Jump to content
✨ STAY UP TO DATE WITH THE WORLD TOUR ✨
  • Guest
    Guest

    Entertainment giant HMV goes into administration - look back at Coldplay's Parachutes launch in-store, July 2000

    Ailing music chain HMV has lost its battle for survival in a devastating blow for the British high street and more than 4,000 staff. The appointment of Deloitte as administrator to the 92-year-old business comes after the failures of Jessops and Comet caused the closure of 422 stores and loss of more than 8,000 jobs.

     

    HMV's 238 outlets will remain open while Deloitte attempts to find a buyer for some or all of the business, although it is likely that there will be widespread store closures as a result of the collapse.

     

    Part of Coldplay's history involves HMV - on 10th July 2000, Coldplay released their debut album, Parachutes. To launch the album, the band performed a special gig at HMV's flagship store in London's Oxford Street (which turned out to be Coldplay's 100th show).

     

     

    This performance was never televised but was recorded to be put on HMV's website. You can watch the performance in its entirity below, and also read more on HMV's battle against closure.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    HMV's administration also means that vouchers and gift cards, many of which were given as Christmas presents, will be worthless. Squeezed by internet retailers and supermarkets, whose scale has enabled them to offer CDs and DVDs at cheaper prices, HMV's boss Trevor Moore warned before Christmas that the entertainment group was in trouble.

     

    Mr Moore said the group would fail to meet expectations for the year to April and that it would breach the terms of its loan agreements later this month. Suppliers including Universal Music came to HMV's rescue in January 2011 with a deal which helped the retailer shed some of its huge debt pile.

     

    But according to the Financial Times, they balked at a request last week from HMV for about £300 million in additional financing to pay off its bank debt and fund an overhaul of the company's business model. HMV sought to diversify into live venues and consumer electronics and was forced to sell off several parts of its business, including the Waterstones book retailer, to reduce its debt pile, while closing loss-making stores.

     

    But Neil Saunders, managing director of retail consultancy Conlumino, said the collapse of HMV was inevitable. He added: "While many failures of recent times have been, at least in part, driven by the economy, HMV's demise is a structural failure. In the digital era where 73.4 per cent of music and film are downloaded or bought online, HMV's business model has simply become increasingly irrelevant and unsustainable."

     

    Back in May last year, when former boss Simon Fox was still in charge, the group said it was looking for pre-tax profits of at least £10 million for the 2012/13 financial year. His replacement joined the group from camera chain Jessops, which went into administration last week at the cost of 1,370 jobs across its 187 stores.

     




    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    There are no comments to display.



    Guest
    This is now closed for further comments

×
×
  • Create New...