tank, Our Scottish Future. It urges setting out a single, clearly defined Scottish industrial strategy, jointly owned by the UK and Scottish government and regional partnerships, proposing a series of 'big bets on a handful of strategic clusters', such as offshore wind.

Cardiff restaurant named among UK's best at national awards
Cardiff restaurant named among UK's best at national awards

South Wales Argus

time36 minutes ago

  • South Wales Argus

Cardiff restaurant named among UK's best at national awards

The National Restaurant Awards took place on Monday (June 9), celebrating "the brilliance and vibrancy of the UK restaurant scene, honouring the best chefs and operators across the country". Awards handed out at the annual event included: National Restaurant of the Year Gastropub of the Year Chef of the Year Cocktail List of the Year Wine List of the Year Opening of the Year Best Restaurant in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland (four individual awards) A list of the UK's top 100 restaurants was also revealed, featuring one Cardiff-based restaurant - Gorse. The best restaurants in the UK The best restaurants in the UK, according to the National Restaurant Awards, are: Why Gorse is among the UK's best restaurants Gorse was ranked the 56th best restaurant in the country at the National Restaurant Awards. It has been described as a "tiny yet brilliant modern Welsh restaurant" and made history in 2025 by bagging Cardiff its first ever Michelin star. The National Restaurant Awards said: "Not bad going given that Gorse is the chef's debut restaurant and had been open for less than 12 months." Gorse: Cardiff's First MICHELIN Star, As Seen By Our Inspectors@gorserestaurant #Cardiff #MICHELINStar Dive deep into the latest MICHELIN Star in Wales, and the first in its capital, with this Inspector's-eye view of a truly wonderful dining experiencehttps:// — The MICHELIN Guide (@MichelinGuideUK) February 11, 2025 The "unassuming" Pontcanna restaurant (named after the shrub) is focused on seasonal Welsh produce and is fronted by chef Tom Waters. The awards website continues: "Gorse is one of the most accessible fine dining restaurants on this list offering tasting menus from as little as £60 per head. "But the longer tasting menu is where the kitchen's ambition shines, with standout dishes including the likes of Pembrokeshire mackerel with horseradish, lovage and apple; roasted kelp custard with N25 Kaluga Hybrid caviar; and a clever dish of rhubarb partnered with toasted hay cream, egg yolk jam and lavender. "Service is polished but relaxed with the minimalist Nordic-inspired 22-cover interior keeping the focus firmly on the food. "Striking a balance between classic and new wave winemakers, Gorse's wine list complements Waters' cooking beautifully but don't miss out on the restaurant's signature Martini, which is flavoured with local seaweed." Customers agree Michelin star Gorse is "exquisite" It's not just the experts who love Gorse, but customers as well, with it boasting a 4.8 (out of 5) rating on Tripadvisor from 25 reviews. Surpurlatives used to describe the Pontcanna restaurant by visitors include "exquisite", "unbelievable" and "outstanding". One person, commenting about their experience at the restaurant, said: "I had the 10 course menu with wine pairings - each course was delicious and the wine was paired perfectly. "The staff were attentive, knowledgeable and friendly. Well deserving of a Michelin star." RECOMMENDED READING: Another customer added: "Exquisite just about covers it.... sublime food, fantastic atmosphere, open kitchen and prep areas makes for an enhanced experience watching the meticulous detail from Tom and his team. "Matched with really interesting and very reasonably priced wine (especially the 5% Contero Moscat meaning I could enjoy the dessert even more). "Pontcanna continues to shine in the food universe."

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