Bars close and hundreds lose jobs as US firm buys Brewdog in £33m deal
Bars close and hundreds lose jobs as US firm buys Brewdog in £33m deal 11 hours ago Craig WilliamsBBC Scotland Hundreds of people have been made redundant and dozens of bars have closed after craft beer firm Brewdog went into administration.
Aberdeenshire-based Brewdog announced last month that consultants AlixPartners had been brought in after the firm failed to make a profit in recent years.
On Monday, they were appointed as administrators.
Sharon Graham, the union's general secretary, added: "BrewDog workers built this brand.
They deserved respect. Instead, they were treated as disposable pawns. " Bryan Simpson, Unite's national lead for hospitality, described the conduct of senior management as "nothing short of a national disgrace".
BrewDog's 18 franchise bars in the UK and internationally will continue to operate.
It described the deal as a significant opportunity for growth in the UK and international markets.
In 2009, the firm launched a fundraising scheme called Equity for Punks.
In 2017 a US equity firm TSG Consumer Partners acquired a 22% stake in Brewdog.
But unlike the Equity for Punks' "ordinary" shareholders, TSG was given "preference shares".
Some of these people correctly predicted their shares would become "worthless".
Last month, the company halted production of gin and vodka brands at its distillery in Ellon, Aberdeenshire.
Brewdog had announced job cuts across the business in October last year, after posting a £37m loss.
The company employed around 1,400 people.
A BBC Scotland documentary also highlighted allegations about the behaviour by former chief executive James Watt.
That prompted a complaint to the broadcasting regulator Ofcom, but it was subsequently rejected.
Watt later stood down as chief executive officer and moved to a newly created position of "captain and co-founder". Dickie left the company last year, saying that he took the decision for personal reasons.
The new owners are buying what they see as the profitable bits of the company in the UK.
They look set to lose the £75m stake they bought through the Equity for Punks scheme In the end, Brewdog, the rebel outsider, has fallen flat like any old corporate failure. BrewDog bars closed 'with immediate effect' Basingstoke Bath Bournemouth Bristol - Baldwin Street; Harbourside Cambridge Cardiff Carlisle Cheltenham Exeter London – Soho; Camden Road; Chancery Lane; Clerkenwell; Ealing; Hammersmith; Seething Lane; Tower Bridge; Wandsworth Liverpool Manchester - DogHouse Manchester, Manchester Outpost Milton Keynes Newcastle Norwich Nottingham Plymouth Reading Southampton Aberdeen – Castlegate, Union Square Edinburgh - Cowgate Glasgow - Merchant City; Argyle Street Inverurie Perth St Andrews Stirling BrewDog bars acquired by Tilray Birmingham London - Canary Wharf, Paddington; Seven Dials; Tower Hill; Waterloo Manchester - Peter Street Ellon - DogTap Edinburgh - DogHouse Edinburgh; Edinburgh Lothian Road Ireland - Dublin
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: