Off-Prem

Channel

33 'unsustainably loss-making' Dixons Travel outlets set to be shuttered affecting 400 staff

Electronics retailer 'confident' workers can be offered opportunities elsewhere in the business


Dixons Carphone is to permanently ground its airport stores that employ 398 staff, amid mounting losses and following the British government's discontinuation of airside tax-free shopping at the start of 2021.

The decision to shutter the Dixons Travel outlets was confirmed in a trading update covering the 51 weeks ended 24 April, which show group turnover rising 14 per cent year-on-year as online sales more than doubled to £4.5bn.

A spokesperson told The Reg: "Today's announcement follows an unprecedented year for the travel industry, which has seen UK airline passenger volumes fall by 75 per cent in 2020 due to COVID-19 restrictions.

"This, coupled with our expectation that passenger numbers will not recover sufficiently to compensate for the removal of the tax-free shopping concession by the UK Government from 1 January, means Dixons Travel, which makes up just 1 per cent of our UK&I selling space, has become unsustainably loss-making.

"We are, therefore, proposing to close our Dixons Travel business. We're confident we'll be able to offer any of the affected colleagues who want to stay another role elsewhere in Dixons Carphone."

As well as being located in major airports across the UK, in Dublin and Oslo, two of the stores were run as concessions on P&C cruises.

In other challenging news for Dixons staff, the company confirmed that "as part of our Mobile transformation" it has closed its Carphone Warehouse stores in the Republic of Ireland. This was not a surprise given the large number of standalone Carphone stores in the UK that have been closed in recent years.

Dixons Carphone top brass take 20% pay cut as swathes of Brit workforce furloughed

READ MORE

As for the financials, the group was up 13 per cent year-on-year in the UK and Ireland for the 51 weeks, and international sales grew 16 per cent, including a 17 per cent rise in the Nordics and 9 per cent in Greece. The fully audited results will be published on 30 June.

The company said that given the "strong financial position", it had "reimbursed all government support for the £73m of furlough paid to UK&I colleagues during the year." The company expects profit before tax for the year to be in line with current forecasts of £151m.

At the halfway stage of Dixons' fiscal '21, CEO Alex Baldock was questioned about repaying the support money. He and fellow execs took a 20 per cent pay cut last year as lockdown measures bit hard on bricks-and-mortar retailers. Baldock was paid £850,000 in the year to April 2019. ®

Send us news
6 Comments

Oak Ridge boffins enlist Quantum Brilliance to make supercomputers sparkle at room temp

Diamond-based accelerators could help smash science problems

To patch this server, we need to get someone drunk

When maintenance windows are hard to open, a little lubrication helps

SQL king Larry Ellison becomes sequel sultan with controlling interest in Paramount Global

Oh, great: another tech billionaire owns a media company – although his son probably runs the show

NASA's solar sailing spacecraft is tumbling – but that's part of the plan

Who needs fuel – or even engines – when you could use the sun to push a spacecraft along?

VMware revenue bounces for Broadcom, chips were a little undercooked

CEO says market for non-AI silicon has bottomed out

Nvidia and chums inject $160M into Applied Digital to keep GPU sales rolling

Datacenters are the lifeline for its $30B ML-fueled boom

US tightens export controls on quantum kit and chips for China, Iran, Russia

Alloys make the list too, as allies try to ensure foes can't weaponise tech

Homeland security hopes to scuttle maritime cyber-threats with port infosec testbed

Supply chains, 13M jobs and $649B a year at risk, so Uncle Sam is fighting back - with a request for info

White House’s new fix for cyber job gaps: Serve the nation in infosec

Now do your patriotic duty and fill one of those 500k open roles, please?

Raspberry Pi 4 bugs throw wrench in the works for Fedora 41

Problems also afflict the Pi Pico 2's chip

Of course the Internet Archive’s digital lending broke the law, appeals court says

Sorry, no, you can’t just digitize, share copyrighted books without permission

AI-pushing Adobe says AI-shy office workers will love AI if it saves them time

knowledge workers, overwhelmed by knowledge tasks? We know what you need