Poundland 'to run out of money within days' if restructuring plan not approved

The company is asking a High Court judge to approve a plan which would save the retailer from entering administration.

Poundland ‘to run out of money within days’ if restructuring plan not approved, High Court toldiStock

Poundland will run out of money within days if a restructuring plan is not approved, the High Court has been told.

The company is asking a judge to approve a plan which would save it from entering administration, with barristers telling a hearing on Tuesday that it is set to run out of money by September 7 if the scheme is not sanctioned.

Poundland, founded in Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire, in 1990, has approximately 14,700 staff members and operates around 800 stores.

It announced plans to shut 68 stores in June after being sold by Pepco Group to Peach Bidco, a subsidiary of private equity firm Gordon Brothers, for £1.

In written submissions for the hearing in London, Tom Smith KC, for Poundland Limited, said that the retailer’s financial position had “significantly deteriorated during the last two years” and that it had “performed poorly in a difficult retail and economic environment”.

He said: “The latest liquidity forecast shows that the group will run out of cash in the week ending September 7 2025.”

The barrister continued that if the restructure was not approved, the company’s directors would likely place it into administration by Friday.

In court, he said a “very significant amount of new money” would be injected into the company through the plan.

He said: “The plan will release a further £60m of funding, and that is in addition to the £30m that has already gone in following the purchase that took place on June 12.

“So, in effect, if you add everything up, Gordon Brothers is putting in £90m.”

As well as the store closures, which would put around 1,000 jobs at risk, Poundland also said it would close its frozen and digital distribution site at Darton, South Yorkshire, later this year and another warehouse at Springvale in Bilston, West Midlands, early next year.

A further 350 people will be affected by the warehouse closures, which are linked to the company’s plan to stop online sales through its Poundland.co.uk website.

In his written submissions, Mr Smith said that the company intended to “phase exits” from some of its stores, but that “this is not certain”.

Poundland first appeared at the High Court in July at what is known as a “convening hearing”, where barristers asked for a judge’s permission to convene “plan meetings” of its creditors to vote on the restructuring plan.

Following the meetings earlier this month, barristers are now asking a judge to rubber-stamp the plans at what is known as a “sanctioning hearing”.

Mr Smith said in written submissions that the company is currently due to pay back £276.5m in loans by September 1, which would be pushed back by three years under the restructuring plan.

It would also see the company, which made a pre-tax loss of around £35.7m in the 2024 financial year, provided with a £30m overdraft facility and have some of its rents reduced.

Mr Smith continued that many of Poundland’s stores “are unprofitable at their current rents”, with the company paying “higher than market rates for a significant number” of its sites.

No-one has appeared in court to oppose the plan being approved.

The hearing before Sir Alastair Norris is expected to conclude later on Tuesday.

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