5,500 jobs at risk as Phones 4U collapses into administration

MORE THAN 500 Phones 4u stores were shut today after the retail chain plunged into administration - putting 5,600 jobs into jeopardy.
Phones 4u is to go into administration - placing more than 5,500 jobs at riskPhones 4u is to go into administration - placing more than 5,500 jobs at risk
Phones 4u is to go into administration - placing more than 5,500 jobs at risk

The collapse follows a shock decision by EE to join Vodafone in cutting ties with the retailer, which sells contracts on behalf of the network operators.

Staff were told to turn up for work today but their future looks bleak pending a decision by administrators from PwC on whether the private equity-owned business can be reopened for trading.

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Entrepreneur John Caudwell, who set up the operation in the 1980s before selling it for £1.5 billion in 2006, said he was “sickened and saddened” for the nearly 6,000 staff who work at the Staffordshire-based firm.

In an interview at the weekend, he blamed the “ruthless behaviour” of the network operators for the demise of the business.

Phones 4u said the decision by EE not to renew its current contract, which is due to end in September next year, came as a “complete shock” and meant it would be left without a single network partner after Vodafone said earlier this month that it would not extend its agreement.

The company is owned by private equity firm BC Partners and has 550 standalone stores, employing 5,596 people.

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Phone operators are increasingly targeting sales through their own stores while Phones 4u’s rival Dixons Carphone - created from Carphone Warehouse and the company behind PC World and Currys - has been successful in building relationships with the phone operators.

Phones 4u said that both EE and Vodafone had, until very recently, indicated that they saw Phones 4u as a long-term strategic partner.

Stefano Quadrio Curzio, a representative of BC Partners, said: “Vodafone has acted in exactly the opposite way to what they had consistently indicated to the management of Phones 4u over more than six months.

“Their behaviour appears to have been designed to inflict the maximum damage to their partner of 15 years, giving Phones 4u no time to develop commercial alternatives.

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“EE’s decision on Friday is surprising in the context of a contract that has more than a year to run and leaves the board with no alternative but to seek the administrator’s protection in the interests of all its stakeholders.”

But Vodafone said it rejected any suggestion that it behaved inappropriately during its negotiations with Phones 4u.

It said: “Phones 4u was offered repeated opportunities to propose competitive distribution terms to enable us to conclude a new agreement, but was unable to do so on terms which were commercially viable for Vodafone in the current UK market conditions.

“We were told by the Phones 4u management team that they had little commercial flexibility due to their debt repayment obligations, but that they had a number of alternative strategies in place if we couldn’t reach an agreement with them.”

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EE said its decision not to renew its contract in September 2015 was in part driven by uncertainty over the long-term viability of Phones 4u.

The Vodafone tie-up with Phones 4u represented some £212 million of sales and about £18.5 million of earnings in the year to July 31. Overall group turnover was more than £1 billion, with earnings of £105 million in 2013.

The process of appointing PwC as an administrator was taking place today.

All mobile contracts bought through Phones 4u will remain unaffected and the networks will continue to provide mobile services to customers.

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Phones 4u chief executive David Kassler said last night: “If the mobile network operators decline to supply us, we do not have a business. A good company making profits of over £100 million, employing thousands of decent people has been forced into administration.

“The great service we have provided should have guaranteed a strong future, but unfortunately our network partners have decided otherwise. The ultimate result will be less competition, less choice and higher prices for mobile customers in the UK.”

Neil Saunders, managing director of retail consultancy Conlumino, said: “The example of Phones 4u is perhaps a salutary lesson to all retailers that they should be beware of being overly reliant on third-party providers that are not within their ultimate control.

“If retailing is about anything, it’s about adding value and creating strong USPs (unique selling points). That cannot be done, at least not sustainably, with a sole reliance on outside brands.

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“As for Phones 4u itself, unless it can dramatically reconfigure its business, it looks likely that its place on the high street is well and truly disconnected.”

At the Phones 4u flagship store on Oxford Street in central London, customers found a shop floor empty of staff and the main lights switched off.

Staff who did arrive for work refused to talk to the media about the company’s situation, instead going down to the store’s lower ground floor.

Shortly after the shop was due to open at 9am, a staff member posted a notice to customers on the door - signed by “The heartbroken Phones 4u team” - which read: “Following the unexpected decision of EE and Vodafone to withdraw supply from Phones 4u, we regret that this store is currently closed.

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“Please accept our apologies and we will update you as soon as possible. Our customer service lines are still open.”

Further along in the shop window was a board advertising the new Apple iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, suggesting customers could pre-order the handset and “get it first”.

PHONES 4U traces its origins from a small dealership called Midlands Mobile Phones, which was set up in 1987 by entrepreneur John Caudwell and his brother Brian to sell a small batch of Motorola handsets.

The venture quickly transformed into a wholesale distributor under an aggressive retail expansion drive that, by 2003, saw it sell 26 phones every minute. The business employed 10,000 people at its peak and generated sales of more than £2.25 billion.

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Mr Caudwell later sold the Phones 4u business for £1.5 billion in 2006 to private equity firms Providence Equity Partners and Doughty Hanson. They then sold it to BC Partners in 2011.

However, the group’s many years of private equity control have seen it rack up sizeable debts, and its fate took a turn for the worse recently as mobile operators stepped up their own sales and marketing efforts to get customers to come to them directly.

The merger of Phones 4u’s largest rival Carphone Warehouse with Dixons has also helped pile on the pressure.

An existing agreement between Dixons and Phones 4u to run mobile concessions in 160 Currys/PC World megastores lasts until May but in the meantime Dixons has wasted no time in equipping a number of its other stores with Carphone Warehouse concessions.

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Three, the UK’s smallest operator, was the first to pull the plug on its partnership with Phones 4u, followed by O2 and then Vodafone earlier this month.

A spokesman for Vodafone said its decision to walk away from the group came after months of negotiations.

“Phones 4u was offered repeated opportunities to propose competitive distribution terms to enable us to conclude a new agreement, but was unable to do so on terms which were commercially viable for Vodafone in the current UK market conditions,” he said.

EE meanwhile said its decision was in line with a strategy to move to “fewer, deeper relationships” with its retail partners. As well as Carphone Warehouse, EE has reseller deals with around 30 smaller partners, including Tesco and Argos, which are also under review. The mobile giant is also behind Phones 4u’s mobile network service LIFE Mobile.

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There were rumours recently that EE could look to buy Phones 4u, and analysts have said that the opportunity now for mobile operators to buy its stores should not be overlooked, as it would fit a strategy to increase their retail presence.

But even if the group is not sold it is unlikely to result in a loss for BC Partners, because the group paid itself a dividend last year that reportedly helped it recoup around 1.3 times its initial investment.

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