Boohoo stock tumbles 30%, wiping $1.25 billion off its market value, after an explosive report into working conditions at one of its factories

Advertisement
Boohoo stock tumbles 30%, wiping $1.25 billion off its market value, after an explosive report into working conditions at one of its factories
REUTERS
  • The UK's fastest-growing online retailer Boohoo saw its shares tumble 30% over two days after it acknowledged that poor working conditions at a factory were "totally unacceptable."
  • An investigation by the Sunday Times found that the fast-fashion retailer paid its factory workers low wages that were less than half the minimum UK wage.
  • Boohoo has come under fire since a workers' rights group found its factories in Leicester were putting workers at risk of contracting Covid-19.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Advertisement

Boohoo shares dropped 30% over two days after reports emerged about the fast-fashion retailer's appalling conditions for its factory workers.

Britain's fastest-growing online clothing retailer saw £1 billion ($1.25 billion) wiped off from its market value as investors reacted to an explosive Sunday Times report that detailed its workers were being paid illegally low wages and worked in "totally unacceptable" conditions.

Boohoo shares fell as much as 14% on Tuesday in intraday trading from £296.70 ($370) to £255.04 ($318) a share. By around 11.30 a.m. UK time (6.30 a.m. ET), the stock had bounced a little and was trading around 6% lower.

The retailer's shares are still listed on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM), which is generally less liquid and far more volatile than the UK's larger cap stock indexes like the FTSE 100 and FTSE 250.

The significant drop in shares came after Boohoo admitted that working conditions in a garment-manufacturing factory located in the city of Leicester fell "woefully short of any standards acceptable in any workplace."

Advertisement

Read More: Bank of America identifies 3 indicators that could make or break the stock market this summer – and warns they're all deteriorating fast

A Sunday Times investigation found that its workers were paid as little as £3.50 ($4.37) an hour. That is far lower than the UK national minimum wage requirement of £8.72 ($10.88) an hour.

In a statement released Monday, Boohoo said it was "grateful" for the conditions highlighted at its factory named in the investigation, Jaswal Fashions.

The company claimed that Jaswal Fashions is "not a declared supplier and is also no longer trading as a garment manufacturer."

It "appears that a different company is using Jaswal's former premises and we are currently trying to establish the identity of this company," Boohoo said.

Advertisement

The retail brand, which owns Pretty Little Thing, Karen Millen, and Nasty Gal, has come under fire ever since a report from a workers' rights group surfaced about Boohoo allegedly putting workers at risk of contracting Covid-19 at its Leicester factories.

New cases spiked in the city last week, and the UK government reimposed a stricter lockdown than for the rest of England.

Read More: GOLDMAN SACHS: Buy these 13 stocks that are poised to crush the market within the next 2 weeks as earnings season gets underway

{{}}