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River Island allowed to shut shops to stave off collapse


River Island has been given the green light to close 33 stores across the UK after the High Court approved the fashion retailer’s restructuring plans.

The High Street brand said a customer shift towards online shopping and higher operating costs had contributed to multi-million pound losses.

It had warned its creditors that it could run short of cash by the end of August if its turnaround proposal was not approved.

As well as closing shops, rents will be reduced at a further 71 branches as part of the plan which, River Island’s chief executive Ben Lewis, said “will enable us to align our store estate to our customers’ needs”.

Negotiations are due to begin with those landlords shortly.

As well as the store closures and rent reductions, about 110 of roughly 950 roles at River Island’s head office will be made redundant, saving an estimated £8.1m.

The retailer has already closed seven loss-making shops this year, River Island’s barrister Matthew Weaver KC told the High Court.

He said that unless the restructure was approved, the alternative was insolvency.

Mr Lewis said the company has a “clear transformation strategy” to ensure the business has a future, “and this decision gives us a strong platform to deliver this”.

Charles Allen, an intelligence analyst at Bloomberg, said River Island had been suffering from issues felt by many UK retailers, such as the shift to online shopping.

“There’s just less business going in shops,” he told BBC’s Today programme. He added that rising costs have also been exacerbated by the increase in employer National Insurance Contributions.

Originally known in Chelsea Girl, it was rebranded in 1988 as River Island and grew steadily, but in recent years has experienced declining sales, Mr Weaver said.

The restructuring will involve closing 33 stores from January 2026, and negotiating with the landlords of a further 71 stores to reduce rents in some cases to zero.

Mr Weaver acknowledge that in some cases, landlords may prefer to regain shop space before the end of leases.

With the restructure, the company is forecasting 1% annual growth for the next five years.



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