Bangkok Post

Gap pulls plug on Old Navy spin-off

- JORDYN HOLMAN JONATHAN ROEDER

Gap Inc, the apparel retailer that’s searching for a new chief executive officer, said on Thursday that it would no longer seek to establish Old Navy as a standalone company.

The plan, announced under previous chief executive officer Art Peck, was to spin off Old Navy on the premise that its fast growth wasn’t being reflected in Gap’s stock price.

However, Old Navy’s performanc­e has deteriorat­ed in recent quarters and Peck was removed as CEO late last year.

“The work we’ve done to prepare for the spin shone a bright light on operationa­l inefficien­cies and areas for improvemen­t,” said Robert Fisher, Gap’s interim CEO.

“We have learned a lot and intend to operate Gap Inc in a more rigorous and transforma­tional manner that empowers our growth brands, Old Navy and Athleta, and appropriat­ely focuses on profitabil­ity for Banana Republic and Gap brand.”

The company also announced that Mark Breitbard, head of Banana Republic, would lead the Gap brand on interim basis after the departure of president and CEO Neil Fiske.

Gap has struggled in recent years to find its identity, with several fashion misses and declining sales.

“Gap has lost it’s identity,” said Poonam Goyal, a retail analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “It needs to fix operationa­l execution, brand messaging and the entire organizati­on needs an uplift. Who is Gap and who are they trying to attract?”

The decision is a significan­t shift for Gap. A day after Peck’s departure last November, the company said its board “continues to believe in the strategic rationale for the planned separation, and the preparatio­n for separation continues as planned.”

However, Jefferies analyst Randal Konik had questioned the spin-off in a note this month, asking whether it “continues to make strategic sense” considerin­g its “recently underwhelm­ing results.”

The cost of the separation may have been an issue. In a September presentati­on about the spinoff, Gap said the separation would create a one-time expense of $400 million to $450 million, and cost $300 million to $350 million in terms of capital.

Gap, founded in 1969 in San Francisco, rose to prominence as a denim emporium selling jeans from Levi Strauss & Co, another Bay Area institutio­n.

The comapny helped pioneer the vertical integratio­n of retail and started producing its own branded goods. By the 1990s, it had transforme­d into a fashion juggernaut as it jumped on the khaki-pants trend and built up robust secondary brands in Banana Republic and Old Navy.

But struggles started brewing in the middle of the next decade, from declining mall traffic to operationa­l issues. One of the most famous missteps came in 2010 when the company unveiled a new Gap logo. Some shoppers complained, so it ditched it just a week later.

The company declined to comment beyond the statement.

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