NEWS
Baldwins Travel shops in Maidstone and Tonbridge, pictured this week
Trade partners seek clarity over Baldwins as receivers appointed
Ian Taylor
Trade partners and staff of Baldwins Travel remain in the dark about the fate of the Kent-based agency after finance firm Westwood Capital Finance sent in receivers. The firm provided finance
secured against the freehold of three Baldwins properties – in Tonbridge, Tunbridge Wells and Tenterden – in November 2023, holding two of seven outstanding charges against Baldwins’ assets. Westwood Capital Finance
warned on May 1 that it would send in receivers in the event of a default, before appointing Philip Jeffrey Ritson Deyes of Leonard Curtis and Frazer Ulrick of Westgates Restructuring as joint receivers on May 7. High Court records show
Baldwins director Nick Marks
travelweekly.co.uk
separately sought a winding-up petition on May 8, suggesting the company could not pay its debts. Baldwins has been in difficulty
for some time. Abta terminated the company’s
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membership on April 1 after initially doing so in February for failing “to provide financial information” but allowing an appeal. Iata suspended Baldwins’ accreditation on April 28 and the Advantage Travel Partnership confirmed Baldwins was no longer a member last week, though Marks still attended the
Advantage Conference in Malta. However, the difficulties extend
back to September 2021 when Baldwins was acquired by Inc & Co, part of a web of companies run by Jack Mason – who became a Baldwins director – Scott Dylan and David Antrobus. Baldwins had served notice of its intention to appoint an
administrator in August 2021, so the deal averted that outcome. But the three were subject to
court proceedings brought by Barclays Bank in November 2021 in pursuit of £13.7 million in “unauthorised borrowings”. Barclays subsequently obtained freezing orders prohibiting the sale or transfer of assets, including Baldwins Travel. The three were each sentenced
to 22 months in prison last October for breaching these orders by moving the assets first to a company in the British Virgin Islands and then to the US state of Delaware. The High Court judge offered
up to 12 months’ remission on the sentences if the assets, including Baldwins’ shares, were transferred back to the UK, but without response. Dylan is now in prison and Mason and Antrobus abroad. Four of the remaining charges are
held by Rivers Leasing of Harrow, with three secured in January 2024 against the Tonbridge, Tunbridge
Wells and Tenterden properties, and a fourth in December 2023 against multiple Baldwins assets. A fifth charge, held by Inflow Property Investments, is secured against assets including “all freehold and leasehold property in the company”. Two further outstanding
charges are held by companies registered in Delaware, as is the owner of Baldwins, Worldwide Travel Holdings. An industry legal source
suggested other charge holders would likely “ask the receivers to repossess all property” and said: “The receivers will seek to recover lenders’ money by selling the properties.” The proceedings brought by
Barclays also remain in prospect. Abta confirmed members could
“submit pipeline claims in respect of Baldwins Travel” last week, treating the business as beyond recovery despite noting: “We’ve
not been notified of a failure.” i Trade supports Baldwins staff, page 4
22 MAY 2025 5
PICTURES: Skye Bull
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