Business
The Poundland stores set to close revealed after business escapes collapse
A high-street retailer is set to close a number of its stores across Britain after narrowly avoiding collapse.
Poundland received court approval for a major restructuring plan on Tuesday after the company told a judge that the plan would save it from entering administration.
Had the scheme had not been sanctioned, the company would have run out of money by September 7, barristers told the court.
In June, the discount retail chain said it planned to permanently shut 68 shops after being sold by Pepco Group to Peach Bidco, a subsidiary of private equity firm Gordon Brothers, for £1.
Poundland said it will shut down a total of 16 more stores but has not yet identified their locations.
It is understood that the closure dates for these are likely to be announced later in the year, when store workers will be informed.
These are the stores set to close on Sunday, August 31:
- Blackburn, Lancashire
- Cookstown, Northern Ireland
- Erdington, West Midlands
- Kimberley Nottingham, Nottinghamshire
- Horsham, West Sussex
- Hull Kingston retail park, East Yorkshire
- Kettering, Northamptonshire
- Omagh, Northern Ireland
- Shepherd’s Bush, Greater London
- Southport, Merseyside
- Taunton, Somerset
This store will shut on September 14:
The following stores have already closed:
- Ammanford, Wales
- Birmingham Fort Shopping Park, West Midlands
- Cardiff, Wales
- Cramlington, Northumberland
- Leicester, Leicestershire
- Long Eaton, Nottinghamshire
- Port Glasgow, Scotland
- Seaham, County Durham
- Shrewsbury, Shropshire
- Tunbridge Wells, Kent
- Bedford, Bedfordshire
- Bidston Moss, Merseyside
- Broxburn, Scotland
- Craigavon, Northern Ireland
- Dartmouth, Devon
- East Dulwich, Greater London
- Falmouth, Cornwall
- Hull St Andrew retail park, East Yorkshire
- Newtownabbey, Northern Ireland
- Perth, Scotland
- Poole, Dorset
- Sunderland Pallion retail park, Tyne and Wear
- Stafford, Staffordshire
- Thornaby, North Yorkshire
- Worcester, Worcestershire
- Brigg, North Lincolnshire
- Canterbury, Kent
- Coventry Hertford Street, West Midlands
- Newcastle Killingworth Centre, Tyne and Wear
- Kings Heath, West Midlands
- Peterborough Orton Gate shopping centre, Cambridgeshire
- Peterlee, County Durham
- Rainham, Kent
- Salford, Greater Manchester
- Sheldon, West Midlands
- Wells, Somerset
- Whitechapel, Greater London
- Swiss Cottage, Greater London
- Southampton West Quay, Hampshire
- Chiswick, Greater London
Business
Southwest Airlines forecasts quarterly earnings below estimates on higher fuel
A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 airplane lands at Los Angeles International Airport after arriving from Chicago on March 7, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.
Kevin Carter | Getty Images
Southwest Airlines forecast second-quarter earnings below analyst estimates, citing higher fuel prices, while holding off on updating its full-year 2026 forecast.
Southwest expects to earn between 35 cents and 65 cents a share in the current quarter, while analysts polled by LSEG expected 55 cents a share.
The airline in January forecast earnings per share of $4 this year, saying that it expected its new initiatives would pay off. Southwest has sought to increase revenue with checked bag fees and seat assignment fees.
“Achieving this outcome would require lower fuel prices and/or stronger revenue performance to offset higher fuel expense. The Company expects to provide updates to this guidance as appropriate,” Southwest said in an earnings release Wednesday.
Airlines have been either cutting their full-year forecasts or holding off on further forecasts because of volatile prices for jet fuel, generally their biggest expense after labor. They are also pulling back on their capacity growth plans to cut costs, which can drive up airfare when fewer seats are for sale.
Southwest said it expects its capacity to be flat to up no more than 1% in the second quarter, and unit revenues to rise by 16.5% to as much as 18.5% over last year.
“Demand continues to be strong, and we remain focused on controlling what we can control by managing costs, optimizing revenue initiatives, and directing capacity toward higher‑return opportunities,” CEO Bob Jordan said in the earnings release.
Here’s what the company reported for first quarter compared with Wall Street expectations, according to consensus estimates from LSEG:
- Earnings per share: 45 cents vs. 47 cents cents expected
- Revenue: $7.25 billion vs. $7.27 billion expected
Southwest swung to a profit of $227 million, or 45 cents a share in the first quarter, compared with a $149 million loss, or a loss of 26 cents per share, a year earlier.
Revenue rose nearly 13% to $7.25 billion compared with $6.43 billion in the year-earlier period.
Business
Trump family crypto firm sued over alleged ‘extortion’
Billionaire investor Justin Sun is suing the family’s World Liberty crypto venture after spending $45m on its tokens.
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