Around 1,600 jobs are at risk after fashion retailer Joules announced it would go into administration due to a failure to secure a necessary cash injection.
The brand stated that talks with investors, including its founder Tom Joule, about an emergency cash call was unsuccessful and have ended.
It said it would file a notice of intention to appoint Interpath Advisory as administrators to the firm and its subsidiaries, including online home and garden retailer The Garden Trading Company, “as soon as reasonably practicable”.
Joules said: “The board is taking this action to protect the interests of its creditors.”
The firm will suspend trading of its shares on the stock market due to the decision, adding that further announcements will be made “in due course”.
It is expected to formally appoint administrators in the next five to 10 working days, but it stressed that its stores and websites continue to trade as normal.
The Leicestershire-based chain employs around 1,600 staff and has over 130 shops.
Joules is the latest retailer to hit the buffers after online furniture business Made.com collapsed last week, with rival Next buying up its brand, websites and intellectual property.
The deal led to 320 redundancies at Made, while 79 employees who had already resigned and were working out their notice were forced to leave the business immediately.
Next had also been in talks with Joules over a deal to buy a minority stake in the business, but discussions between the two collapsed in September.
Joules then revealed it was in talks over a so-called cornerstone equity raise with strategic investors, including Joule, who recently returned to the business in an executive position as Product Director.
It was also holding discussions with Joule and its lender over a possible bridge financing deal to allow the funding talks to continue. Still, it failed to secure the crucial strategic investment needed.
At the same time, the group was considering the option of a voluntary company arrangement (CVA) – which typically involves a firm agreeing to delayed or reduced payments to landlords or other creditors – as part of a restructuring to turn around its fortunes.
It has suffered a slump in shares over the past year following profit warnings amid soaring costs and a downturn in consumer spending.