Today: 10 April 2026
Next buys Russell & Bromley for £3.8m — and leaves 33 stores facing an uncertain future
21 January 2026
2 mins read

Next buys Russell & Bromley for £3.8m — and leaves 33 stores facing an uncertain future

London, Jan 21, 2026, 11:42 GMT

  • Next is paying £2.5 million for Russell & Bromley’s brand and IP, plus £1.3 million for some stock
  • Three stores transfer to Next; 33 stores and nine concessions remain in administration
  • Administrators expect court approval later Wednesday; clearance firm Retail Realisation is involved in the stock sell-down

British retailer Next said on Wednesday it has bought Russell & Bromley through an insolvency process, paying £2.5 million for the brand and a further £1.3 million for some of its stock. The deal covers the brand’s intellectual property and three stores, while 33 stores and nine concessions — shop-in-shop spaces inside other retailers — are not included.

It is a familiar kind of rescue now: the name and a few prime sites get saved, the rest gets pushed into a decision window. For staff and suppliers, that window can feel like the whole story.

For Next, it is another small cheque for a big label, at a time when weaker fashion chains keep sliding into formal insolvency. It can keep selling a brand without dragging every lease along with it.

Interpath, which is overseeing the process, said the sale is being carried out as a pre-pack insolvency — a deal agreed before administrators formally take over — and it expects court approval later on Wednesday. It said the stores and concessions left out will stay open and trade while options are assessed, and named Will Wright and Chris Pole as the joint administrators. Wright said the transaction “will preserve the brand”. Interpath

Russell & Bromley chief executive Andrew Bromley said the company had taken a “difficult decision” to sell, calling it “the best route” to secure the future of the brand. City AM

Sky News reported on Tuesday that Next had partnered with stock clearance specialist Retail Realisation for the bid and that rival interest included groups behind fashion brands Bench and Weird Fish. Retail Realisation is affiliated with high street investor Modella Capital, Sky News said.

Next shares were down about 0.3% in London morning trade. The administrator has appointed Retail Realisation to manage the sale of remaining stock from outlets excluded from the deal, according to a separate report.

Next has built a reputation for picking up troubled labels and running them through its platform, with recent purchases including Cath Kidston, Joules, FatFace, Made and Seraphine, and UK partnerships with brands such as Gap and Victoria’s Secret, FashionNetwork reported. It said Next has not set out detailed plans for what happens to the wider Russell & Bromley store estate.

Stores outside the transaction include sites in Ireland such as Grafton Street in Dublin and an outlet at Kildare Village, as well as concessions at Arnotts in Dublin and Brown Thomas in Cork, the Irish Examiner reported. A Belfast store is also omitted, it said.

But the shape of Russell & Bromley on the high street is still unsettled. If administrators fail to find a buyer or a deal for the remaining shops, closures and job cuts could follow quickly — leaving Next with a brand that lives mostly online.

Stock Market Today

  • Archer Aviation Stock Could More Than Double by 2027, Eyes FAA Certification and Olympic Deployment
    April 10, 2026, 3:24 PM EDT. Archer Aviation (NYSE:ACHR) trades near $5.58, down from late 2025 highs but holds a forecasted price target of $12.11 by April 2027, indicating a potential 117% upside, per 24/7 Wall St. The company aims to achieve FAA certification, initiate passenger flights, and commercialize its eVTOL aircraft ahead of the LA 2028 Olympics, with partnerships including Korean Air and Japan Airlines. Despite a 25.8% year-to-date decline and Q4 2025 losses, Archer maintains $2 billion in liquidity. Risks include certification delays and widening operating losses nearing $730 million in 2025. Analysts remain cautiously optimistic with a moderate 50% model confidence and six out of nine rating Buys or Strong Buys.

Latest article

UK Stock Market Today: FTSE 100 Climbs as Traders Eye Fragile Iran Ceasefire

UK Stock Market Today: FTSE 100 Climbs as Traders Eye Fragile Iran Ceasefire

10 April 2026
London’s FTSE 100 rose 0.38% to 10,644.28 late Friday morning as investors awaited U.S.-Iran talks in Pakistan. Brent crude climbed 1% to $96.83 a barrel, while sterling eased but was on track for its biggest weekly gain since January. The FTSE 250 gained 0.79%. Britain’s 10-year gilt yield stood at 4.807%.
US Stock Market Today: CPI, Oil and Iran Truce Set the Tone Before the Open

US Stock Market Today: CPI, Oil and Iran Truce Set the Tone Before the Open

10 April 2026
Dow e-minis slipped 0.15% before Friday’s open, with S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures each down 0.08% as traders awaited March CPI data and watched U.S.-Iran tensions. Economists expect headline CPI to rise 0.9% for March and 3.3% year-on-year. Weekly jobless claims increased to 219,000. Brent crude traded near $97 a barrel, while shipping through the Strait of Hormuz remained well below normal.
Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 10.04.2026

10 April 2026
LIVEMarkets rolling coverageStarted: April 10, 2026, 12:00 AM EDTUpdated: April 10, 2026, 3:27 PM EDT Archer Aviation Stock Could More Than Double by 2027, Eyes FAA Certification and Olympic Deployment April 10, 2026, 3:24 PM EDT. Archer Aviation (NYSE:ACHR) trades near $5.58, down from late 2025 highs but holds a forecasted price target of $12.11 by April 2027, indicating a potential 117% upside, per 24/7 Wall St. The company aims to achieve FAA certification, initiate passenger flights, and commercialize its eVTOL aircraft ahead of the LA 2028 Olympics, with partnerships including Korean Air and Japan Airlines. Despite a 25.8% year-to-date
MARA Holdings Stock Rises Even After Target Cut as Bitcoin Miner Leans Harder Into AI

MARA Holdings Stock Rises Even After Target Cut as Bitcoin Miner Leans Harder Into AI

9 April 2026
MARA Holdings shares rose 1.7% to $9.67 Thursday despite Cantor Fitzgerald cutting its price target to $10. The company recently sold 15,133 bitcoin for $1.1 billion and agreed to repurchase $1 billion in convertible notes at a discount. MARA is expanding into AI and cloud infrastructure, but fourth-quarter revenue fell 6% and it posted a $1.7 billion net loss.
What Wall Street watches today: U.S. economic calendar, housing signals and a $13 billion Treasury auction
Previous Story

What Wall Street watches today: U.S. economic calendar, housing signals and a $13 billion Treasury auction

Lululemon pulls new ‘Get Low’ leggings from online store after see-through complaints
Next Story

Lululemon pulls new ‘Get Low’ leggings from online store after see-through complaints

Go toTop