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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Leon to shut sites and axe jobs as it enters administration

The fast-food chain will close a number of branches and reduce its workforce as part of a turnaround plan

A view of a Leon branch

Fast-food chain Leon is poised to enter administration, shut several outlets and make redundancies as part of a rescue plan by its new owner to revive the beleaguered brand.

The London-headquartered business was reacquired last month by co-founder John Vincent from Asda in a transaction reported to be between £30m and £50m, significantly less than the £100m paid by billionaire brothers Mohsin and Zuber Issa in 2021.

It has now been confirmed that Leon, which has branches around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, has sought an administration order "for the purpose of formulating proposals for a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) to help accelerate the restructuring of the business".

In a statement, the company indicated that Mr Vincent and his team's immediate focus is "the immediate priority is to reduce the number of loss-making restaurants".

Leon attributed its difficulties to "changing work patterns, brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic, and also tax increases" which have "combined to place further strain on the business and the wider hospitality industry in recent years", as reported by .

The firm added: "Although he believes that the company drifted from its values under the ownership of EG and Asda, Vincent has been sympathetic to the challenges they had as owners."

Mr Vincent said: "In the last two years, Asda had bigger fish to fry, and Leon was always a business they didn't feel fitted their strategy.

"If you look at the performance of Leon's peers, you will see that everyone is facing challenges – companies are reporting significant losses due to working patterns and increasingly unsustainable taxes."