Hotels • the
London Ritz (1995-2020)
Shipping Ellerman Lines (1983–1985) In 1983, the brothers purchased brewing and shipping group
Ellerman for £45m. They later sold its brewing division (for £240m), and in late 1985 its shipping business (to its management). The Ellerman deal helped the Barclays develop the strategy of buying companies, breaking them up and profiting from the real estate. The technique of approaching an insider to obtain an advantage also set a precedent for later deals: the Barclays approached the Ellerman non-executive chairman, David Scott, at a secret meeting in Monte Carlo. Scott recalled in his memoirs that David Barclay requested an exclusive option to buy the firm, and to keep it secret from all but two directors, in return for a promise that Scott would stay on as non-executive chairman. However, moments after signing the sale document, Scott was handed a letter (by the Barclays' lawyer) demanding his immediate resignation on grounds that he had been indiscreet about the offer.
Retail The Very Group and Littlewoods In 2002, the brothers purchased the
Liverpool-based retail company
Littlewoods from its founders, the
Moores family, for £750 million. The deal was bankrolled by
HBOS, which also took a 5% equity stake in the brothers' bidding vehicle, LW Investments. The brothers merged the company with their earlier purchase,
The Very Group, to form
Littlewoods Shop Direct Home Shopping Limited, which operates a majority share of the United Kingdom's home shopping market. They also closed and sold off the Littlewoods department store chain, with the largest parcel of 120 properties being purchased by
Associated British Foods for leasing mainly to its subsidiary
Primark, while other stores were leased to
Marks & Spencer,
New Look and
British Home Stores. Two years after the brothers' acquisition of Littlewoods Ltd.,
HM Revenue and Customs repaid the company VAT that it had charged in breach of EU law. Since October 2004, more than £200 million in overpaid VAT and £268 million in simple interest was repaid to the company. However, Littlewoods argued that the company was owed a compounded interest rate and subsequently sued HMRC for £1 billion. In 2024, Very Group auditors,
Deloitte, resigned after stating they struggled to access "appropriate and relevant information in respect of certain financing arrangements between companies in the wider group". Very Group's ownership is spread across many different companies, some unaudited, with an ultimate offshore owner.
Yodel Delivery company
Yodel has received criticism for its poor service in the past, but has improved over recent years. Yodel (which operates via Home Delivery Network Ltd.) suffered a £130 million loss in 2011.
handbag.com (1999–2006) In October 2006, the Barclays sold handbag.com for £22 million. This was almost all profit: they acquired the website after it was set up as a joint venture between
Hollinger International and the
Boots Group in 1999. The Handbag group was a collection of four websites designed for female users: the high fashion getlippy.com, the fashion and home life-focused allaboutyou.com, a "specialist pregnancy site" gomamatoday.com and handbag.com.
Woolworths and Ladybird brands (2009–2021) On 2 February 2009, it was announced that the brothers'
Shop Direct Group had purchased the brand names of
Woolworths and
Ladybird children's clothing for an undisclosed amount, from
Deloitte, the administrators of the failed
Woolworths Group. In July 2021, the British and Irish Woolworths brands would be sold to
Woolworth in Germany, with The Very Group retaining the Ladybird brand.
Newspapers Many of the brothers' publishing interests are owned through a
Jersey company,
Press Holdings.
The European (1992–1998) In 1992, the Barclay brothers entered the newspaper publishing industry by buying
The European newspaper, formerly part of
Robert Maxwell's holdings. The weekly paper became a high-end business tabloid, but closed in 1998.
The Scotsman (1995–2005) In 1995, they bought
The Scotsman newspaper, and in 1996 appointed former
Sunday Times editor
Andrew Neil to oversee their publishing interests. On 19 December 2005, the Barclays sold
The Scotsman Publications Ltd, itself then part of
Press Holdings Group, for £160 million to
Johnston Press. The Barclays had owned these publications for a decade, and said they intended to use the capital raised on their other interests. During their ownership of
The Scotsman, the newspaper had seven editors in nine years (see
The Scotsman: Editors).
Sunday Business (1998–2008) In 1998 they bought and relaunched the
Sunday Business newspaper with editor
Jeff Randall. It became a weekly magazine
The Business in 2006, and was merged into
The Spectator in 2008.
The Telegraph Media Group (2004–2025) In July 2004, the Barclays bought The Telegraph Group (now
Telegraph Media Group), which includes
The Daily Telegraph,
The Sunday Telegraph, and
The Spectator after months of intense bidding and lawsuits.
The Telegraph Group was owned by
Hollinger Inc. of
Toronto, Ontario, Canada, the newspaper group controlled by the Canadian-born British businessman
Conrad Black. As part of a February 2004 judgment, an American judge,
Leo Strine, accused the Barclay brothers of being "less than fully candid", adding they had "remained silent while Lord Black misled the
Hollinger Inc. International board", remarks that incurred the brothers' wrath, with David branding the criticisms "grossly unfair". The brothers' period as newspaper proprietors was more tumultuous than with their property interests. At the Telegraph Group,
Murdoch MacLennan made over 100 journalists redundant in 2006, prompting the
National Union of Journalists (NUJ) to consider strike action.
The Sunday Telegraph editor
Dominic Lawson was sacked and replaced by
Sarah Sands in June 2005, but Sands lasted just nine months.
Patience Wheatcroft from
The Times was appointed editor in March 2006. She was replaced by
Ian McGregor one year later.
Jason Seiken was made editor-in-chief and chief content officer of Telegraph Media Group in October 2013, but announced his departure after 18 months in April 2015, three months after
Peter Oborne, the Chief Political Correspondent, resigned from the newspaper in protest at its editorial direction. In October 2019, it was announced that the brothers were seeking to sell the Telegraph Group amid speculation that their business interests were in some difficulty. On 7 June 2023, after a bitter row over nearly £1bn of unpaid debts, the
Daily and
Sunday Telegraph, amongst others, were put up for sale by
AlixPartners, who had been appointed by
Bank of Scotland as official receiver to seize the shares owned by the Barclay family in the holding company that ultimately controlled the national newspapers and
The Spectator magazine. the
Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024. ==Controversies==