Pizza Express customers have reacted with horror to news that the High Street food chain is facing financial difficulties and crunch talks with creditors.
The chain, which was acquired by Chinese private equity firm Hony Capital in 2014, is set to engage in talks to save the business, which is in £655million worth of debt.
The popular restaurant is thought to have struggled with rising costs and a tough UK trading environment, putting 14,000 jobs at risk.
It comes just months after the UK lost Jamie’s Italian from the High Street and it is thought the Pizza Express chains are in debt of up to £1.6million per eatery.
It is thought the Pizza Express chains are in debt of up to £1.6 million per eatery (chain in Surrey pictured above)
On social media, anxious customers urged each other to head to Pizza Express this evening or this weekend to shore up the restaurant chain’s finances.
‘I don’t want Pizza Express to go. It’s one of my favourite restaurant chains when I wanted to dine for a pizza and we’re all in this together,’ said one, Abdulqadir Muhammad.
Chris Samuels said: ‘Everybody who can should make an effort to eat at Pizza Express this week. Our high streets will be worse without them.’
Another user wrote: ‘I will be genuinely gutted if Pizza Express goes under. Don’t care how authentic it wasn’t or whatever. It’s good pizza and they’re flexible.’
Many users referred to the restaurant chain’s popularity among children.
Writer Stuart Heritage joked: ‘If Pizza Express closes my children will starve to death,’ while another user replied: ‘And mine will never be bribable again.’
Journalist Ian Dunt said: ‘Would be genuinely sad if Pizza Express folded.
‘Those were some of my first proper meals out when they opened in my hometown when I was a kid. Plus those dough ball things are the dog’s bo*****s’.
Twitter exploded with memes after news broke that Pizza Express was facing difficulties
On social media, anxious customers urged each other to head to Pizza Express this evening or this weekend to shore up the restaurant chain’s finances
Pizza Express customers reacted with horror online to news that the High Street food chain is facing financial difficulties and crunch talks with creditors
TV presenter Jake Humphrey praised the chain for always being around when he had needed somewhere to eat with his children.
He said: ‘People who aren’t bothered about Pizza Express folding have never been in a town they don’t know, at 3pm, with two screaming, hungry kids & a headache…’
Many people had suggested just going to another pizza place, which many felt was something only people in more metropolitan areas were privilege to.
Writer Matt Haig tweeted: ‘Love all these native-born Londoners saying ‘plenty of other pizza places’. In most British towns Pizza Express is the best pizza restaurant. In some it is the *best* restaurant. When Newark first got one it was like a spaceship had landed. People walked around speechless.’
Langton Capital Limited tweeted out the update following the announcement on October 4, that the company had hired advisors.
Langton had previously sent out a report to clients which highlighted the amount of debt the firm was in, and how each restaurant was accumulating £1.6 million of debt.
MailOnline requested the report from Langton, which they had sent out earlier in the year to its clients.
Houlihan Lokey Inc were appointed days ago to assist the talks between Pizza Express and creditors.
MailOnline contacted both Pizza Express and Hony Capital, neither of which could be reached this afternoon.
Each Pizza Express shop is individually designed depending on the local tastes of the area. Pictured: The Pizza Express in Kingston upon Thames in 2004
Peter Boizot opened his first Pizza Express after failing to find any Italian food in London
Sources close to the situation today said that the company ‘isn’t contemplating a Company Voluntary Agreement (CVA)’ and is neither ‘close to collapse’.
This is while a group of bond holders have also started working with the business.
The chain’s founder, businessman Peter Boizot, sold the restaurant chain for a reported £33million in 1993 but had lost all of his money by the time he died last year.
Pizza Express has been instructed to pay £465 million in secured bonds by August 2021. Its next repayment for £200 million in unsecured notes is due to be repaid by the following year.
In the second quarter of the year, the company’s earnings fell 11 per cent, while its debt rose 7.9 times before tax and earnings, compared to 6.6 times just a year earlier.
On August 28 the company filed its half year results. The group claimed it had a ‘resilient performance despite challenging trading environment’.
The figures reflect the period covering the 26 weeks before June 30 2019.
The success of its restaurants allowed the brand to expand into selling its products in supermarkets
Total sales were up just 0.5 per cent during that period.
This is while reports on Companies House suggests that that brand has a half a billion pound loan with its parent company, which is currently being paid with a 10 per cent interest rate per year.
As of the end of December 2018 the companies loans and borrowings came in at £1.13 billion.
In 2017 the company cut off Firezza Holdings Limited, which is another pizza fast food chain.
The current group chairman of Pizza Express, Jinlong Wang, said at the end of the last quarter the brand had been ‘pleased with the results’.
‘In the first half of the year, we are pleased that we have remained resilient across all our markets despite sector-wide challenges.
‘At a Group level, total sales grew by 2.6 per cent and like-for-like sales were broadly flat.’
It was also stated that revenue growth was down 7.7 per cent (before tax and earnings).
The half year reported also claimed that the brand was ‘not immune’ to the ‘cautious consumer environment’ across the UK and Ireland and that it had positive sales growth of just 0.5 per cent.
It is not yet known how the news will impact the UK High Street, nor is it known whether or not the brand’s supermarket range will be pulled if the talks lead to administrative measures being taken.
Pizza Express has a whole range of foods which it markets across UK supermarkets including pizza, dough balls and other dishes inspired by its menus.
The brand has around 600 restaurants across the UK and Ireland, and if these close, hundreds of thousands of workers could be out of a job.
Despite the bleak outlook for the UK, the brand’s international sales seem to have taken off and the company saw sales rise by 11.5 per cent in international markets.
This is while it is also planning to trial new menus and is also looking at improving its international remit, which now accounts for over 20 per cent of the group’s revenues.
The news comes just under a year after the food chain’s founder Peter Boizot, died at his home in Peterborough.
Just one year before his death director Richard Paul Hodgson left the business.
Experts have now claimed that it is ‘no surprise’ that the chain could be facing financial issues.
Hospitality industry expert and partner at law firm Gordons, Simon Mydlowski, said: ‘Following news in May that Jamie’s Italian had gone into administration, it is perhaps unsurprising that another major high-street name looks to be struggling.
‘Pizza Express is seen by many as a more innovative, mainstream brand, but it is struggling with its cost base which is affecting the operating and profitability of the chain.’
How the £33m Pizza Express founder lost all his dough: Businessman who started selling pizza for two shillings a slice died almost penniless after trying to save ailing local football club
By Andrew Young
He made millions bringing authentic pizzas to Britain, but by the time of his death, businessman Peter Boizot had lost all of his money.
The Pizza Express founder, who died last December aged 89, left assets of £99,050, but the size of his net estate was reduced to nil after his liabilities were settled, probate records show.
Despite making a reported £33 million when he sold the hugely successful restaurant chain in 1993, it appears Mr Boizot lost his fortune through bad business deals – and by giving it away.
Despite making a reported £33 million when he sold the hugely successful restaurant chain in 1993, it appears Mr Boizot (pictured) lost his fortune through bad business deals – and by giving it away
His entire estate was said to have been swallowed up by a £45,000 tax bill, as well as funeral costs
A big lover of art, with a passion for design, Peter enlisted the help of friend Enzo Apicella to design a number of his restaurants. He started a trend, which continues today, designing each restaurant in its own style that’s relevant and specific to the local area
His sister Clementine Allen, 83, said his entire estate was swallowed up by a £45,000 tax bill owed on his death, as well as funeral expenses, legal fees and other debts.
Mr Boizot lost the bulk of his money by taking over and investing in his struggling local football club, Peterborough United, and buying a theatre, art galleries and a hotel.
Ms Allen, who runs her own pizza restaurant in Lancaster, said: ‘Peter did what he wanted in the way he wanted to do it.
Scott Hamilton (tenor saxophone) and Warren Vache (flugelhorn) playing live at Pizza Express in London in February 1979. In 1969, Peter started PizzaExpress Jazz Club, with the likes of Ella Fitzgerald and Amy Winehouse starring there. Ever since, music has been at the heart of the dining experience
American singer Gregory Porter performing at Pizza Express Dean Street in Soho in 2001
Fat Boys were among the celebrities to perform at Pizza Express in Kensington, London in 1985
‘I don’t think he understood money and he didn’t seem to mind that he had lost money. He didn’t have any value for it, but he loved his life and he helped a lot of people.’
Mr Boizot, who had no children and never married, lived in a rented flat in Peterborough, and did not own any property.
Peter Boizot was once the owner of his local football team, Peterborough United Football Club
He graduated from Cambridge with a history degree and spent ten years working in Europe before returning to London and opening his first pizzeria in 1965 because he could not find a proper pizza to eat in the UK.
Mr Boizot imported a pizza oven from Naples and employed an elderly Sicilian to knead dough so he could sell pizza for two shillings a slice.
The chain, which now has 500 restaurants worldwide, was sold to the China-based private equity group Hony Capital for £900 million in 2014.
Amy Winehouse celebrated her 26th birthday with dinner in Pizza Express in Marylebone in 2009
Pizza Express founder Peter Boizot attends the launch of the ‘New Generation’ in 2010. He first opened a shop in 1965