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Birmingham Post
Birmingham Post
Business
Tom Pegden

Poundstretcher keeping almost all its 450 shops open during lockdown to supply family essentials

Poundstretcher management say they have only closed a handful of shops as they strive to keep the business going during the Covid-19 lockdown.

The discount supplier has been allowed to keep most of its 450 stores open because of the essential goods it stocks such as food, toiletries, household medicines and even pet food.

It comes as new trading figures for parent company Crown Crest showed turnover for its last financial year was £442 million – up from £397 million a year earlier.

However operating losses grew from £4.9 million to £9.4 million, due to pressures on the wholesale side of the business as well as Poundstretcher sales falling.

Even before the coronavirus outbreak the business, headquartered in Kirby Muxloe, Leicestershire, was planning a “significant further restructuring” to achieve sustainable profits and cash generation.

A queue of shoppers at Sainsbury's in Basingstoke. (Jonathan Buckmaster)

Group finance director Hemant Patel told Business-Live that sales had continued as social isolation kept people at home – though not at the level of the supermarket chains.

He said: “At the moment only a few of our stores are closed, which are inside shopping centres that have shut.

“Otherwise all our stores are open, and there’s no reason why they should not continue that way.

“We have got 450 stores in the estate and maybe five are closed.

“We are allowed to open because we sell some of the essential products that people needs, and we are also quite big on pet foods.

“We had a busy run-up in the three weeks before the lockdown a week last Monday, as people were panic buying and still going out. Things are back to normal, because the panic is over.

“Because the stores are open, everything else within the business is operational, which will stay that way unless something changes.

“The warehouse has to run, otherwise you can’t service the stores. Head office is also running with, where possible, staff working from home.

“The main thing is for everyone to keep safe.”

He said the business saw sales of its Cosy Soft toilet roll range triple in the build-up to the lockdown, as families up and down the country panic bought.

He said: “Toilet roll sales during those three key weeks were probably no different to any other retailer.

“Stock has been coming in, but as soon as it does it is still selling out.”

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