Business
Bodycare to close another 30 shops while administrators seek rescue sale
Bodycare has announced the closure of another 30 shops after the high street beauty chain collapsed into administration earlier this month.
The British retailer said the latest set of closures would be on Tuesday and Thursday this week.
A shortage of stock and the cost of running high street shops has meant it is no longer viable to keep all the remaining 115 stores open, administrators said.
About 235 staff working across the stores will be made redundant, the company said.
The latest closures will leave the chain with 85 remaining shops.
Bodycare appointed administrators from Interpath on September 5, saying it had come under pressure from rising costs and a shortfall in funding, which also impacted supplier relationships and led to stock shortages.
At the time, it announced it was shutting 32 stores, resulting in around 450 redundancies.
Nick Holloway, managing director at Interpath and joint administrator, said on Monday: “We’d like to express our sincere thanks to the hundreds of dedicated Bodycare staff who have shown such professionalism since our appointment.
“We will continue to trade the remaining 85 stores while we remain in discussions with interested parties with the aim of preserving as much of the business as possible.”
Interpath is currently pursuing a potential rescue sale of the business and assets.
The company said it had received interest from a number of parties in relation to the stores.
Bodycare was founded in 1970 in Lancashire and sells beauty products, as well as fragrances and other bathroom items.
Business
Urban Company Sees Rs 59.3 Crore Loss In Q2 Due To Investments In Insta Help
New Delhi: Home services provider Urban Company on Saturday announced a net loss of Rs 59.3 crore in Q2FY26, a significant drop from a profit of Rs 6.9 crore in the previous quarter. The loss was attributed to heavy upfront investments in its new daily-housekeeping vertical, Insta Help, which overshadowed strong revenue growth in its core services and products businesses, according to regulatory filings by the Gurugram-based firm.
The company posted a loss of Rs 1.82 crore in the July-September quarter last year, the company said. While revenue from operations increased 37 per cent year-on-year to Rs 380 crore, the total expenses rose to Rs 462 crore from Rs 384 crore in Q1. This resulted in adjusted EBITDA turning negative at Rs 35 crore, compared with a profit of Rs 21 crore in Q1.
Insta Help reported an EBITDA loss of Rs 44 crore, and excluding this segment, Urban Company achieved an adjusted EBITDA profit of Rs 10 crore, accounting for 0.9 per cent of net transaction value (NTV), the company noted.
“Early indicators for Insta Help are encouraging, with strong consumer adoption and repeat usage,” the company said in its shareholder letter. It added that it believed the segment holds “significant long-term opportunity and believes these investments are important to sustaining market leadership.”
The company expects its adjusted EBITDA losses to continue in the near term due to further investments in the Insta Help vertical, despite its core India and international businesses remaining profitable and cash-generating.
The company’s smart home products vertical, Native, which sells water purifiers and electronic door locks, recorded revenue of Rs 75 crore, up 179 per cent YoY, while losses narrowed to 9 per cent of NTV from 30 per cent in the previous year.
The home services provider closed the quarter with Rs 2,136 crore in cash and equivalents, up from Rs 1,664 crore in the previous quarter, mainly due to proceeds from its recent IPO.
Business
Andy Jassy Reveals Real Reason Behind Amazon 14,000 Job Cuts — And It’s Not AI
New Delhi: Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has opened up about the company’s recent layoffs, which affected around 14,000 employees. Contrary to popular belief, he said the decision wasn’t about cutting costs or the rise of artificial intelligence. Instead, Jassy pointed to a deeper reason behind the move — company culture. “The announcement that we made a few days ago was not really financially driven, and it’s not even really AI-driven, not right now at least,” he said, as quoted by Business Insider. “It really — it’s culture.”
A Cultural Reset at Amazon
Andy Jassy’s comments reflect Amazon’s ongoing push to reshape its internal culture. As reported by Business Insider, he has been focused on raising performance standards, tightening discipline, and cutting down on unnecessary bureaucracy to make the company more efficient and agile.
During the earnings call, Jassy acknowledged that Amazon’s rapid expansion over the years had added “a lot more layers,” which ended up slowing down how decisions are made. He emphasised that the company now needs to “operate leaner and move faster,” particularly as artificial intelligence continues to reshape industries worldwide.
“Sometimes, without realizing it, you can weaken the ownership of the people that you have who are doing the actual work,” Jassy said. “And it can lead to slowing you down.” In a blog post on October 28, Amazon’s senior vice president of people experience and technology, Beth Galetti, also confirmed that the company is “making organizational changes across Amazon that will impact some of our teammates.”
“While this will include reducing in some areas and hiring in others, it will mean an overall reduction in our corporate workforce of approximately 14,000 roles,” she said. This marks Amazon’s largest round of layoffs since 2022, when about 27,000 employees were let go. Interestingly, Jassy’s recent comments contrast with what other Amazon executives have previously said about the reasons behind the job cuts.
The decision also reflects a broader trend across Big Tech. Giants like Google and Microsoft are undergoing what many call the “Great Flattening” — cutting down layers of management to speed up decision-making and eliminate unnecessary bureaucracy.
Business
Berkshire Hathaway Q3 results: Profit jumps 17% to $30.8 bn as Buffett readies exit; Greg Abel set to take charge amid $381 bn cash pile – The Times of India
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway reported a 17% rise in quarterly profit, boosted by a rebound in its insurance operations and gains from investments, even as the legendary investor prepares to hand over the reins to Vice Chair Greg Abel in January, AP reported.The company said on Saturday that it earned $30.8 billion, or $21,413 per Class A share, for the quarter ended September, up from $26.25 billion, or $18,272 per share, in the year-ago period. Operating profit — Buffett’s preferred measure to assess the firm’s performance — surged to $13.49 billion, or $9,376.15 per Class A share, compared with $10.09 billion a year earlier.Analysts surveyed by FactSet had projected operating earnings of $8,573.50 per share. Berkshire said the strong performance was driven by its insurance business, which benefited from fewer catastrophic losses than last year, when Hurricane Helene battered the US southeast. Insurance underwriting profit rose $1.6 billion to $2.37 billion.The conglomerate also booked $17.3 billion in investment gains during the quarter, while foreign currency debt holdings added $331 million in profit, reversing a $1.1 billion loss a year earlier.However, earnings at Berkshire’s utilities division slipped nearly 9% to $1.49 billion.Despite a $9.7 billion investment in OxyChem last month — Berkshire’s biggest deal in years — the group’s cash reserves remained substantial at $381.7 billion as of end-September.Buffett, 95, will step down as CEO in January but continue as chairman. The company’s Class A shares closed Friday at $715,740, well below their record of $812,855 reached in May before Buffett’s retirement announcement.
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