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Coronavirus: 1,100 jobs at risk as creditors approve Pizza Express restructure

A woman passes a branch of Pizza Express in London, as the restaurant chain has said it could close around 67 of its UK restaurants, with up to 1,100 jobs at risk, as part of a major restructuring plan. (Photo by Dominic Lipinski/PA Images via Getty Images)
Pizza Express is now owned by Chinese private investment firm Hony. Photo: Dominic Lipinski/PA Images via Getty Images

Popular chain Pizza Express said on Monday that creditors had approved restructuring plans that will close 73 of its restaurants and put as many as 1,100 jobs at risk in the UK.

In a statement, the company said that 89% of its creditors voted in favour of its proposed company voluntary arrangement (CVA) restructuring deal, securing more than 9,000 jobs.

“The successful vote unlocks the company’s ability to actively address the challenges brought by COVID-19,” Pizza Express said.

“Regrettably, the CVA proposes the closure of 73 restaurants, putting 1,100 jobs at risk,” it said.

Pizza Express announced the sweeping restructuring process, which will see widespread rent reductions, late last month.

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Noting that most of its 454 restaurants have been profitable over the past three years, the company said that declining earnings had been exacerbated by the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

In early August, Pizza Express said it had hired advisers from Lazard to lead a sale process for the business.

The company is now owned by Chinese private investment firm Hony, which acquired it in 2014 from UK private equity firm Cinven.

That sale is being run separately from the company’s restructuring process. Pizza Express also said that it was hoping to sell its business in mainland China.

Pizza Express had already been struggling under the weight of a huge debt pile, with interest payments on its hundreds of millions in loans more than offsetting its operating profits in recent years.

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Hospitality has been one of the hardest hit sectors by the pandemic and its related public health restrictions.

Around 80% of hospitality firms stopped trading in April, with 1.4 million people in accommodation and food services furloughed, according to the Treasury, the highest of any sector.

The UK government launched the Eat Out to Help Out scheme to assist the recovery of the hospitality industry, but it was wound down at the end of August.

“The directors of Pizza Express thank its creditors for their support during this period and look forward to ongoing partnership as the hospitality industry recovers to growth,” the company said on Friday.

Here is the full list of restaurants that are set to close:

Aberdeen – Belmont St

Aylesbury

Barnstaple – Three Tuns

Biggleswade

Billericay

Birmingham – Corporation St

Birmingham – Mailbox

Bournemouth – Post Office Rd

Bramhall

Bristol – Berkeley Sq

Bristol – Regent St

Bromsgrove

Bruton Place

Charlotte St

Chippenham

Dalton Park

Darlington

Dudley – Merry Hill

Earls Court – Earls Ct Rd

Edinburgh – Holyrood

Formby

Fulham Palace Road

Glasgow – Princes Square

Glossop

Gosforth

Grantham

Halifax

Hampstead

Hatch End

Hereford

Heswall

Ipswich – Lloyds Ave

Leeds – Crown St

Leeds – Horsforth

Ludlow

Lymington

Melton Mowbray

Midhurst

Milton Keynes – Hub

Moseley

New Brighton

Newcastle

Newport – Isle of Wight

Newport – South Wales

Northallerton

Nottingham – Goosegate

O2 Finchley

Orpington

Oxford – Oxford Castle

Poole

Port Solent

Ramsgate

Reading – St Mary’s Butts

Scarborough

Sheffield – Devonshire St

Sheffield The Moor

Shirley

Southport – Old Bank

Stafford

Staines

Stoke

Stourbridge

Sudbury

Torquay

Uxbridge

Wakefield

Walsall

Wapping

Wardour St

Weston-super-Mare

Whiteley Village

Whitstable

Wrexham