An influential group of retailers including M&S and Tesco has warned the Treasury at least 300,000 retail jobs would disappear by 2030 due to unsustainable cost hikes this year.
The newly revamped Retail Jobs Alliance (RJA) has warned the government that retailers are facing “a perfect storm” of additional costs from this April. It said a higher National Insurance bill, a new recycling tax and higher business rates means they expect one in 10 shop floor workers to leave retail by 2028.
The RJA, which employs just under a third of those working in the sector, equal to almost one million people, says the business rate plans threatened to hamper retail investment in the UK, lead to store closures and ultimately mean more workers leave the sector.
It added that thousands of stores were at risk of a heavy tax blow under the changes, saying that much of the impact was likely to be felt in more impoverished communities.
The body is calling for the government to give stores an exemption from the higher rate business rates multiplier, which is applied to the rateable value of properties to calculate the tax due.
A spokesman for the RJA said: “This change would provide much-needed relief for at-risk stores, enabling them to reinvest in their businesses, retain staff, and grow their footprint on the high street.”
The warning follows M&S chief executive Stuart Machin saying over the weekend that “retail is being raided like a piggy bank and it’s unacceptable”.
Simon Roberts, Sainsbury’s chief executive, also said the government needed to be careful over reforms: “There are big parts of the UK where the supermarket plays a fundamental role at the heart of a community, and we need to make sure that the reform of business rates makes the ongoing viability of those locations really clear.”
Last month, Tesco CEO Ken Murphy said that the business rate changes put big town centre stores at risk, despite them being “often critical to maintaining the integrity of that high street. The risk is that more and more of those large retail sites become unviable.”
However, a Treasury spokesman said: “We delivered a once-in-a-Parliament Budget to wipe the slate clean. Now we are focused on going further and faster to kickstart economic growth so working people have more money in their pockets.
“We’re levelling the playing field for high street businesses by permanently cutting business rates and removing the £110,000 cap for over 280,000 retail, hospitality and leisure business properties, while also capping corporation tax.”
Richard Bradbury, executive chair of family-owned fashion retailer River Island, is stepping down from his role, citing personal reasons, the retailer conformed in a statement.
Photo: Sandra Halliday
Following the announcement of his departure, River Island also said Ben Lewis, who is related to founder and owner Bernard Lewis, will return to the position of CEO with immediate effect. Clive Lewis, the son of the founder, will also take on his previous role as non-executive chair with immediate effect.
Ben Lewis, who previously held the CEO position for nearly a decade before stepping down in 2019, said: “I am excited to be rejoining River Island at such a pivotal time.”
He added: “Richard has built a great team, and I look forward to working with them to continue to develop the business and capture the many opportunities ahead.”
Bradbury, who had served as its CEO until 2010, rejoining River Island in December 2022, added: “It has been a great honour to have worked in this amazing business twice. The River Island team is incredible, and during the last two years we have achieved so much together to position the business for its next phase. I know [it] will be in strong and capable hands under the experienced leadership of Ben.”
After swinging to a loss in 2023, River Island reportedly last month drafted in consultants from AlixPartners to focus on profit improvement.
Italian hatmaker Borsalino is diversifying by introducing a capsule collection of glasses. It is Borsalino’s first foray in the eyewear segment since it was bought in 2018 by Haeres Equita, the investment fund led by Philippe Camperio. Borsalino had developed a line of glasses in the 2000s, and this time it has partnered with emerging brand Ophy Eyewear, creating an exclusive collaboration.
Borsalino will drop a collection of glasses with Ophy Eyewear in spring – Borsalino
“The collaboration with Ophy marks a new milestone in our brand’s growth,” said Mauro Baglietto, CEO of Borsalino, in a press release. He added that this is a “new chapter in Borsalino’s quest for creative synergies, as it continues to promote a dialogue between tradition and innovation.”
Ophy is an emerging Italian eyewear brand founded in 2018 by Sicilian designer Placido Minissale, an architecture enthusiast who designs his collections with a contemporary approach, deconstructing the forms of classic eyewear.
Borsalino and Ophy have developed a capsule collection of four models called ‘Jean’, ‘Alain’, ‘Ingrid’ and ‘Marcello’, previewed at the Mido eyewear trade show held in Milan on February 8-10. In the press release, Borsalino described them as “glasses that strike a perfect balance between contemporary design and timeless style” with their “essential geometric lines and distinctive details.”
The cellulose acetate frames are available in black and in dark or light brown tortoiseshell, and are all decorated with the golden Borsalino logo. The line will be commercialised at a retail price of €330 from end of March and April via Borsalino retailers and duty-free stores and the brand’s e-shop, as well as selected eyewear specialists worldwide.
In the last few years, Borsalino has dropped a number of collaborations, notably with long-established brands. Recently, it partnered with iconic Neapolitan tie brand E. Marinella, and with century-old Italian jewellery brand Damiani. In 2023, Borsalino created capsule collections with Saint Laurent, Elie Saab and Chloé.
The Hugo Boss group has renewed until 2029 the license agreement for the Boss and Hugo childrenswear collections with French company CWF (Children Worldwide Fashion), the group’s licensee for over 15 years.
Hugo Boss has renewed its kidswear license deal with CWF until 2029 – HUGO BOSS
The deal includes the Boss Newborn, Boss Infant Boy, Boss Kid Boy and Boss Kid Girl lines, covering the 0-16 age group, and the Hugo Boy and Hugo Girl lines for 4 to 16-year-olds. CWF will take care of the design, production and worldwide distribution of the lines’ apparel, footwear, underwear and hosiery.
“As the European market leader in high-quality children’s fashion, CWF is the right partner for us to further leverage the potential of Boss and Hugo in the kidswear segment in the years to come,” said Daniel Grieder, CEO of Hugo Boss.
CWF was founded in 1965 and is based in Les Herbiers, France. Its portfolio includes one own brand and 13 licences for brands in the premium and luxury childrenswear segment. The company has over 900 employees, and in 2024 it distributed approximately 8 million units in 83 countries via 2,000 stores, including 350 department stores, 30 leading e-tailers, and 70 stores of the Kids Around chain, the group’s multibrand childrenswear retailer.