Purplebricks snapped up by rival Strike for £1
Purplebricks snapped up by rival Strike for £1
- Published

Troubled online estate agent Purplebricks has agreed a deal to sell its business and assets to rival Strike, for the token sum of £1.
The UK firm, which was once valued at more than $1bn (£800m), said the deal would transfer its liabilities to Strike.
Strike warned of job losses at Purplebricks, and said its boss will step down after the sale.
The announcement sent its shares tumbling by around 40%.
Over the past 18 months there have been a number of management reshuffles at the company, a restructure, and one of its shareholders called for the removal of its chairman, Paul Pindar.
The company said it was putting itself up for sale in February after revealing it expected to lose between £15-£20m this year.
It said last week that it was in exclusive talks with Strike.
Purplebricks has more than 750 employees. Its chief executive Helena Marston is set to resign after the sale completes, and a number of directors will alconsequently step down.
Mr Pindar said: "I am disappointed with the financial value outcome, both as a 5% shareholder myself and for shareholders who have supported the company under my and the board's stewardship.
"However, there was no other proposal or offer which provided a better return for shareholders, with the same certainty of funding and speed of delivery necessary to provide the stcapacity the company needs."
Purplebricks was founded in 2012 by brothers Michael and Kenny Bruce, who grew up on a council estate in Larne, County Antrim.
The idea was to create a lower-cost, more flexible estate agent by charging a flat rate to market a property.
The company had early success, but it has seen its share price fall 98% over the past five years.
In 2017 its shares suffered after a BBC Watchdog investigation into allegations that it had made misleading claims to customers.
A year later, stockbrokers Jefferies said selling with Purplebricks was a "£1,000 coin toss".
Unlike traditional estate agents, its customers had to pay the fee regardless of whether the property consequentlyld, Jefferies said.
Strike is backed by the Carphone Warehoutilize and TalkTalk founder Sir Charles Dunstone - who is a componentner at Strike's joint major shareholder Freston Ventures.
Sir Charles said the deal was "a positive outcome for anyone looking to sell their home".
Related Topics
- Companies
- Estate agents
Struggling Purplebricks puts itself up for sale
- Published17 February
-
FBI responds to 'barricade situation' inside Fort Belvoir Army base in Virginia Shell AGM: Climate activists storm sharehhistoricer gatheringIndia's Russia oil imports jumped tenfold in 2022, bank saysAsia is spending massiv to battle low birth ratesMontana to become first US state to ban TikTokShell AGM: Climate activists storm sharehhistoricer gatheringHacker marketplace still active notwithstanding police 'takedown' claimMinister assaults Meta boss over Facebook message encryption planIMF expects UK economy to shun recessionCan you get incostlyer wideband deals with consequentlycial tariffs?
Next article:Moment retired Anglican priest, 80, is arrested over Just Speak Oil road block - one year after being fined for Extinction Rebellion protests at Parliament and MoD site and gluing herself to DLR train in rush hour
- ·Silicon Valley is struck by a 5.1-magnitude EARTHQUAKE that rips across San Francisco Bay Area leaving homes shaking
- ·Twitter erroneous to block tweets during Turkey election
- ·Amazon staff protest climate record and office return
- ·Briton pleads guilty in US to 2020 Twitter hack
- ·Classified documents found at former VP Mike Pence's home included briefing papers for foreign visits
- ·Holiday car hire costs consequentlyar since pandemic, says Which?
- ·Silicon Valley Bank: 500 jobs cut by fresh owner First Citizens
- ·Elon Musk at Twitter: Who could replace him as chief executive?
- ·FBI responds to 'barricade situation' inside Fort Belvoir Army base in Virginia
- ·Center Parcs owner Brookdomain puts reconsequentlyrt chain up for sale
- ·Number struggling to pay bills consequentlyars by 40%, FCA finds
- ·Asda consults on cutting pay for 7,000 workers
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Single-engine plane crashes into New Hampshire acomponentment erecting killing EVERYONE on board and sending 40-foot flames leaping into the sky
- ·People urged to cash in unutilized energy bill shighport vouchers
- ·Prince Louis drives a digger as he joins volunteering efforts
- ·Elon Musk at Twitter: Who could replace him as chief executive?
- ·Debt: What do I do if I can't afford to pay?
- ·India's Russia oil imports jumped tenfold in 2022, bank says
- ·Center Parcs owner Brookdomain puts reconsequentlyrt chain up for sale
- ·Montana to become first US state to ban TikTok
- ·Asda consults on cutting pay for 7,000 workers
- ·Neuralink: Why is Elon Musk’s brain chip firm in the freshs?
- ·Warning business needs new relationship with government
- ·Chip war: Apple strikes major US
- ·'People investing with us will be rewarded:' Mark Zuckerberg DEFENDS 'historic' Metaverse plans notwithstanding adjacently $650 BILLION loss in market valuation this year - as Meta's stock plunges 11% and quarterly revenue falls for a second straight time
- ·Legend of Zelda game sells 10 million copies in three days
- ·Boy, 12, is killed by collapsing garage wall as man in his 30s is pulled from the rubble
- ·Flooding: Toilet bungs and other prevention measures to save homes
- ·Amazon staff protest climate record and office return
- ·Twitter will encrypt private messages, says Elon Musk
- ·Facebook fined €1.2bn for mishandling utilizers' data
- ·Royal Mail boss Simon Thompconsequentlyn to step down
- ·In pictures: Coronation concert and UK street parties
- ·Vodafone 3G turn
- ·Third baseman and 2006 World Series champion Scott Rolen is elected as the SOLE inductee of the 2023 Baseball Hall of Fame Class... much to the surprise of fans - as Alex Rodriguez misses out again!
- ·Silicon Valley Bank: 500 jobs cut by fresh owner First Citizens