Re Poundstretcher: cross-class cramdown survives even when six landlord classes say no

The Chancery Division sanctions Poundstretcher's restructuring plan despite six dissenting landlord classes, applying the Adler and Petrofac framework.
When six out of fourteen creditor classes vote against a restructuring plan, instinct might suggest the proposal is in trouble. Re Poundstretcher Ltd [2026] EWHC 1438 (Ch) shows why that instinct can be wrong, and offers one of the clearer recent illustrations of how Mr Justice Hildyard applies the now well established Adler, Thames Water and Petrofac framework to a retail lease restructuring built around the familiar architecture of landlord categorisation, compromised property liability payments and an upside sharing mechanism.
The plan followed a now familiar pattern for discount retailers under sustained cost pressure. Poundstretcher's 2020 CVA had provided only temporary relief, and by 2026 the group faced a forecast £6 million EBITDA loss, a liquidity crisis requiring weekly triage of which creditors to pay, and a Shareholder Loan Agreement from its Fortress Funds owners that would not release its remaining £4.5 million tranche absent sanction by 10 July 2026. The plan divided 298 leases into Class A, B and C categories based on each store's profitability, mirroring the approach Sir Alastair Norris took in the recent Poundland restructuring, with rent reductions of 25%, 50% or 75% (or to nil) depending on category, compromised property liability payments calculated at 175% of each creditor's estimated administration return, and a contingent "Excess Cumulative EBITDA Entitlement" giving landlords upside if the turnaround succeeds.
Eight classes approved the plan, including all three financial creditor classes (each a single creditor voting 100% in favour) and the Class C landlords, who faced their rent reduced to nil yet voted 81% in value in support. Six classes, including both Class B1 landlord categories and the two guaranteed landlord classes, voted against. The judgement's interest lies less in the cramdown mechanics themselves, which by now are well rehearsed, than in two specific points of friction that the Opposing Creditors pressed hard.
The first was a complaint that the Explanatory Statement gave no real explanation for why the PLL parent company guarantees attaching to certain leases were valued at nil, an assessment only properly substantiated in a supplemental report produced two days before the sanction hearing. Hildyard J accepted this should have been explained earlier, but found the underlying conclusion, that PLL's only real asset was its fully charged shareholding in the plan company, was sufficiently "obvious" that fuller disclosure would not have changed any vote. This is a useful marker for practitioners: late disclosure of valuation evidence is a real procedural failing, but it will not by itself defeat sanction unless it can be shown to have actually deprived creditors of an informed choice.
The second, more substantive, point was the Opposing Creditors' proposal that the PLL guarantees be preserved entirely, mirroring a separate clause of the plan that preserved guarantees from entities outside the group while only releasing onward indemnity claims. The judgement draws a sharp and instructive distinction here. Where the guarantor sits outside the corporate group, there is no need to release the guarantee itself, only any ricochet claim back against the plan company. But where the guarantor is the plan company's own parent, with no assets beyond its shareholding in the plan company, any successful claim against it directly threatens the value the restructuring is trying to preserve. Drawing on Michael Green J's reasoning in Fitness First, the court treated this as an obvious commercial necessity rather than an unjustified intrusion on landlord rights.
Perhaps the most candid passage concerns the judge's own doubts about whether the turnaround plan would actually work, given the prior CVA's failure and the absence of any detailed business plan document. Hildyard J was notably unimpressed by the generality of the evidence on this point, effectively inferring commercial credibility from the fact that sophisticated funders were prepared to forgo £16.2 million in interest, while signalling that future plans should expect closer scrutiny of their stated turnaround rationale. For landlords facing these plans, the lesson is that procedural grumbles about disclosure timing rarely move the needle, but a sharply targeted argument about guarantee structure, even when ultimately unsuccessful, gets the court's genuine engagement.










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