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B&Q owner to shut 60 stores in Ireland and Britain

The owner of B&Q has announced plans to close 60 DIY stores over the next two years. The move...
Newstalk
Newstalk

09.35 31 Mar 2015


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B&Q owner to shut 60 store...

B&Q owner to shut 60 stores in Ireland and Britain

Newstalk
Newstalk

09.35 31 Mar 2015


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The owner of B&Q has announced plans to close 60 DIY stores over the next two years.

The move comes amid a 7.5% drop in adjusted pre-tax profit of stg£675m for Kingfisher, a chain that operates in Ireland, the UK and mainland Europe.

Releasing its figures for the full-year ending January 31st, it said total sales were also down by 1.4%, to stg£10.96bn (€15.06bn).

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Kingfisher said the closures would affect poor-performing stores in the UK and Ireland and added that around 600 jobs are at risk.

It expects natural attrition to account for most of the positions, with other staff being reassigned to different parts of the group, including its builders' supplies chain Screwfix.

"Kingfisher has said for some time that B&Q UK and Ireland can adequately meet local customer needs from fewer stores and that some of the store should be smaller," it said.

Overall, its UK and Ireland operations saw sales up 5.5% in the year to stg£4.6bn (€6.3bn), achieving a retail profit of stg£276m (€379m).

More than half of the total sales for the London-listed firm come from its businesses on the continent.

On Monday a planned stg£200m (€274m) deal by the company to buy the French DIY chain Mr Bricolage collapsed. The market responded positively to the development with shares in Kingfisher rising by 2%.

Shares were also up 3% in early trading after Tuesday's announcement.

Kingfisher had been looking to strengthen its position in France, where it already owns Castorama and Brico Depot.

The closures are the first major attempt at reorganisation by Veronique Laury, who took over as CEO from Ian Cheshire last September.

Ms Laury was previously the boss of Castorama.

She said the entire group would undergo a strategic shake-up, with fewer product lines, greater IT integration and executive refocus.

Two years ago B&Q saw a massive sales slump which it blamed on poor weather.

The chain has eight Irish outlets across Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick, Kildare and Athlone.


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