Australian clothing giant Mosaic Brands has gone bust owing almost $250million.
The company went into voluntary administration on October 28, and a newly released report from the external administrators shows a long list of creditors.
KPMG has been appointed as receivers and managers and is looking to sell the business.
More than 300 employees are owed an undisclosed amount.
Mosaic owes 23 Bangladeshi garment factories more than $30million. Workers earning a few hundred dollars a month told the ABC they were worried about feeding their families.
Before going into administration, Mosaic announced it would shut down its entities Autograph, BeMe, Crossroads, Rockmans and W.Lane.
Those closures were supposed to open the way for more investment in its other brands Katies, Millers, Noni B and Rivers. In total, Mosaic Brands had more than 700 stores and 10 online shops.
But an announcement to the ASX in October shows the restructure was unsuccessful.
The future of Mosaic’s brands, including Noni B, is uncertain. Picture: Supplied
‘Following recent attempts by the company to informally restructure its operations, the board of Mosaic has determined that voluntary administration is now the most appropriate way to restructure the Group,’ the ASX announcement reads.
The Mosaic group will continue trading, work on a wider restructure plan and focus on the ‘key Christmas and holiday trading period’.
‘The board wishes to reiterate its belief to those who supported the restructure, to Mosaic’s customers, and most importantly, to Mosaic’s dedicated team across Australia, that the business has a long-term future,’ the announcement continued.
Mosaic Brands Limited owes about $249million to 171 creditors, though this number could change as administrators comb through the books.
The administrators report says KPMG has more than 12 interested buyers for the business.
Administrators are confident some staff can be redeployed and ‘expect to be able to satisfy employee entitlements in full’.
The Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association told the ABC that Mosaic’s conduct set a bad precedent for the industry.
An association spokesperson told the ABC they wrote to Australia’s High Commission about Mosaic’s non-payment, and the association was told to seek independent legal advice.
Staff of one of Mosaic’s suppliers, Hydroxide Knitwear. Bangladeshi garment companies are owed about $30m. Picture: Facebook
Your browser does not support iframes.
Oxfam Australia said the business collapse highlighted systemic inequalities.
‘These workers are already paid poverty wages at around $6 per day for the minimum wage,’ Oxfam Australia advocacy lead Sarah Rogan told the ABC.
‘For Mosaic not to pay for orders already fulfilled means they have essentially worked for free.’
The company is Australia’s largest women’s fashion retailer group and had employed more than 4000 staff in more than 700 stores around Australia.
Queensland University of Technology Business School retail expert professor Gary Mortimer, said Mosaic Brands made the mistake of ‘essentially creating multiple brands to market to the exact same audience – middle aged, middle class woman’.
‘If you walk into a shopping centre, you will find at least two, if not three, of those brands all competing for the same customer and that just duplicates and triplicates the cost of doing business,’ he told News Corp.
Professor Mortimer likened the overlap to what Kmart and Target – both owned locally by Wesfarmers – were doing, often competing against themselves.
Earlier this year Mosaic had problems as it migrated to a new supply chain system, and had little inventory on hand for the key Mother’s Day trading period.
The company’s shares have been suspended from the ASX since September 2 because of a delay on filing its 2023/24 financial report, which was due in August.