|
Friday 5th June 2015 |
Text too small? |
Pumpkin Patch, the ailing children's clothing retailer, has abandoned plans to refinance or find a buyer after a number of discussions with interested parties weren't compelling enough for the board to seriously consider.
Chairman Peter Schuyt said the company will continue to focus on lifting Pumpkin Patch's performance, which it believes will deliver more value to shareholders in the medium term than any alternative. The retailer reaffirmed guidance for normalised earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation to be about $14 million in the year ending July 31, in line with earnings a year earlier, with targeted debt and inventory reductions likely to achieved.
"The company, and its advisers, held discussions with a number of interested parties but these did not result in any proposals being received that, in the board's opinion, represent satisfactory outcomes for the company," Schuyt said. "Market conditions are expected to remain challenging and earnings may be volatile going forward."
Pumpkin Patch shares jumped by a third in mid-March when the board announced plans to look at finding a potential buyer or recapitalising the company, and were unchanged at 26 cents today. That values the retailer at $44 million.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
No comments yet
Fonterra announces Mainland Group leadership change
OCA - Oceania announces Director changes as part of Board refresh
AIA - Analyst and media webcast for FY26 interim results
The Warehouse Group confirms leaner operating structure
SML - Synlait provides half year performance update
RYM - Refreshed strategy and new capital management framework
ENS - Clarification of Gina Tuzcet’s status
BGP - 4th Quarter Sales to 25 January 2026
Contact Energy 2026 Half Year Results Presentation
February 2nd Morning Report