The 437,000 sq ft Staffordshire warehouse was mothballed by Asos in 2023
Marks & Spencer has struck a deal to acquire a warehouse from Asos in Staffordshire, a move set to generate 600 new jobs and bolster its ambitions to double online sales.
M&S confirmed the 437,000 square foot facility in Lichfield will rank among its largest distribution centres upon opening in 2027.
The warehouse was mothballed by Asos in 2023 as part of a restructuring drive aimed at reducing stock levels and costs while improving profitability.
It had employed a few hundred workers at the time, though Asos said when it announced the move that those staff were not directly employed by the group.
M&S said the site will expand capacity and enable faster order processing, supporting the retailer’s long-term ambition to double the scale of its online fashion, home and beauty operation.
“The new site will support the strategy to deliver more of M&S fashion faster than ever before, enabling customers to order later in the day and with more sizes and styles available,” the retailer said.
John Lyttle, managing director for fashion, home and beauty, said: “As we transform M&S fashion, home and beauty, our ambition is to double online sales.
“To achieve this and serve our customers faster, more efficiently and with better availability, our 24/7 distribution network needs more capacity.”
He added that the acquisition would advance its transformation agenda at considerably less expense than constructing a new site from the ground up. Asos confirmed it will pocket a minimum of £66 million from the warehouse sale while cutting approximately £6 million in annual running costs, including rent.
The transaction is set to generate a one-off profit uplift of around £85 million upon completion, which is anticipated before the end of August.
Asos shares surged 12% in morning trading on Monday following the announcement of the sale.
The retailer stated that its remaining facilities in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, and Berlin will “provide sufficient capacity to support future growth”.
Asos chief executive Jose Antonio Ramos said: “The disposal of our Lichfield fulfilment centre represents a further step in strengthening Asos’s balance sheet and improving our capital efficiency.
“This transaction enables us to unlock value from one of our non-core assets while reducing our ongoing cost base, consistent with the actions we have taken over the past three years to simplify the business and enhance financial resilience.”





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