James Cropper Plc (LON:CRPR) has completed a refinancing of its debt facilities, providing the Group with a more flexible funding platform to support delivery of its medium-term strategic priorities.
The new arrangements improve the Group’s cash flow and balance sheet flexibility through access to a new invoice discounting facility of up to ÂŁ15m committed for at least three years, which provides flexible working capital funding to enable more efficient management of the Group’s liquidity.
As part of the refinancing, the Group will make a part-repayment of ÂŁ7.1m on its existing UK bank loan, funded from the Group’s cash resources and the new invoice discounting facility, with the remaining balance repayable in reduced quarterly instalments through to March 2030.
In addition, the maturity of the Group’s US bank loan has been extended by 12 months, with the final repayment of $3.2m deferred to December 2027, improving liquidity headroom during this period.
Alongside the debt refinancing, the Group has agreed to make a one-off contribution into its defined benefit pension schemes of ÂŁ0.6m, with the previously agreed contribution schedule reduced by ÂŁ0.35m in aggregate across the period to September 2027. In addition, the Group has agreed to bring forward the next triennial actuarial valuation of the pension schemes by 12 months to March 2027.
Andrew Goody, Chief Financial Officer, James Cropper said: “This refinancing builds on the significant progress we have made in strengthening the Group’s balance sheet through improved operational performance and continued focus on cash and working capital management, with net debt at 28 March 2026 less than 1x adjusted EBITDA.
“The refinancing materially improves our liquidity and financial flexibility. By improving access to committed working capital funding and extending the maturity profile of our debt, the new arrangements provide greater headroom to support both operational requirements and strategic growth initiatives.
“Importantly, the refinancing allows us to deploy capital more efficiently, which we expect will allow the Group to reduce cash financing costs. I am grateful to our lending partners for their continued support and to HSBC Invoice Finance for helping deliver this important enhancement to our funding structure.”






































