Business: What went wrong at Pumpkin Patch

38

Administrators’ report recommends vote for liquidation.

Former employees and other unsecured creditors of Pumpkin Patch are being urged to support liquidation of the failed children’s clothing retailer as the only way to receive any repayment.

[smartslider3 slider=3]

A detailed report by voluntary administrators McGrathNicol on the former sharemarket high-flier – at its peak worth more than $800m but now effectively worthless – outlined a company that “had been in a steady state of decline for many years” and recommended creditors vote for liquidation at the watershed meeting scheduled for March 7.

The administrators noted that the company’s banker, ANZ, was secured and facing a shortfall meaning that trade suppliers and former employees faced recovering nothing without additional action.

Pumpkin Patch’s history is broadly explained by the administrators as having two phases. Photo / Nick Reed

“Unless there are recoveries that become available in liquidation … there will be no recoveries available to unsecured creditors,” the report said.

While the administrators did not tally the unsecured debt, receivers’ reports for the five companies in the group suggest this class of creditors is owed $17.4m.The company employed 1591 people, with 545 at its headquarters and 44 stores in New Zealand, and the remainder based in 120 stores in Australia.

 

The report said the board had struggled to secure a long-term future for the debt-laden company, but an approach to ANZ to restructure its loan facilities – including converting debt to equity – was rebuffed.

Having concluded shareholders were also unwilling to invest further in the business, directors appointed McGrathNicol on October 25, a move matched hours later when ANZ sought to protect its position by appointing KordaMentha as receivers.

The company’s history is broadly explained by the administrators as having two phases.

There was an expansion followed by long and slow decline. Rapid growth into the United States and United Kingdom markets in 2006-7 coincided with the global financial crisis and a subsequent retreat.

“The group had insufficient capital to exit stores through negotiating early termination of leases with its landlords,” the report said.

Similar problems were found with the company’s stock management being partly blamed on out-of-date software.

But the report said while the company was aware its generic software wasn’t fit for the purpose of merchandise planning, it was unable to raise the required $8m to procure a replacement.

A repayment of $25m to ANZ in 2015 was the result of what administrators described as an “aggressive sales campaign” aimed at reducing stock levels.

“The significant sell down of inventory and reduced level of purchases of new season stock in FY15 resulted in stock availability issue for online and clearance stores in FY16,” administrators said.

NZ Herald

- Advertisement - [smartslider3 slider=4]