Boris Johnson: UK government looking at conduct of Arcadia directors

Boris Johnson: UK government looking at conduct of Arcadia directors
Above, a shuttered Topman clothes store, operated by Arcadia, in central London on Nov. 30, 2020. (AFP)
Updated 02 December 2020
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Boris Johnson: UK government looking at conduct of Arcadia directors

Boris Johnson: UK government looking at conduct of Arcadia directors
  • ‘We will be doing everything we can to restore the high streets of this country’

LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Wednesday the conduct of directors of the collapsed fashion group Arcadia would be examined.
“The secretary of state for business, enterprise and skills (Alok Sharma) has written to the Insolvency Service to look at the conduct of the Arcadia directors,” Johnson told parliament.
Arcadia, owned by Philip Green, entered administration on Monday, threatening 13,000 jobs.
“We will be doing everything we can to restore the high streets of this country,” Johnson added.
Sharma said he had asked the regulator to review a report from Arcadia’s administrators as soon as they received it.
“If you decide that there are grounds for an investigation, I would ask that it looks not only at the conduct of directors immediately prior to and at insolvency, but also at whether any action by directors caused detriment to creditors or to the pension schemes,” he said in the letter.