A High Street retailer with shops across Tayside and Fife has warned it will cut hundreds of jobs as sales have failed to pick up after lockdown.
WH Smith is planning to cut up to 1,500 jobs as bosses said its recovery from the Covid-19 lockdown has been “slow”.
The chain has branches in the centre of Dundee, Perth, Montrose and Arbroath as well as at Ninewells Hospital.
In Fife the retailer operates from St Andrews’ South Street, Crossgate in Cupar, the Kingdom Centre in Glenrothes and Dunfermline High Street.
It also has three branches in Kirkcaldy – in the High Street, Victoria Hospital and Kirkcaldy Railway Station.
The retailer said it is starting to consult with staff over plans that could see as many as 1,500 of them losing their roles.
The company said it needs to reduce costs as its shops in airports and railway stations have been hit by low passenger numbers and its high street stores have also suffered from low footfall.
It said just over half of its UK travel shops have reopened and that 246 of its largest sites have started trading again.
All 575 of its high street stores have opened, the business said, but footfall is strongly down compared with last year.
Revenue was 57% lower last month compared with July 2019, even as sites started to welcome customers back, with most of this loss coming from the travel arm.
“We now need to take further action to reduce costs across our businesses,” said chief executive Carl Cowling.
“I regret that this will have an impact on a significant number of colleagues whose roles will be affected by these necessary actions, and we will do everything we can to support them at this challenging time.”
The WH Smith branches at Kirkcaldy Railway Station and Victoria Hospital are currently closed.
Although travel revenue has started to recover from April, when it was down 92% on last year, sales were still nearly three-quarters lower in July.
The high street business, meanwhile, has gone from 71% down in April to 25% down in July compared with the same months in 2019.
The US arm should recover quicker, the company said, as most flyers travel domestically.
Revenue in the travel business there is down 80%, but the 147 open stores are seeing an “encouraging performance,” WH Smith said.
The company said its loss before tax is likely to reach between £70 million and £75 million for the year ending August 31. The results will be announced in November.
Mr Cowling added: “Covid-19 continues to have a significant impact on the WH Smith Group. Throughout the pandemic, we have responded quickly and taken decisive actions to protect the business, including substantially strengthening our financial position. We have also welcomed support from Government where available.”