Sports chain JJB sparks war over CVA plans

Ailing high street chain JJB Sports faces a fight with fellow retailers over its plans to close up to 95 unprofitable stores.

One of the country's biggest retailers is understood to have called for an emergency industry meeting to discuss JJB's use of a controversial company voluntary agreement (CVA) for the second time in two years.

Under the scheme, JJB will seek to revise tenancy agreements for those shops that are no longer making money and facing closure.

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It has warned that it will go into administration if the CVA is not supported by at least 75 per cent of its unsecured creditors and more than 50 per cent of its shareholders.

The retailer, which has not been identified, called on the industry to withhold rent payments to landlords if they support the JJB plan.

He told a Sunday newspaper: "This cannot be allowed. Every retailer would love to be able to dump their worst performing stores.

"We will call a meeting of all the major retailers to fight back against JJB's plans. We will tell landlords that if they accept this, we will consider whether or not to pay our rents."

Landlords have also expressed concern about JJB's plans.

Liz Peace, chief executive of the British Property Federation, said: "What has concerned landlords are past cases where a retailer had released a store through a CVA and then returned to the same locality to take a new store on reduced rent."

JJB said it will shut 45 stores in the next 12 months and keep 50 on review for two years, but has identified 150 branches which are "core" to the group's future.

The properties which fall under the CVA's plans represent 40 per cent of annual rent payments, JJB said.

The locations of the stores have not yet been released.

The CVA involves reducing rent for stores set for closure and paying rent on these stores monthly rather than quarterly.

Shareholders will put JJB's plans to a vote on Friday at the company's extraordinary general meeting.

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