Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin 'Chicken King' Ranjit Singh Boparan, Hit By Scandal, May Exit Fish Business

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Feb, 2018 12:23 PM
  • Indian-Origin 'Chicken King' Ranjit Singh Boparan, Hit By Scandal, May Exit Fish Business
Britain's Indian-origin "chicken king" is planning to sell off his Irish fish supplying business to consolidate his food empire following a hygiene scandal at one of his chicken plants in the UK last year.
 
 
The 2 Sisters Food Group, owned by Ranjit Singh Boparan, is believed to be working with corporate finance advisers from Clearwater International on a possible disposal of the business, The Sunday Times reported.
 
 
An undercover investigation last year had showed workers appearing to change the dates on food labels and picking up dead poultry from the floor and returning it to the production line at a plant in West Bromwich. The company has since put a series of safety measures in place at all its chicken production units.
 
 
Earlier this month, 2 Sisters said it would close three of its factories, threatening the future of nearly 900 jobs. Last month, Mr Boparan sold the pizza brand Goodfella's to the owner of Birds Eye for 200 million pounds in cash.
 
 
The 51-year-old tycoon, based in the Midlands region of England, left school at 16 and turned 2 Sisters into Britain's largest poultry supplier through a series of acquisitions, including a 342-million-pounds takeover of quoted rival Northern Foods in 2011.
 
 
 
 
He also acquired turkey business Bernard Matthews and restaurant chains FishWorks, Giraffe and Harry Ramsden's.
 
 
According to the newspaper, the deal spree left 2 Sisters with debts of 824 million pounds at the end of last year, 5.4 times its underlying earnings although the Goodfella's sale will reduce that total. The company has 250 million pounds of bonds that will need to be repaid next year.
 
 
In November last year, the credit ratings agency Moody's downgraded its debt rating deeper into junk territory on fears over meagre profit margins and huge debts.
 
 
Mr Boparan is also shouldering heavy pension payments after acquiring Northern Foods' final-salary pension scheme. The plan has about 17,000 members and had a 541 million pounds shortfall in March 2015, its most recent disclosures show.
 
 
2 Sisters has reportedly also held talks about merging its Fox's Biscuits brand with the Jammie Dodgers maker Burton's Foods, which is owned by a Canadian pension fund.

MORE International ARTICLES

New Zealand denies visas to Indian students

New Zealand denies visas to Indian students
New Zealand has denied visas to thousands of Indian students who wanted to study in the country, a media report said on Friday.

New Zealand denies visas to Indian students

Indian-Origin Businessman Tarsem Singh Gets Prison For $6 Million Contract Fraud

Indian-Origin Businessman Tarsem Singh Gets Prison For $6 Million Contract Fraud
Tarsem Singh was sentenced by Washington Federal Judge Reggie Walton, who also fined him $25,000 and ordered him to pay about $120,000 in restitution, officials said on Wednesday.

Indian-Origin Businessman Tarsem Singh Gets Prison For $6 Million Contract Fraud

Celebrated Pakistani Philanthropist Abdul Sattar Edhi Passes Away In Karachi

Celebrated Pakistani Philanthropist Abdul Sattar Edhi Passes Away In Karachi
Celebrated humanitarian and Edhi Foundation Chairman Abdul Sattar Edhi passed away at the age of 92 in Karachi on Friday night, it has been learnt.

Celebrated Pakistani Philanthropist Abdul Sattar Edhi Passes Away In Karachi

Indian-Origin Minister Priti Patel Backs Theresa May For British Prime Minister

Indian-Origin Minister Priti Patel Backs Theresa May For British Prime Minister
Patel's backing came as May emerged as the clear front-runner in the race to take over from Cameron, with over half of the Conservative party's 330 MPs voting in her favour in the first round of voting earlier this week.

Indian-Origin Minister Priti Patel Backs Theresa May For British Prime Minister

Vijay Mallya Says Life Must go on, in Public Appearance at British GP

Vijay Mallya Says Life Must go on, in Public Appearance at British GP
Vijay Mallya, who is currently wanted in India over loan default cases related to the now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines, made a rare public appearance at the Formula 1 British Grand Prix practice session in Silverstone on Friday

Vijay Mallya Says Life Must go on, in Public Appearance at British GP

Modi Pays Tribute To Nelson Mandela

Modi Pays Tribute To Nelson Mandela
I am convinced that industry-to-industry ties not only can bring rich economic gains to our societies, they can give a new shape to our partnership, and drive it to new levels

Modi Pays Tribute To Nelson Mandela