Home improvement chain Homebase is on the verge of tumbling into administration, with thousands of jobs and 130 shops at risk.
The troubled chain is preparing to line up administrators Teneo to handle its insolvency after announcing a loss of £84.2 million last year.
Hilco Capital, which bought the retailer for £1 in 2018, began investigating cost-cutting measures earlier this year, blaming overly cautious consumers not splashing out on DIY projects.
The firm’s collapse could sound the death knell for another British high street chain after the deaths of beloved brands including BHS, Wilko and Debenhams and others – which have been resurrected as online-only businesses.
In August, Sainsbury’s agreed to acquire 10 Homebase stores and convert them into supermarkets. It co-founded the homeware business in the 1970s before selling it off in the early 2000s.
Homebase looks to be heading for administration, with the garden chain appointing insolvency experts which could mean jobs and 130 shops are at risk. File photo
Damian McGloughlin, the managing director of Homebase, told suppliers in August it would begin an ‘active sale process’ to seek new investment
Sainsbury’s (stock image) agreed to acquire 10 Homebase shops and convert them into supermarkets in a deal which is anticipated to create around 1,000 new jobs
A map showing the 10 locations set to be converted into Sainsbury’s stores – an irony, given the supermarket chain co-founded Homebase in the 1970s
The locations set for conversion are located in Sutton Coldfield, Bromsgrove, Cromer, Derry/Londonderry, Fareham, Inverurie, Lowestoft, Newark, Omagh and Rugby.
Damian McGloughlin, the managing director of Homebase, told suppliers in August it would begin an ‘active sale process’ to seek new investment.
The chain is reported to be in talks with the owners of The Range and discount shop B&M – with talk of a ‘pre-pack’ administration sale that could save some stores and jobs.
The Range is considering swooping for 75 stores in a move that could save 1,500 jobs, Sky News reported.
Simon Roberts, chief executive officer of Sainsbury’s said: ‘Sainsbury’s food business continues to go from strength to strength as we push ahead with our Next Level Sainsbury’s plan.
‘We have the best combination of value and quality in the market and that’s winning us customers from all our key competitors and driving consistent growth in volume market share.
‘We want to build on this momentum which is why we are growing our supermarket footprint.
‘Our ambition is to be customers’ first choice for food and these new stores will showcase some of the best that Sainsbury’s supermarkets have to offer to even more communities around the country.’
Analysts suggest Homebase may have run into trouble because of high borrowing costs – stopping homeowners from investing in improvements to their properties.
Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: ‘It’s been tough going in the home renovation market, as consumers have tightened their belts amid high borrowing costs.
‘Even though interest rates have begun to come down, homeowners have been ultra cautious, with bigger ticket items hard to shift.
‘Some consumers appear to have been ring-fencing spending for holidays and experiences rather than major makeovers.’
She added that competitors such as B&M and Home Bargains – which sell much cheaper, mass-market furniture – will have cleaned up at Homebase’s expense.
Ms Streeter continued: ‘The Range appears to have found a recipe for success with its pile ’em high, sell ’em cheaper approach to homewares, and appears to be mulling expanding its footprint by taking a chunk of Homebase stores.
‘The future for others remains uncertain, although there may be other takers in the “value” end of the home market, who could swoop in with a cut-price offer.’
Homebase currently operates around 144 locations across the UK, with its first store opening in Croydon in April 1981. Sainsbury’s dispensed with the business in 2002.
Its most recent owners, Hilco Capital, purchased Homebase from Wesfarmers in 2018 for £1. Hilco has closed 106 stores since.