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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Cocktail bar chain owed millions to OakNorth, HMRC before collapse

The company has made at least 30 staff redundant alongside closing several sites as founder Nick Campbell battled to secure rescue funding to buy the company in a pre-pack administration deal

Simmons cocktail bar(Image: Kenny Brown | Manchester Evening News)

Fresh corporate documents have disclosed that Simmons owed millions of pounds in debts to OakNorth bank and tax authorities before entering administration.

The London-based cocktail bar chain has made at least 30 staff redundancies whilst shutting several venues as founder Nick Campbell fought to secure rescue funding to purchase the company through a pre-pack administration arrangement, as reported by .

Simmons owed £5.7m in outstanding loans to OakNorth, alongside £900,000 to tax authority HMRC and £850,000 to local councils Camden, Westminster, Hackney and the City of London.

The firm also owed £400,000 to drinks supplier Venus Wine & Spirit Merchants, according to filings by administrators Kroll.

The company has approached HMRC regarding a "time to pay" arrangement to defer settling some of its tax liabilities.

Campbell is set to acquire the group from administration in a £6m transaction, which encompasses settling the OakNorth debt by transferring it into a new facility.

"In recent years, the group has experienced a downturn in trading, largely attributable to a combination of macroeconomic factors," Kroll stated.

"The cashflow and profitability of the group has been significantly impacted by a continued challenging consumer environment post Covid-19, with consumers shifting away from drinking culture to more health-conscious lifestyles; increased inflationary pressures; and increased overhead costs."