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Dick Smith report outlines the decisions that lead to failure of a giant
Thu, 14th Jul 2016
FYI, this story is more than a year old

Dick Smith creditors are out of pocket to the tune of more than AU$260 million according to an official report into the collapse of the business, which highlights a litany of poor decisions which ultimately lead to the fall of the industry giant.

The report by administrators McGrathNicol notes poor inventory purchasing decisions, dubious expansion plans and an inability to obtain favourable credit terms all contributed to the company's downfall.

Ultimately, Dick Smith Group failed because it was unable to make scheduled payments without breaching the terms of its bank facilities.

The report, released ahead of the second shareholders meeting later this month, says Dick Smith was losing market share in a highly competitive market where consumer demand patterns were changing rapidly.

“Revenue growth was based on store growth and commercial sales at low margins,” the report notes. Dick Smith's store network was ‘much larger' than those of its competitors, leaving the company with a higher cost base and considerable exposure to, and reliance on, the rapidly moving office and computer products market.

The report suggests the company's expansion plan may have been too rapid, requiring‘considerable' financial commitment and utilitilising all cash resources, along with requiring ‘considerable' supplier commitment and bank borrowings.

Meanwhile, inventory decisions weren't consistent with consumer demand, leaving the company with considerable amounts of obsolete and inactive stock, requiring a major write down, and clearance sales didn't generate the required sales or margin to alleviate the cash pressure.

An inability to obtain favourable credit terms impacted on stock levels, product mix and store presentation, and ultimately the cash flow pressures lead to banking covenants being breached that could not be remedied, McGrathNicol says.

The administrators say the majority of outstanding employee entitlements have been paid, but note that $2.1 million in historical underpayment issues, are still to be paid.

While the banks will be repaid a proportion of the A$140 million they are owed, McGrathNicol says they are likely to suffer ‘a significant shortfall', with that shortfall dependent on recoveries that can be made by the receivers and the settlement of security interests with trade creditors.

Unsecured creditors – which include gift card holders – are not expected to see any return on their investments, ‘unless very significant recoveries are made in the liquidation process'.