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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Business
Sarah Butler

Mike Ashley’s Frasers Group makes £83m offer for handbag maker Mulberry

a model in a brown dress/coat holds a circular shaped teal coloured leather handbag
Mulberry says it needs to raise cash after making a £34m pre-tax loss in the year to the end of March. Photograph: Dpa Picture Alliance/Alamy

Mike Ashley’s Frasers Group has filed a possible £83m offer to buy the luxury brand Mulberry as it expressed concerns about the future of the British handbag maker.

Frasers – the owner of Sports Direct, Evans Cycles, the House of Fraser department stores, the luxury streetwear chain Flannels and multiple brands from Slazenger to Jack Wills – already owns a 37% stake in Mulberry.

It said it was making an offer for the rest of the company after the luxury brand announced an emergency £10.75m placing of shares to prop up the balance sheet late on Friday.

Mulberry had said it needed to raise cash after it fell to a £34m pre-tax loss in the year to the end of March, from a £13m profit a year before, after sales fell by 4% to £153m. It added that sales were down by 18% for the 25 weeks since the period ended.

In a statement issued on Monday, Frasers said it would “not accept another Debenhams situation where a perfectly viable business is run into administration”. The statement refers to the collapse of the department store in 2019, wiping out shareholders such as Ashley’s retail group, which had ploughed £150m into the business, including building up a near-30% stake.

The statement said the group “was not aware of the [planned cash raising by Mulberry] until immediately prior to its announcement” and would have been willing to underwrite it on better terms than those announced.

Mulberry’s share price, which stood at 125p on Friday before the announcement, closed at 124p on Monday after hitting a low of 102p earlier in the day.

Ashley’s potential offer is 130p a share and is subject to a string of conditions – all of which it says are “waivable”, including the ditching of the planned share placement and full backing of the Mulberry board.

Clive Black, an analyst at Shore Capital, suggested there could be “much emotion and potential shenanigans” as Frasers would be up against 56% shareholder Challice, controlled by the Singaporean entrepreneur Christina Ong.

“Quite whether the two large and dominating shareholders can come to an agreement will be at the heart of the next steps, we shall watch with interest,” Black wrote in a note.

Challice has pledged to underwrite the share placing, suggesting Ong is prepared to back the new chief executive, Andrea Baldo, who joined Mulberry on 1 September.

The former boss of the fashion label Ganni, who was previously involved in a turnaround at the Italian streetwear brand Diesel, took over from Thierry Andretta, who had led Mulberry since 2015 and led a push to take it upmarket.

Mulberry – founded in 1971 by the entrepreneur Roger Saul and his mother, Joan, and best known for its leather goods, particularly women’s handbags – has struggled to find a place in the luxury market amid heavy competition and the post-Brexit ending of shopping tax breaks for tourists to the UK.

Mulberry was approached for comment.

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