British major retailer, Wilko, says it is forced to shut all its stores across the country by early October, amid rising inflation and an unprecedented cost-of-living crisis that is plaguing the UK.
According to the announcement, which was made on Monday, the decision will see more than 10,000 staff get laid off after last-ditch talks on a rescue deal with the owner of the HMV music store chain collapsed.
“…despite extensive efforts, it has become clear that no significant part of the Wilko operations can be rescued,” said PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), a British multinational audit and assurance firm, which has taken over as the family-owned budget retailer’s administrator.
PwC confirmed that 124 Wilko stores will be closed by September 21, while the timing for the closure of the remaining 222 stores has yet to be announced. The company’s distribution center operations are expected to be shut down on Friday.
Wilko, which started as a hardware store in 1930, announced its collapse on August 10, putting 12,500 jobs at risk.
It blamed Britain’s “stubbornly high inflation” and interest rates affecting businesses and consumers as the main reasons behind the decision.
Market analysts also confirmed that the company has succumbed to Britain’s tougher economic environment and cost-of-living crisis that has been driven by high inflation and a series of interest rate rises.
Earlier this month, London-listed retailer B&M struck a deal to buy 51 Wilko stores for up to 13 million pounds ($16.26 million). However, a deal could not be reached in time for the rest of the company, despite efforts by Canadian businessman, Doug Putman, the owner of HMV music stores, and PwC.
The PwC put the failure down to the impossibility of cutting down infrastructure costs quickly enough to make a transaction viable.
The rest of the bidders have said they were disinterested in running their stores under the Wilko name.
“This isn’t a tragedy without cause,” said Nadine Houghton, national officer at the GMB trade union, which says it represents about 4,000 workers at Wilko.
“Wilko should have thrived in a bargain retail sector that is otherwise strong, but it was run into the ground by the business owners,” she added.
Leader of the Britain’s opposition Labour Party, Keir Starmer, also commented on Wilko’s collapse on X, formerly known as Twitter.
“Devastating for staff and their families and another symptom of Tory Britain,” he said, referring to the Conservative Party, which has held power in Britain for the last 13 years.