WH Smith to sell UK high street business for nearly $100 million

By Yamini Kalia

(Reuters) -WH Smith is to sell its more than 230-year-old British high street business to Hobbycraft-owner Modella Capital for 76 million pounds ($98 million) to focus on global travel retail.

The sale means the WH Smith name will disappear from British shopping streets as the group’s nearly 500 stores will be renamed TGJones by the new owner, which intends to retain existing products and services, including the Post Office and Toys “R” Us, while gradually adding new product ranges.

“Given our rapid international growth, now is the right time for a new owner to take the High Street business forward and for the WH Smith leadership team to focus exclusively on our Travel business,” CEO Carl Cowling said in a statement.

WH Smith’s profitable travel business, which has about 1,200 stores in airports and train stations across 32 countries, has benefited from customers splurging on treats, books and electronics.

“Modella Capital believes strongly in the future of the high street, and we are delighted to have the opportunity to take a heritage brand and develop it further in the coming years,” a Modella spokesperson said.

The sale will not include WH Smith’s personalised online greeting card business, funkypigeon.com, for which it will explore strategic options, including a possible sale.

“There will be relief that a buyer has been found to remove what’s been more of a burden than a diversified blessing,” said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown.

But Streeter said the new branding would take time to resonate with the British public, and many would “mourn the loss of a high street brand which has been a hub for shoppers for centuries.”

The British retailer’s shares fell 4% to 1,046 pence by 1013 GMT.

WH Smith’s travel business contributed 75% of the group’s revenue and 85% of its trading profit in 2024.

The unit’s revenue rose 7% in the 21-week period to January, while sales at the retailer’s UK business fell due to the country’s inflation-ridden, subdued consumer market.

($1 = 0.7729 pounds)

(Reporting by Yamini Kalia in Bengaluru, Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Jane Merriman)

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