Sears plc

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Sears plc
Industry Retail
Fate Acquired by Philip Green
Successor Arcadia Group
Founded 1891
Defunct 1999
Headquarters London, UK
Key people
Charles Clore (Chairman)
Number of employees
65,000

Sears plc was a large British-based conglomerate. The company was listed on the London Stock Exchange and was once a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index. It was acquired by Philip Green in 1999.

History

The business was founded by John and William Sears in 1891 and initially traded as bootmakers under the name of Trueform.[1] It had acquired Freeman, Hardy and Willis by 1929.[2] The business was acquired by Charles Clore in 1953.[1] He renamed it Sears Holdings in 1955 and it went on to buy the Manfield and Dolcis shoe shop chains in 1956.[1] In the late 1950s Clore consolidated all the shoe brands Sears had acquired under the name British Shoe Corporation[1] under which name it also bought Saxone, Lilley & Skinner, another shoe shop chain, in 1962.[3]

Sears decided to invest in department stores in 1965 acquiring Lewis's Investment Trust which itself controlled Selfridges.[1] In 1966, Selfridges launched the Miss Selfridge department, which subsequently expanded to a store chain in its own right.

In 1971 the company diversified again buying William Hill, a chain of bookmakers.[1]

The company bought Wallis in 1980 and Foster Brothers Clothing, which owned Adams Childrenswear, in 1985.[4] and in the same year was renamed Sears plc. It acquired Richard Shops in 1992.[5]

As at April 2005, the company was FTSE 100 listed and had the following brands:

Wallis, Warehouse, Miss Selfridge, Adams Childrenswear, Shoe Express, Shoe City, Saxone, Dolcis, Cable & Co, The Outfit, Lilley & Skinner, Freemans Catalogue Store, Selfridges, The Selfridges Hotel, Part ownership of The StEnoch's Shopping Centre in Glasgow, 3,000 retail shops being mostly leasehold with a few freehold jewels such as 190 Oxford Street and 330 Oxford Street known as the Top Shop flagship store.

In 1996 sold FHM, Manfield, True Form, Saxone and Curtess to entrepreneur Stephen Hinchliffe and his business Facia.[6] The remaining parts of British Shoe Corporation were sold by 1998, at an accounting loss of £150 million.[7]

Sears plc was acquired by January Investments on behalf of Philip Green in January 1999.[8] The womenswear business (comprising Warehouse, Richards, Wallis and Miss Selfridge) was subsequently transferred to Arcadia Group.[9] Philip Green later purchased the Arcadia Group, regaining control of Wallis and Miss Selfridge alongside Arcadia's other brands (Arcadia having closed Richards, and sold Warehouse to Rubicon Retail).

Sears Group Properties a wholly owned subsidiary was sold to the owner of Owen Owen department store and continues to operate as an outsourced property solution for other fashion brands.

Sears Property Developments Limited a wholly owned subsidiary of Sears Plc was swallowed up by January Investments but the asset stripping of the retail park development properties generated around £50M. These included Parc Fforestfach and Westway Cross Retail Park. Sears Property Developments Limited had contributed in excess of £10M per annum profits and was Sears "secret weapon." The Times had exaggerated Sears PLC as being involved in "risky property development" which it was certainly not.

Brands after demise of Sears

After taking on a raft of footwear brands, Stylo subsequently decided to consolidate the stores under their Barratts and PriceLess Shoes branding and many of the other brands (Lilley & Skinner, Trueform, Saxone, FHW) were axed. The deal meant Stylo had a surfeit of retail space in many locations, and so decided to sell off surplus stores to other operators, including Shoe Zone, or close them. Dolcis was not included in the original sale of shoe stores to Stylo and traded independently until 1998 when it was purchased by fashion retail group Alexon. The chain split off from Alexon in 2006, but collapsed into administration in 2008, with the rump of the chain purchased by Stylo. Lilley and Skinner brand then traded under the Stead and Simpson banner.

Adams Childrenswear - trading as 'Adams Kids' - remained on the high street until 2010, after some difficulties over the years, and collapsed into administration twice since 2006;[10] Former Stead & Simpson chairman John Shannon purchased a portion of the chain's outlets and the Adams brand,[11] before the company fell into adminsistration for a third time in 2010.[12] The brand survives as an online business.[13]

William Hill plc is owned by private equity firms Cinven and CVC Capital Partners. It remains one of the UK's leading betting and gaming organisations.

Selfridges is owned by Canadian firm Galen Weston and has expanded beyond London with branches in Manchester and Birmingham.

Lewis's was split from Selfridges and was placed into Administration in 1991. Branches in Liverpool, Manchester, Oxford, Leeds and Hanley were bought out by Owen Owen.

Richard Shops were closed down by Arcadia Group shortly after the firm took the chain over from Sears. Miss Selfridge and Wallis remain part of Arcadia, and the firm has also continued to develop and evolve the Outfit out-of-town fashion store format initially developed by Sears. Arcadia sold Warehouse as part of the deal which created Rubicon Retail in 2002. Subsequently Rubicon merged with Mosaic Fashions, and following the collapse of Mosaic, Warehouse is in the hands of the new firm, Aurora Fashions, which took on many of Mosaic's brands.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Richard Davenport-Hines Clore, Sir Charles (1904–1979) Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  2. Andrew Godley, Business History Centre at Reading University American Multinationals and Innovation in British Retailing, 1850-1962 Helsinki Congress of the International Economic History Association, August 2006
  3. PRIVATE MONOPOLIES Hansard, 14 February 1962
  4. ADAMS CHILDRENSWEAR LIMITED: INITIAL SUBMISSION Competition Commission, 2006
  5. Where class wins over cash The Guardian, 27 October 1991
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  9. Sears sells womenswear business BBC News, 8 July 1999
  10. Adams sheds 850 jobs as administrators close 111 shops guardian.co.uk, 5 February 2009
  11. Childrenswear retailer Adams bought by former owner John Shannon The Telegraph, 14 February 2009
  12. Childrenswear chain Adams falls back into administration guardian.co.uk, 22 January 2006
  13. About Us Adams Kids