Hilco
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hilco Capital is an international UK company that specialises in restructuring and refinancing other companies.
Notable projects
Hilco have been involved with these companies, and in some cases owning and operating them for a period of time:[1]
United Kingdom
- Adams Childrenswear
- Allders (store closures)
- Allied Carpets
- Andys Records
- Beatties of London
- Borders (UK)
- Clintons (294 store closures)
- Courts plc
- Denby Pottery Company (debt, restructuring and management buyout)[2]
- Elvi
- Ethel Austin
- Extreme Stores
- Faith
- Fashion Rocks
- Focus DIY
- Habitat (debt and restructuring)[3]
- HMV (purchased in 2013)[4]
- Hypervalue
- ILVA (UK)
- JJB Sports (cleared stores)
- Kwik Save
- Litho Supplies
- Littlewoods
- MFI Group
- MK One
- Music and Video Club
- Nicole Farhi (fashion label, sold in 2012)
- Owen Owen
- Peacocks (retail advisor during administration)
- Silverscreen
- Staples UK (closed 23 stores)
- Stationery Box
- Woolworths Group (store closures)[5]
International
- Fletcher Jones (stores)
- Habitat (Iberia, France, Germany, Benelux)
- Karstadt
- Kraus Flooring (purchased in 2012)[6]
- WOW Sight & Sound
Canada - Hilco Canada
HMV Canada (purchased in 2011)[7]
Ireland - Hilco Capital Ireland
- HMV Ireland[8]
- Xtra-Vision Ireland (purchased in 2013)[9]
- A-wear previously operated Ireland's leading female clothing retailer
References
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Habitat Case Study". Hilco UK. Retrieved 2013-05-11.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Amanda Andrews; Matthew Holehouse (27 June 2011). "HMV confirms sale of stores in Canada for £2m". The Daily Telegraph (London).
- ↑ http://www.hotpress.com/news/Hilco-look-to-reopen-HMV-stores-in-Ireland/9698264.html. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ "HMV-owner Hilco rescues Ireland's largest DVD rental chain". Reuters. 2013-06-11.
External links
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