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Retail & Consumer

Poundstretcher exits CVA after paying off creditors at a rate of 12p in the pound

Discount chain said the biggest single creditor was HMRC followed by around 250 of its shop landlords

Poundstretcher chief executive Aziz Tayub(Image: Tom Pegden)

Management at the Poundstretcher discount chain say they have exited a two year CVA after repaying creditors at a rate of 12p in the pound.

The business brought in the legal arrangement back in July 2020 to find a way of offloading high rent stores.

It means the Leicestershire headquartered discount chain has paid off around £13 million of what it owed, from a total of around £100 million.

The business said the biggest single creditor was HMRC followed by around 250 of its shop landlords.

Documents filed at Companies House suggest business recovery specialist Interpath Advisory, which helped with the CVA, was paid more than £740,000.

Poundstretcher management said the CVA had enabled them to rebuild the business with new store openings now underway at a rate of around one a week – having dropped from 450 stores a couple of years ago to just over 330 today.

It is also working with retail specialists to work out how to get the best return from its shop and shelving layouts.

Management said the CVA allowed the business to reset its cost base so that it was able to generate profits of £22-28 million in the year to March 2022 on the back of revenues of £326 million. Overall turnover was down from £411 million back in 2020 because there were now fewer stores.