The fashion chains Peacocks, Jaeger, Austin Reed and Jacques Vert have collapsed into administration, putting nearly 4,800 jobs at risk.
The retailers are all part of entrepreneur Philip Day’s Edinburgh Woollen Mill Group (EWM), which warned last month it was on the brink of collapse.
The Cardiff-based budget fashion chain Peacocks employs 4,369 staff across its 423 stores, while the upmarket brand Jaeger employs 347 people across 76 outlets. The Jaeger business also includes the formalwear chains Jacques Vert and Austin Reed. They were put into administration before a legal deadline on Friday after talks on a rescue package failed.
No redundancies or permanent store closures have so far been announced, and administrators said the businesses would continue to trade while they consider options for their future.
Tony Wright, a joint administrator and partner at the advisory firm FRP, said: “Jaeger and Peacocks are attractive brands that have suffered the well-known challenges that many retailers face at present. We are in advanced discussions with a number of parties and working hard to secure a future for both businesses.”
Day is thought to want to rescue Peacocks but has been looking for a buyer for Jaeger and other brands, including Austin Reed and Jacques Vert.
EWM said: “In recent weeks we have had constructive discussions with a number of potential buyers for Peacocks and Jaeger but the continuing deterioration of the retail sector due to the impact of the pandemic and second lockdown have made this process longer and more complex than we would have hoped.”
The group said it could not extend further a standstill agreement agreed with the high court six weeks ago.
EWM added: “Therefore, as directors, we have taken the desperately difficult decision to place Peacocks and Jaeger into administration while those talks continue. We will continue to do all we can to support FRP advisory in trying to secure the best outcome possible for these businesses.”
Two other chains owned by Day – Edinburgh Woollen Mill, which specialises in knitwear and fashions for the over-50s, and Ponden Mill homewares – called in administrators earlier this month. Just under 900 people immediately lost their jobs and a further 2,000 roles remain at risk at those two chains.
The businesses have suffered from years of underinvestment and were ill-prepared for the massive switch to online shopping brought about by the pandemic.
All fashion retailers were already under pressure from a slowdown in spending on clothing, but the shift to working from home, high street lockdowns, fall in tourist numbers and the closure of pubs, clubs and bars have all increased the pain.