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Sir Philip Green
Pulling out: Sir Philip Green had seemed keen to engineer a turnaround of the struggling suits firm but now says the time is wrong

Green makes £1m as he offloads Moss Bros slice

Simon English
28 Nov 2008


Sir Philip Green's return to the stock market did not last for long but he has today departed the scene and is nearly £1 million richer.

Two weeks ago he snapped up a 28.5% stake in struggling suits firm Moss Bros and talked of making a bid for the whole of the business.

Today he offloaded the stake at a profit to Simon Berwin, the managing director of Berwin & Berwin, one of the UK's biggest suppliers of suits to retailers such as Next, Ted Baker and indeed Moss Bros itself.

Leeds-based Berwin's trust now owns 29.9% of the business - just 0.1% shy of the level at which he is obliged to bid for the rest of the company.

Sir Philip paid £6.7 million for his stake at 24.95p a share. He sold at 28.85p, a return of just under £1 million, although today he stressed that he had paid overheads during complex negotiations to buy the original stake from Iceland-based Baugur.

Moss Bros has proved an impossible takeover target for many suitors, with some of the shareholders said to want more than 80p a share for their stakes

Brewin said: "We're not intending to make a bid at the moment. We would just like to bring a period of stability to Moss Bros. They're big customers of ours and they've been through a lot in the past few years with companies bidding and we want to try and stabilise things."

Sir Philip said: "This was a totally unpremeditated situation where someone turned up who wanted to buy the stake. It's not some complicated saga. I met him for the first time at 9.35 this morning, he turns up and he has the money. Simple."

Under the terms of the deal, it appears that Berwin is happy for Moss Bros to continue plans for a suit-hire joint venture with Sir Philip's Burton and Bhs businesses.

Moss Bros shares rose 2p to 19p.

Although Sir Philip is one of the best-known UK businessmen, due to his ownership of Topshop and Bhs, these companies are privately held away from the glare of the stock market.

At first he seemed keen to engineer a takeover and turnaround of Moss Bros, saying: "We like the hire business and we like the Hugo Boss franchise business. It is an interesting opportunity."

But yesterday he announced that he would not be bidding, saying it was "not the right time" and that he had "too many other things going on".

Today a statement to the stock market said only that Warbeck, his investment vehicle, had disposed of its entire shareholding. Sir Philip is reckoned to be the seventh-richest man in Britain, with control of 2300 shops and assets of £3.6 billion.

He bought the Moss Bros stake from Baugur, which itself pondered a £40 million bid earlier this year but walked away. The founding Moss and Gee families are reckoned to have around 15% of the shares, but they tend not to agree on what should be done with the company.

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