Hut Group’s boss Matt Moulding loaned millions by local council

Local council extends huge loan to billionaire Matt Moulding, founder and boss of beleaguered online retailer The Hut Group

  • Warrington lends another £18m to Moulding Capital, bringing total to £200m 
  • Moulding Capital is now the council’s single largest credit exposure
  • Council says loan is safe but it is not known what the money is being used for

Exposure: Matt Moulding has repaid about £25million of the original council loan

A local council has extended a huge loan to billionaire Matt Moulding, the founder and boss of beleaguered online retailer The Hut Group. 

Labour-controlled Warrington council agreed earlier this month to lend another £18million to private company Moulding Capital Limited – which is owned by Moulding.

It was one of a series of loans worth a total of £200million made to the businessman’s interests, and represents the council’s largest single credit exposure.

Council documents seen by The Mail on Sunday say the new loan is ‘fully secured… against a portfolio of real estate assets’. It is not known what the loan is being used for. 

A spokesman added that the council considered Moulding Capital Limited to be ‘a good credit risk’. 

About £25million of the original council loan has been repaid. Moulding, reportedly a Conservative party donor, became landlord to THG – with brands including Cult Beauty and Myprotein – after a controversial sale and leaseback deal in the run-up to THG’s £5.4billion stock market flotation in 2020. 

The deal nets Moulding £20million a year in rent on 30 commercial properties. He has also won approval from the council for a new plastics recycling plant. 

THG has insisted that Moulding personally has never been a Tory donor. It said THG, the company he founded, has donated to a number of political parties. 

The Manchester-based group’s shares have plunged by almost 80 per cent since flotation amid concerns about governance, strategy and managerial control.