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After the collapse of BHS and Austin Reed who’s next? Thousands of retailers ‘at risk of going bust next year’

The tipping point will come at the end of January when retailers must pay rents to landlords

BHS store

THOUSANDS of retailers are at risk of collapse as a lethal cocktail of lacklustre Christmas trading, prolonged discounting, higher staff costs and the pound's weakness threaten to push firms to "breaking point".

Research from insolvency specialist Begbies Traynor suggests that 21,802 retailers across the country are suffering from "significant financial distress", 6 per cent higher than at the same stage last year.

 Thousands of jobs were lost earlier this year when BHS shut its doors for the last time
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Thousands of jobs were lost earlier this year when BHS shut its doors for the last timeCredit: Getty Images

Julie Palmer, partner at Begbies, said: "Retailers were hopeful that 2016 would be a bumper year for Christmas sales, after reports that credit card debts hit a record high in October.

"But with rising transport and fuel costs continuing to drive up the cost of living and drag down consumer spending power, it seems that this momentum has not continued into the festive period, with levels of financial distress among retailers now even higher than last year."

Research shows that 97 per cent of retailers in a state of financial distress are small and medium-sized businesses.

Earlier this year, two well-known high street brands - BHS and Austin Reed - disappeared. Thousands of jobs were lost when the two retailers closed their doors.

Other casualties have included American Apparel, which has shut all its UK stores, after going into administration.

While stationary shop Staples is closing down all of its UK branches after the US owner sold the struggling business.

 Over 120 Austin Reed shops were closed when the brand collapsed earlier this year
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Over 120 Austin Reed shops were closed when the brand collapsed earlier this yearCredit: EPA

Begbies said that a key tipping point will come at the end of the month when retailers must pay a large quarterly rent bill to landlords.

Ms Palmer said: "Small businesses, whose margins and cost bases are already stretched to the limit, are undoubtedly the biggest victims of the increasingly cut-throat UK retail environment, unable to compete on price or provide the convenience that savvy shoppers increasingly demand.

"With the sector's quarterly rent day just around the corner, retailers across the country will be pinning all their hopes on a last-minute sales surge from shoppers who have left it too late for online deliveries, to help tip them over into the black.

"Unfortunately, without a strong end to 2016, I'm afraid many smaller retailers in particular may not survive much beyond the January sales."


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