Investment firm says it will retain remaining 333 UK retail stores and safeguard 3,200 jobs
Stricken retailer Game Group, which went into administration last week, has been given a new lease of life by investment firm OpCapita. The firm will acquire Game's UK assets, retain its remaining 333 UK stores and safeguard more than 3,200 jobs.
OpCapita has "no plans for any further store closures", the company said in a statement on Sunday, and will seek to rehire a "small number" of staff made redundant from Game's head office last week.
Former Halfords Group chief executive David Hamid, now a partner at OpCapita, has been appointed chairman of Game. A chief executive is expected to be named shortly. Ian Shepherd held the role until last week, when he resigned with immediate effect after a two-year battle to turn the company around.
OpCapita acquired electrical retailer Comet from its owner Kesa Electricals last year for a nominal sum of £2. The financial terms of its Game acquisition have not been disclosed, but it is thought to have paid a nominal sum and taken on the company's debts.
The UK operations of the video games retailer, which trades under the Game and Gamestation names, were taken over by administrator PricewaterhouseCoopers a week ago after overexpansion and competition from online gaming companies left the business unable to pay its creditors.
Game owed £85m to six banks, including RBS, Barclays and HSBC. The lenders made an offer for the company in the hope of recovering some of the debt, but OpCapita beat them to the finishing line.
The banks are thought to have rolled Game's loans into Baker Acquisitions, the company created by OpCapita to front the transaction. Game collapsed owing £40m to suppliers, £20m to landlords and £10m in tax. Shareholders saw the value of their holdings reduced to zero. Last week, PwC stemmed further losses by closing 277 stores and making 2,104 staff redundant.
"This means the Game brand will not be another one of the retail names disappearing from the high street in the current difficult climate," said PwC partner and Game Group administrator Mike Jervis.
The recession has taken its toll on a number of household names since Christmas, with fashion stores Peacocks and Fenn Wright Manson and lingerie brand La Senza going into administration.
OpCapita's founder, Henry Jackson, a former investment banker, is making something of a comeback. His previous buyout venture, Merchant Equity Partners, bought MFI in 2006 but sold it into prepack administration 18 months later. It was more successful with French electricals retailer BUT, acquired in 2008, which has since grown market share.
His bid for Comet was aided by John Clare, who ran rival electrical retailer Dixons for 15 years. Clare secured the support of the chain's major suppliers to ensure they continued providing goods to the firm before it was handed over to OpCapita, and is now serving as Comet's chairman.
"We strongly believe there is a place on the high street for a video gaming specialist and Game is the leading brand in a £2.8bn market in the UK," said Jackson. "We have assembled a strong team of experienced industry operators to implement the programme of operational change that is needed."
Before setting up Merchant Equity Partners, Jackson was a managing director at Deutsche Bank, where he advised on retail sector mergers and acquisitions.