David Moss
GET UPDATES FROM David Moss

Mallett make all the right moves as they announce they are back in profit

13/04/2012

STRINGENT belt-tightening and strategic cost-cutting have paid off for Mallett as one of the UK’s oldest-established and most famous antiques emporiums moves into the black for the first time in four years.

Mallett, one of very few publicly quoted antiques retailers, announced a £0.5m profit in its results for the year ending December 31 2011 compared to a loss of £1.4m in 2010.

The then Bond Street dealers have been struggling since the global financial meltdown of 2008 and quickly realised that despite a tradition stretching back over a century they could no longer compete with the frock shops and afford a Bond Street address.

As I reported last month they finally moved in February, albeit just across the road to Dover Street. The relocation is the key to Mallett’s resurgence with a £1.3m reassignment of the Bond Street lease and a hefty 50 per cent cut in rental costs.

Interestingly, sales to the United States were down from 39 to 34 per cent of the 2011 total but sales outside the US and Europe rose 75 per cent and it is these new markets which are being targeted by chief executive Giles Hutchinson Smith (above).

MasterArt - Search now over 15000 works of art from the world's finest art dealers
April 2012
April 2012
Asian art dealers who wish they could be in two places at the same time
Berko bring Virtuoso Painters to the Chinese and speak to them in their own language
Robert Aronson mounts a show of the best in Dutch Delftware and remembers his father
TAMBARAN beats the drum for tribal art with a new American showcase
French national treasure sets up shop in Greenwich Village
Leading New York art dealer bucks the economic trend with two new five-storey spaces
The Queen of Op Art set to dazzle at museum-class gallery shows
The Oldie Guard make a stand against the excesses of contemporary art
LAPADA Fair putting on the style in Berkeley Square
Monumental sculpture provides the finishing touch to luxury property development
The many wiles of Windsor chronicled in landmark exhibition
Mallett make all the right moves as they announce they are back in profit
Three decades in the business are brought to book
TEFAF Maastricht celebrates its Silver Jubilee with a vintage performance and declares it is staying put