Britain's high street gloom was made in the City

By Matthew Lynn Jan 13, 2012

Matthew Lynn

Share with
friends:

Comments (3) Print this article

The headlines almost write themselves. As yet another high-street chain calls in the administrators or puts itself up for sale, the same story gets repeated over and over. The high street is in crisis. The internet is blowing away sales and profits. Cash-strapped consumers have stopped spending. Costs have spiralled out of control. The way things are going, soon all that will be left in your local shopping centre are a couple of charity shops and a bookmaker. It’s a good tale, and easily understood. There is a problem, however. It is not really true.

The real story is far more interesting. This is not a retailing crisis, but a financial one. The City has loaded up far too much debt onto companies that can no longer support it. And if there is a question that should be asked, it is why they were allowed to get away with it.

There is certainly no shortage of well-known retail brands running into trouble right now. Just before Christmas, the lingerie retailer La Senza, which has 146 shops across the country, announced it was calling in the administrators. Thorntons, the chocolate retailer, has run into trouble, and is having to close shops. The toy and gadget retailer Hawkin’s Bazaar is shutting down shops and so is the clothes retailer D2. The 100-store chain Past Times plans to put itself into administration. Peacocks is considering selling off its Bonmarché chain as part of a restructuring. Others, such as HMV and New Look, have managed to stay in business, but have suffered big falls in profits. It all adds up to a grim picture.

These are challenging times for many high-street retailers. The internet has undoubtedly taken a big chunk of sales away from them. All kinds of things – from books, to gadgets, to clothes – that we used to buy from familiar retailers we now buy with the click of a mouse and get delivered to our house. They are usually a lot cheaper, and we don’t have to fight our way through the crowds or worry about finding a parking space. Online retailers don’t have to worry so much about business rates, rent reviews, or staff costs – and so can offer cheaper prices.

Then there is the recession. Faced with soaring inflation, stagnant wages, minimal house-price growth, and sparse credit, consumers are feeling the pinch. They are cutting back. Luxuries – the kind of thing you might buy at Thorntons or La Senza – are the first to go.


Sign up for a 3-week FREE trial of MoneyWeek
and get the following free as well

"The only financial publication I could not be without."
John Lang, Director, Tower Hill Associates Ltd


So far, the grim tale about the high street makes sense. But here are some details that challenge the picture. In December, retail sales rose at the fastest rate since May, according to the Confederation of British Industry. This week, the British Retail Consortium said Christmas sales were up by 4% this year. In November retail sales dropped by 0.4%, according to the Office for National Statistics, but they were up in October, and over the latest three-month period they were up by 0.7%.

The numbers jump around a bit, as they always do. Broadly speaking, retail sales are flat, just as you might expect when the economy is going through a hard time. But it is not exactly a bloodbath. If anything, it is remarkable how well retail has done considering the state of the economy. The retail industry is certainly changing as technology moves on and consumer preferences also develop. That is all part of a completely normal – and healthy – process. It shouldn’t be a catastrophe.

The one big problem is the debt. Take a look at who actually owns the retailers. La Senza, for example, was owned by the private-equity company Lion Capital, which bought it in 2006. Past Times was owned by Epic Private Equity. New Look is owned by the private-equity firms Permira and Apax. Hawkin’s Bazaar was owned by a company called Tobar Group, itself partially owned by the venture capital firm Primary Capital. Peacocks is backed by the American hedge funds Och-Ziff and Perry Capital.

In short, nearly all the retailers in trouble are owned by private-equity companies. They bought them in the good times and put a mountain of debt on them. The result? If there is a minor drop in sales and profits they get into trouble, because their balance sheets are in such terrible shape.

The City loved retailing. It had stable cash flows and usually lots of property assets. So it was a perfect arena for financial engineers to come up with clever schemes for ‘sweating the assets’ and ‘making the balance sheet work harder’. It was all fine so long as the economy was booming – and not so good as soon as it got into trouble.

It’s not hard to understand. If your own income went down, say, 2% this year, you wouldn’t expect the house to be repossessed. But the City has stretched many businesses to the point where they can no longer cope with any kind of adversity. We are seeing the results everywhere. A company such as EMI couldn’t cope with the turmoil in the music industry. Now swathes of the retail industry can’t cope with the challenges on the high street.

That is crazy. Businesses need to be able to survive through both good times and bad. The financial markets are supposed to be there to help companies go through difficult times – not to put them straight out of business as soon as they face a slight bump in the road. Instead of seeing what’s happening as a high-street crisis, we should recognise this for what it is: a crisis created by financial engineering.

This article was originally published in MoneyWeek magazine issue number 571 on 13 January 2011, and was available exclusively to magazine subscribers. To read all our subscriber-only articles right away, sign up for a three-week free trial now.

Comments (3)

Share with
friends:

Comments

  • 1. PD

    (15 February 2012, 12:56PM)  Complain about this comment

    I am glad you digged deeper into the pernicious effects of private equities loading of debt onto the businesses. These guys effectively take the rump of the value by means of a special dividend and leave the shell there for passive investors. Capitalism is cyclical and when the inevitable downturn comes, the businesses fail and equity holders get wiped out. It is just another form of stealing by the financial engineers. This is not turning around a failing business, it is just opportunism to make a quick buck and then hold their hands up and say 'Not my fault gov!'

  • 2. Nickr

    (15 February 2012, 12:59PM)  Complain about this comment

    Completely agree with Mathew and 20/20 wisdom is a useful review tool but if it is to be of value then perhaps Messer’s Cameron, Osbourne and co can be encouraged to see the validity of these words and act to the benefit of this country and all its people - better still Mathew call them direct! This is yet another example of financial mischief wreaking havoc Does Britain really need the city or does the city need a country/economy as naive as Britain to put up with its malevolent self serving interests.

  • 3. clive chafer

    (15 February 2012, 09:19PM)  Complain about this comment

    What a great article! All that selling of the freeholds on retail properties, leasing them back to the retailer then floating the companies back on the stockmarket with a mountain of debt.
    The financial 'engineering' companies prosecuted for incompetence. No doubt their 'brilliance' was rewarded with enormous salaries and bonuses. I'm so glad that we are paying top dollar for these wonderful business minds who have destroyed much of our high streets in the process!
    The bankers still have the cheek to claim that they need to reward these similar best people in the same way now. Let's be in no doubt: it's all an illusion. There are any number of decent business minds who could do what people like Stephen Hester does.

    Incidentally, does anyone know what really caused Woolworths to fold? I believe they were suffering from just the sort of massive debt leverage referred to in this piece but they still had profitable distribution businesses apart from their stores, by all accounts.

Leave a comment

This will be the name displayed with your comment.

This helps us verify comments are genuine. It will not be displayed anywhere on the site and is stored confidentially.

Please keep your comment within 1,000 characters and relevant to the main topic. We encourage healthy debate, but we don't allow insults or bad language. Anything off topic or unpleasant, we'll remove. Enjoy the conversation! Thank you.

captcha To prevent spam-related comments please enter the characters shown in the 'Captcha' box to the left.

By leaving a comment you accept our terms and conditions.


FREE - MoneyWeek's daily investment emailJohn Stepek

Our free daily email, Money Morning, is an informative and enjoyable analysis of what's going on in the markets. Written by our Editor, John Stepek, and guest contributors.
Sign up FREE to Money Morning here.

>