22nd December 2024
Woman walking past Wilko storeEPA

The Wilko name will disappear from UK High Streets as a rescue deal for the chain fell through.

All of its 400 stores across the UK will close by early October, the GMB union has said.

It means redundancies now look likely for all 12,500 staff at the family-owned business.

It is understood no bidders are interested in running shops under the Wilko name, although some parties are interested in rebranding their stores.

The billionaire owner of HMV, Doug Putman, hoped to keep up to 300 Wilko shops open, but his bid failed as rising costs complicated the deal.

Administrators are expected to announce the details of further redundancies and store closures soon.

The company has struggled with strong competition from rival chains like B&M, Poundland, The Range and Home Bargains, as the high cost of living has pushed shoppers to seek out bargains.

B&M has said it will take on up to 51 of Wilko’s 400 shops in a deal worth £13m. The BBC understands that the stores will be rebranded as B&M shops, although it is not clear yet whether any jobs will be saved or if Wilko workers will be given preference if they apply for roles at the B&M shops.

Many Wilko shops are in High Street locations in traditional town centres. While these locations are convenient for shoppers without cars, since the pandemic there has been a shift to bigger retail parks and out-of-town options with more space, benefiting its rivals like B&M.

Poundland is also understood to be interested in buying up to 70 stores as a way of boosting its own portfolio.

The Wilko brand is also still up for grabs, with retailers including The Range proposing bids for the name specifically.

One Wilko worker, who asked not to be named, told BBC News on Monday morning that staff still had not been given any official information on the future of her store.

“I feel sick and tired now, everyone is stressed,” she said.

The employee, who has worked for the retail chain for 15 years, added that she felt “let down by Wilko, the union and the administration people”.

Another said that they were finding out details from the press, adding that weeks of uncertainty had affected workers’ mental health.

“This is not fair on these loyal employees who stuck by Wilko,” she said.

  • ‘Under siege’ Wilko staff fear for jobs as shoppers hunt bargains
  • What’s gone wrong at Wilko?

The cash-strapped chain announced in August it had collapsed into administration, raising concerns over the futures of its 12,500 employees.

Administrators at PwC have already announced that some 1,016 redundancies would be made at 52 shops across the country that will close on Tuesday and Thursday this week.

Another 299 redundancies have taken place at its two distribution centres in Worksop and Newport, which will close on Friday next week, while more than 260 redundancies have been made at its support centre.

A rescue bid put forward by Canadian entrepreneur Doug Putman was hampered by the costs and difficulties thrown up by the need to overhaul Wilko’s supply chains.

He had originally been eyeing up to 300 shops, but the deal in its most recent form may have included about 100.

Day-to-day costs to keep everything running, rents and supplier contracts were also posing a challenge.

Mr Putman said he had worked with administrators and suppliers over several weeks to seek a viable way to rescue the business and the failed bid was “a great disappointment”.

“A stable foundation could not be secured to ensure long-term success for the business and its people in the way that we would have wanted,” he added.

‘Sick and tired’

After the collapse of Woolworths in 2008, Wilko – which remained family-run until its problems came to a head – stepped up to fill the gap left on the High Street.

Founded in 1930 and well known for its affordable everyday items, it had been struggling with sharp losses and a cash shortage.

Nadine Houghton, national officer at the GMB union, said: “Wilko was far more than a brand, a retailer or the products it sold, it was the thousands of loyal team members now facing an uncertain future. “Wilko may have ceased genuinely being a family brand many years ago, but the staff kept the real family ethos of Wilko alive until the very end. It is the family that Wilko colleagues made for themselves that will be missed the most.”

Wilko had already borrowed millions from restructuring specialist Hilco, cut jobs and rejigged its leadership team and sold off a distribution centre as it struggled with rising costs and keeping shops fully stocked.

The company has been criticised for paying dividends in recent years, but Lisa Wilkinson, the retailer’s chairwoman until January this year and the granddaughter of the firm’s founder, said the company would have collapsed even if it had not made these payments.

Ms Wilkinson recently said “everybody has thrown everything” at trying to save the business.

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