The billionaire brothers behind one of Britain’s biggest fuel retailing empires are close to sealing a last-ditch swoop on McColl’s Retail Group that could lead to thousands of job losses.
Sky News has learnt that EG Group was putting the finishing touches on Friday to a takeover of McColl’s through a pre-pack administration that would usurp a rival rescue proposal from Morrisons, the supermarket chain.
EG’s shareholders are identical to those of Asda, Morrisons fellow Yorkshire-headquartered food retailing rival.
McColl’s confirmed in a lunchtime announcement to the London Stock Exchange that it was to appoint PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) as administrator, confirming a Sky News report on Thursday.
It said its “senior lenders have this morning declined to further extend the waiver of the Company’s banking covenant… in the expectation that they intend to implement a sale of the business to a third-party purchaser as soon as possible”.
Insiders confirmed that that third party was EG Group, although there was speculation that Morrisons – which has an extensive partnership with McColl’s – could seek an injunction to prevent the deal going through.
McColl’s lenders, which include the taxpayer-backed NatWest Group, are said to have demanded the immediate repayment of their loans, to which EG is said to have agreed.
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Under a rival rescue proposal from Morrisons, revealed by Sky News earlier on Friday, the lenders would have seen their loans taken on by the supermarket chain and repaid in full – but over a period of several years.
One source said the EG proposal would see the lenders receive 90p in the pound, while another suggested they would be repaid in full.
The decision by McColl’s to call in administrators will have implications for the company’s pension scheme members, and may prompt questions about why a solvent alternative proposed by Morrisons was not accepted.
Questions are also likely to be raised about PwC’s dual role as adviser to McColl’s lenders and as administrator if the crisis leads to an inferior outcome in terms of job retention and pension payments.
It was unclear how many of McColl’s 16,000-strong workforce would keep their jobs under the deal with EG Group.
McColl’s is an important partner of Morrisons, operating hundreds of smaller shops under the Morrisons Daily brand.
Sky News reported in February that McColl’s was scrambling to secure new funding that would allay concerns about its future.
The company, which is listed on the London Stock Exchange, employs roughly 6000 people on a full-time equivalent basis.
It raised £30m from shareholders in a cash call just eight months ago.
In Scotland, it trades under the name RS McColl.
McColl’s collapse into administration makes it the largest insolvency in the UK retail sector by size of workforce since the collapse of Edinburgh Woollen Mill Group in 2020.
Since then, both Debenhams, which employed about 12,000 people, and Sir Philip Green’s Arcadia Group, which had a workforce numbering roughly 13,000, have also gone bust, becoming casualties of changing retail shopping habits and the pandemic.
McColl’s shares have collapsed this year, with the existing equity now worthless.
Jonathan Miller, McColl’s recently departed chief executive, is understood to have invested £3m personally in the fundraising last summer in a bid to convince other shareholders to support the company.
EG could not be reached for comment, while Morrisons and NatWest declined to comment.
PwC has been contacted for comment.