John Lewis May Dilute Historic Partnership Model, Times Reports

John Lewis Partnership Plc may dilute its famous employee-owned structure to raise new investment as UK retail conditions worsen, the Times reported, without saying where it got the information.

(Bloomberg) —

John Lewis Partnership Plc may dilute its famous employee-owned structure to raise new investment as UK retail conditions worsen, the Times reported, without saying where it got the information. 

The company, which owns the high-end grocery chain Waitrose as well as its eponymous department stores, may explore a change in the company’s mutual structure so it can raise at least £1 billion ($1.2 billion) of new investment, according to the Times.

A minority stake may require a change to the firm’s constitution. John Lewis has been employee-owned for more than seven decades.

On Thursday, John Lewis reported a £234 million loss, canceled its employee bonus for the second time in three years, and warned of new job cuts for its 80,000 partners who co-own the business.

The company is losing ground to profitable competitor Marks & Spencer Group Plc, which recently reported its best-ever market share in food retailing.

Tables Turn in the £20 Billion Fight for Britain’s Middle Class

John Lewis’ new plan is being overseen by Chairwoman Sharon White, who was encouraged toward the idea of selling a minority stake in the core business by finance chief Bérangère Michel, according to the Times. 

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.