Friday, April 5, 2013

Saved!...



HMV has been rescued by the restructuring expert Hilco, saving more than 2,500 high street jobs and 141 stores.

Hilco, which already owns HMV Canada, said the deal for the CD and DVD retailer included 25 stores that had been slated for closure, although 80 sites will remain shuttered. All nine branches of its Fopp music chain will also be saved.

HMV, founded in 1921 and famous for its Nipper the dog trademark, collapsed into administration in January after struggling to compete against cut-price supermarket offers and internet downloads. It is understood the chain was sold for £50m, but Hilco and HMV's administrators Deloitte declined to comment on the sale price.

Paul McGowan, the chief executive of Hilco, said: "We hope to replicate some of the success we have had in the Canadian market with the HMV Canada business which we acquired almost two years ago and which is now trading strongly. The structural differences in the markets and the higher level of competition in the UK will prove additional challenges for the UK business but we believe it has a successful future ahead of it."

HMV UK will be run by a Hilco team working alongside existing management. It will be led by Ian Topping, formerly chief executive of the South African retail group Steinhoff. McGowan will become HMV's chairman.

Topping said it was an "exciting investment" and believes the nation's outpouring of grief when HMV collapsed "shows a strong desire for the business to continue to trade and we hope to play a constructive part in delivering that".

Topping plans to take HMV back to its traditional musical roots by reversing an earlier decision to sell tablets in store in order to "reclaim the space for an enhanced music and visual range".

HMV called in administrators from Deloitte in January but hopes of a rescue deal were raised just days later when Hilco bought HMV's £176m of debt for a reported £40m. It was announced in February that 66 of HMV's 220 shops would close over two months, at the cost of nearly 1,000 jobs. Another 37 store closures were announced later that month.

At its peak, HMV had more than 400 shops around the world, more than half of them in the UK. It had a 35% share of Britain's CD market in 2012.

These HMV stores in the UK will therefore remain open (including the flagship at Oxford). HURRAH!


1. Aberdeen

2. Ayr

3. Banbury

4. Bangor (Wales)

5. Basingstoke

6. Basildon

7. Bath

8. Belfast Donegall Arcade

9. Birmingham Bullring

10. Blackpool

11. Bluewater

12. Bournemouth

13. Bradford

14. Brighton

15. Bristol Broadmead

16. Bristol Cribbs Causeway

17. Bromley

18. Bury

19. Bury St Edmunds

20. Cambridge

21. Canary Wharf

22. Canterbury

23. Cardiff

24. Carlisle

25. Chelmsford

26. Cheltenham

27. Chester

28. Chichester

29. Colchester

30. Coventry

31. Crawley

32. Cwmbran

33. Darlington

34. Derby

35. Doncaster

36. Dudley Merry Hill Centre

37. Dundee

38. Eastbourne

39. East Kilbride

40. Edinburgh Fort

41. Edinburgh Ocean Terminal

42. Edinburgh Princes Street

43. Exeter

44. Gateshead

45. Glasgow Argyle Street

46. Glasgow Buchanan Street

47. Glasgow Fort

48. Gloucester

49. Grimsby

50. Guernsey (St.Peter Port)

51. Guildford

52. Hanley (Stoke-on-Trent)

53. Harlow

54. Harrogate

55. Hastings

56. Hatfield

57. Hereford

58. High Wycombe

59. Horsham

60. Hull

61. Inverness

62. Ipswich

63. Islington

64. Isle of Man (Douglas)

65. Isle of Wight (Newport)

66. Jersey (St.Helier)

67. Kettering

68. King's Lynn

69. Kingston-Upon-Thames

70. Leamington Spa

71. Leeds Headrow

72. Leeds White Rose

73. Leicester

74. Lincoln

75. Liverpool LiverpoolOne

76. Livingston

77. Llandudno

78. Maidstone

79. Manchester 90 Market Street

80. Manchester Trafford Centre

81. Mansfield

82. Middlesbrough

83. Milton Keynes

84. Newcastle

85. Newport (Wales)

86. Northampton

87. Norwich Chapelfield

88. Norwich Gentlemen's Walk

89. Nottingham Victoria Centre

90. Nuneaton

91. Oxford

92. Oxford Circus 150 Oxford Street, London W1

93. Peterborough

94. Poole

95. Portsmouth Commercial Road

96. Portsmouth Gun Wharf

97. Preston

98. Plymouth

99. Reading Oracle Centre

100. Romford

101. Selfridges Oxford Street, London W1

102. Sheffield High Street

103. Sheffield Meadowhall

104. Shrewsbury

105. Solihull

106. Southampton

107. Southend

108. Southport

109. Speke Park (Liverpool)

110. Staines

111. Stevenage

112. Stirling

113. Stockport

114. Stratford-Upon-Avon

115. Sunderland

116. Sutton

117. Swansea

118. Taunton

119. Thanet

120. Thurrock

121. Truro

122. Tunbridge Wells

123. Uxbridge

124. Westfield London Stratford City

125. Westfield London W12

126. Wimbledon (hmvcurzon)

127. Winchester

128. Wolverhampton

129. Worcester

130. Worthing

131. Yeovil

132. York

Fopp Stores

1. Bristol

2. Cambridge

3. Edinburgh

4. Glasgow, Byres Road

5. Glasgow, Union Street

6. London - Covent Garden

7. London - Gower Street

8. Manchester

9. Nottingham

4 comments:

Jon said...

It is great news - as is the fact they have decided to stop trying to flog devices and just concentrate on CDs and DVDs/Blu-Ray. They were in serious danger of "muddying the waters" for a long time, when the competition is so fierce. I am pleased so many stores are staying open (at the moment!), but I only hope they look realistically at their prices otherwise they are still going to be undercut by Amazon... Jx

Barbarella's Galaxy said...

Yes, thrilled to hear they will return to focus on CD's and DVDs/Blu-Ray! And hopefully they will start to offer more competitive prices. But this is very good news indeed for UK music lovers and tourists. A trip to London just would not be the same without a couple of hours (or more) in the Oxford store!

Jon said...

I wouldn't go to Oxford to shop - but I gues you mean Oxford Street (Oxford Circus)... lol! Jx

Barbarella's Galaxy said...

Erm - obviously, yes ;) It used to be my mothership - went there for the first time in 2001 and stayed for hours. The money I spent in there is probably what kept them going this long, e-hemm...

Just really glad that they (along with Fopp) will stay in business, at least for a while. I just hope they will indeed give the branch a much needed "facelift" and a different price policy.

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