Houston Chronicle

STOCKX SNIFFS OUT FAKE SNEAKERS

- By JC Reindl

DETROIT — The pair of allegedly rare Air Jordan sneakers arrived last month to the bunker-like Authentica­tion Center of StockX, a company backed by Quicken Loans founder and Cleveland Cavaliers co-owner Dan Gilbert that is one of Detroit's fastest-growing startups.

The black-and-red Jordans were purportedl­y from 1995. For sneakerhea­ds who collect such things, that's close to antique.

If these shoes were authentic, they might fetch $500 on StockX's online marketplac­e, which functions like a stock market for the re-selling of hardto-find sneakers, sportswear, watches and handbags.

But this pair didn't pass the smell test.

One of the center's “authentica­tors” took a whiff of the Jordans and immediatel­y knew something was off. Smell is one of the 25 to 30 indicators they can use to distinguis­h a legit shoe from a cheap knockoff.

“It just had a very distinct smell that we hadn't smelled before,” recalled sneaker authentica­tor Sadelle Moore, “so we knew automatica­lly that was fake.”

This army of dozens of merchandis­e authentica­tors form the backbone of StockX and its effort to become the world's leading resale marketplac­e for scarce consumer goods.

Launched in February 2016 with just a handful of employees, StockX has grown to 370 employees, including about 40 workers at its western U.S. authentica­tion center in Tempe, Ariz.

The company says it currently processes thousands of pairs of shoes a day and handles about $2 million in daily sale transactio­ns. It plans to open new centers in New Jersey and London this year.

StockX CEO Josh Luber, 40, said one of the company's latest challenges in finding enough people to hire.

“There are 200 people we'd hire tomorrow, if we can find the right people,” Luber said. “We'd triple the engineerin­g team, we'd double the authentica­tion team, we'd double the customer service team. That is just part of hyper-growth.”

Roughly 70 percent of StockX's merchandis­e is currently sneakers, followed by about 20 percent streetwear and about 5 percent watches and handbags. StockX only sells authentic sneakers that are unworn and in their original box.

The company says it overtook eBay last year for sneaker resales. Its competitor­s also include online sellers and platforms such as GOAT, Grailed, Flight Club and Stadium Goods.

There is significan­t money in reselling sneakers. Shoe companies intentiona­lly produce limited quantities of desirable models, such as the latest Adidas Yeezy or Air Jordans, which makes it hard for consumers to buy a pair before inventorie­s sell out.

Similar to the dynamics of event ticketing, this confluence of small supply and big demand creates a market of people who are willing to pay lofty sums for a must-have commodity. Hot sneakers can sell for hundreds or sometimes thousands of dollars above their original retail price.

StockX's innovation­s include its elaborate authentica­tion process and unique sales platform that functions like a stock market.

The way the platform works is buyers place bids and sellers place “asks.” When a bid and ask match, a sale occurs automatica­lly. StockX then tracks and graphs the completed sales, showing the current and historical market value of a particular sneaker, watch, handbag or other item.

StockX takes a 9.5 percent cut of each sneaker transactio­n, with the fee lowering to 8 percent for high-volume sellers.

Similar to what Kelley Blue Book is for used cars, StockX has already become a leading gauge of market value in the sneaker resale world — even for transactio­ns that don't happen on the StockX platform.

That dynamic was on display at a recent sneakers and streetwear trade event. The event, which was sponsored by StockX, was jammed with sellers displaying like-new and lightly worn merchandis­e with price tags that could hit several hundred dollars or more.

Many in the crowd of buyers were teenage boys. Some looked no older than 12.

Sneaker seller Mohamed Ibrahim, 21, of Toledo said it's common to see buyers check the price of a shoe on StockX.

“Everyone references StockX when they're at these events,” Ibrahim said. “They'll pull out their phone before they'll even think about purchasing something.”

The startup story

StockX emerged from the foundation of Luber's earlier Philadelph­ia-based startup called Campless. That company launched in 2013 and used eBay sales data to produce a price guide for sneakers that was the first of its kind.

It even was used by insurance companies to write policies for large sneaker collection­s. However, Campless was not a sales platform.

“My idea was, ‘Look, eBay is the largest marketplac­e. That seems inefficien­t, and it also seems crazy how you look on eBay and one shoe is selling for $1,000, and the other shoe is selling for $400. What's the right price?' ” Luber recalled.

By 2015, Gilbert was looking to start a business to test an idea he had for a “stock market of things” for consumer goods in a marketplac­e using real-time trades.

He tapped Greg Schwartz, an entreprene­ur he had backed through his venture capital fund, to help set up the business. They decided that sneakers would be a good first product to demonstrat­e the stock market concept.

But neither Gilbert nor Schwartz felt they knew enough about sneakers. So they reached out to Luber, then living in Philadelph­ia. Luber, who owns a personal collection of more than 350 pairs of sneakers, recalled being pleasantly shocked to hear how Gilbert and Schwartz shared his own long-desired goal of using sneaker sales data to operate a stock market-like platform.

All the other corporate executives Luber had sat down with simply wanted to incorporat­e his sneaker data into their existing business models, he said.

Soon after, Luber sold his company to Gilbert and moved to Detroit to start StockX.

“Dan is a cofounder in this,” said Luber, whose office attire is often backward baseball caps and hoodie sweatshirt­s. “He's not like the billionair­e investor who wrote a check. He literally had the same idea.”

Gilbert financed much of StockX's early growth. Other investors have included Eminem, actor Mark Wahlberg, Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback Joe Haden, entertainm­ent executive Scooter Braun and fashion designer Jon Buscemi, among others.

No fakes guarantee

Weeding out replica sneakers from authentic originals is key to StockX's business model. The company guarantees that the merchandis­e it ships is “100 percent authentic.” So if too many knockoffs were to get through and customers then complained on social media, StockX's brand would suffer.

Luber said there are strong incentives to make knockoffs of rare sneakers and pass them off as genuine.

“It's a really big business because of the margins that these fake factories can make,” he said. “They can make a fake shoe for $40 in China and sell it for $1,000 on eBay.”

Ebay does not authentica­te resold sneakers.

When StockX started two years ago, about 15 percent of the sneakers it received from sellers turned out to be replicas or fakes. Nowadays, the company says that figure is down to about 2 percent.

StockX bans sellers from its platform that willfully or repeatedly attempt to sell fakes. Would-be buyers whose orders are stopped by the discovery of a fake get refunds if no similar item is available.

“Because we check, most people don't even try to send fakes through us,” Luber said. “Most of the fakes that we see are people that generally don't know they have the fakes themselves. Because if you have a fake shoe and want to scam somebody, you are better off going to eBay, somewhere where people aren't in the middle checking.”

On the Reddit.com community Repsneaker­s, which focuses on replica sneakers, a few people have claimed to receive knockoff sneakers from StockX.

One user named “bwheezzyy” wrote, “there's really no way to trust that someone is going to authentica­te your shoes, especially when it's such a madhouse there and they have to check so many shoes.”

Those who alleged to have received fakes said that after they notified StockX, the company gave them a full refund and a $20 discount code for future purchases.

Legit check training

StockX sneakers authentica­tors go through a 90-day training period. They study a company “fake book” showing telltale signs of knockoffs. They also examine actual fake sneakers that StockX encountere­d in the past, such as the infamous “Yeezy Supremes.” (Such a shoe was never officially released.)

“We bring in fake sneakers, we rip them apart, we note every single difference between all of them. And then we teach people, ‘Here are the real ones, here are the fake,' ” Luber said. “It could be different color stitching, it could be different materials, it could be different packaging. Sometimes it's the box.”

And sometimes it's the smell. “The first thing that every authentica­tor does with every shoe is they smell the shoe, because the glue on the fake shoes usually has a much more distinct smell,” he said.

Many of the factories producing knockoffs are believed to be in China and Vietnam, he said.

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 ??  ?? Antonio Gray, 29, of Detroit, worked as a sneaker salesman for six years before becoming an authentica­t over a pair of Jordans. Stock X has created day trading for consumer goods and is doing $2 million in sal
Antonio Gray, 29, of Detroit, worked as a sneaker salesman for six years before becoming an authentica­t over a pair of Jordans. Stock X has created day trading for consumer goods and is doing $2 million in sal
 ?? Kimberly P. Mitchell / TNS ?? tor at StockX, where he looks les daily.
Kimberly P. Mitchell / TNS tor at StockX, where he looks les daily.
 ??  ?? Tre Cadwell, 22, carries sneakers to a station to be authentica­ted at the new Stock X facilites in Detroit.
Tre Cadwell, 22, carries sneakers to a station to be authentica­ted at the new Stock X facilites in Detroit.
 ??  ?? Calais Sewell, 27, of Detroit prepares authentica­ted goods for shipping. Sewell says she tries to be the “go-to” at StockX.
Calais Sewell, 27, of Detroit prepares authentica­ted goods for shipping. Sewell says she tries to be the “go-to” at StockX.

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