A Courts store in Bridgetown, Barbados (2010).

Courts is a furniture and electronics retailing brand used by stores in the Caribbean, the United States and Asia. Courts was founded in 1850 in the United Kingdom, and at its peak, Courts had 350 stores worldwide, of which one hundred were in the United Kingdom.

History

Courts was founded in 1850, by William Henry Court, with a single store in Canterbury, England.[1] In 1945, the company was sold to the Cohen brothers, who began to expand the business. Hire purchase terms were offered from 1946. Courts was listed on London Stock Exchange in 1959. By this stage, Courts had thirty four retail stores in the United Kingdom.

In 1959, Courts expanded into the Caribbean, and opened its first store in Kingston, Jamaica. By 1965, a further store was opened in Barbados, and the product range was diversified to include electricals. Courts Jamaica listed on the Jamaica Stock Exchange in 1969. In 1978, Courts Barbados listed on the Barbados Stock Exchange.

Courts expanded into Fiji and Singapore in 1971.

Administration in the United Kingdom

In December 2001, after Courts breached a number of its banking covenants, the company's banks appointed PwC to safeguard their debts.

On Monday 29 November 2004, shares in Courts plc were suspended at 13.5p and the company went into administration,[2] with debts of £280 million. PwC earned record fees for both pre administration and post administration work. The reasons given for entering administration were a fall in sales in the country, combined with the financial cost of the damage caused by Hurricane Ivan to the company's Caribbean arm.

The administration caused public controversy, because the sudden store closures had seen a number of outlets almost besieged and in some cases damaged by angry customers and left thousands of customers out of pocket, without the furniture they had ordered and deposits they had paid. SB Capital, owners of Furnitureland, acquired the largest number of branches.

All stores in the United Kingdom were closed, and overseas subsidiaries were sold. Courts plc was dissolved as a company.

Current operations

Courts' Caribbean operations were sold to Unicomer Group, which operates over ninety three stores in eleven Caribbean countries, including Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, St. Lucia, and Trinidad and Tobago. A store branded Courts Caribbean is located in Jamaica, New York to serve Caribbean immigrants living in the United States wishing to send gifts to family members in their countries of birth. The American store positions itself as an ethnic and nostalgic brand.[3] As of November 2023, there are four Courts stores in the US, located in Jamaica, Brooklyn, The Bronx and Miramar, Florida.

The Malaysia and Singapore operations (which had previously operated stores in Indonesia and Thailand) were consolidated under Courts Asia Ltd, which has since opened new stores in Indonesia. Courts Asia was acquired by Nojima Corporation in 2019.[4]

BAIC-subsidiary Bramcom Holding acquired the Mauritius and Madagascar operations, and co-founded Victoria Courts in Kenya in partnership with Nairobi-based Victoria Furnitures.[5] Following the collapse of BAIC in 2015, the Mauritius stores were acquired in a management buyout, after a failed acquisition attempt by Courts Asia.[6]

Courts branded stores also operate under separate ownerships in Fiji and Papua New Guinea. Courts also makes furniture in Fiji taking advantage of locally grown Mahogany.

Sponsorships

In June 2013, Courts Caribbean announced their sponsorship of the Caribbean Premier League "CPL's partnership with Courts is a very strategic and beneficial one to both parties, and we are thrilled about the possibilities that exist for us from a marketing perspective," said CPL CEO Damien O' Donohoe.

"Combining our advertising and marketing programmes with that of Courts will heighten the awareness of CPL across the region, and increase fan support, which will put people in the stands at matches and customers in the aisles of Courts."[7]

See also

References

  1. Courts Homecentres Archived 2012-07-23 at the Wayback Machine, Fiji
  2. "Courts to go into administration". BBC News Online. 29 November 2004.
  3. "About us". Archived from the original on 2013-03-29. Retrieved 2013-06-26.
  4. "Nojima completes acquisition of Courts Asia". 15 March 2019. Retrieved 2023-11-15.
  5. "Courts Mauritius Opens First Store On The African Continent". Retrieved 2023-11-15.
  6. "David Isaacs (CEO, Courts Mammouth): "BAI saga: I was not around between 2013 and 2015"". 21 September 2016. Retrieved 2023-11-15.
  7. "Latest News | cplt20".
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