retail

Albemarle & Bond pawnbroker stores close

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The future of the pawnbroker Albemarle & Bond and nearly 400 staff is unclear, while customers have been left fearful that they will not get their belongings back, after it shut shops and its website warned that parts of the business had “ceased trading”.

In a statement on its website, Albemarle & Bond told its customers, who pawn their valuables for short-term cash, that their items would be held at its pawnbroking centre for the duration of the loan.

But the pawnbroker, which is owned by Speedloan Finance, said nothing about the future of the 116 shops that it operates alongside its sister brand, Herbert Brown.

“If you do not redeem your loan on the agreed date your pledged item(s) may be sold in accordance with your pawnbroking agreement,” the company said.

“If your item is sold for a surplus, we will write to inform you how you can receive these funds.”

A customer service telephone number appeared to be overwhelmed or not working, with calls eliciting an engaged tone.

The website offered no further information about the overall financial health of the company, saying only that “this store” had ceased trading and that affected customers would receive a letter.

Fellow pawnbroker and payday loans company The Money Shop went bust in June but it is unclear if Albermarle & Bond has suffered the same fate.

The Liverpool Echo newspaper said it had been “inundated” with calls from people who were worried that it has. Borrowers who contacted the paper said they had pawned items for cash at their local shop and now feared they might never see them again after it pulled down the shutters.

The Oxford-based Speedloan Finance, which employed 391 people at the end of 2018, reported a decline in revenue last year, from £38m to £34m, leading to an increase in pre-tax losses from £1.9m to £3.3m.

Its ultimate owner is a Japanese company called Daikokuya Holdings, which is listed on the Tokyo stock exchange and also has a pawnbroking business in Japan.

Albermarle & Bond flirted with administration in 2014 but was bought out in a rescue deal by Promethean, the investment vehicle of the former Bank of Scotland boss Sir Peter Burt.

In 2016, it secured a £10m cash injection from the investment and consulting firm Gordon Brothers.

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