Several private equity firms are understood to be circling Homebase as the DIY chain’s Australian owner plots an escape from its ill-fated £340 million takeover.

Hilco, Endless and Lion Capital are among the groups eyeing a potential bid, with bargain retailer B&M also weighing an approach, sources have told the Press Association.

It is unclear at this stage whether any bid would be for the entirety of the business, part of it, or, in B&M’s case, a chunk of Homebase’s store estate.

Wesfarmers appears eager to offload the troubled retailer after their 2016 takeover turned sour when customers failed to respond to a sweeping overhaul, including renaming stores to the well-known Australian brand of Bunnings.

Such have been the woes of the UK business that it announced in early 2018 that half-year pre-tax losses had deepened to £97 million, sinking from a £28 million loss the year before.

The group blamed the deterioration on the “rapid re-positioning” of Homebase and tough trading conditions in the UK.

It added to the misery surrounding the deal, with Wesfarmers revealing in February that it had embarked on a business review of Homebase. The move could lead to 2,000 job losses and 40 store closures across the UK and Ireland.

The emergence of potential bidders comes after reports that investment bank Lazard had been tasked with sounding out buyers for the UK operation.

A sale would mark a bleak end to Wesfarmers’ foray into the British market after snapping up Homebase from Home Retail Group two years ago.

Homebase operates from 250 stores, including those in Ipswich, Bury St Edmunds, Colchester and Sudbury, and employs 12,000 people in total in the UK.