Business Standard

ADIDAS TO SELL REEBOK TO ABG FOR $2.5 BILLION

- RICHARD CLOUGH & CRYSTAL TSE

Adidas agreed to sell its underperfo­rming Reebok business to Authentic Brands Group Inc. for up to $2.5 billion, adding another well-known name to the buyer’s growing lineup of consumer companies.

The majority of the price will be paid in cash at closing, with the rest coming as deferred and contingent considerat­ion, the companies said Thursday in a statement. The deal is expected to close in the first quarter of 2022.

Authentic Brands Chief Executive Officer Jamie Salter said in the statement that the deal is “an important milestone” in the company’s growth. “We are committed to preserving Reebok’s integrity, innovation and values — including its presence in bricks and mortar.”

Authentic Brands, which filed in July for an initial public offering in the US, has already acquired more than 30 names, including bankrupt assets such as Barneys New York and Brooks Brothers. Reebok has been formally on the block since early this year after Adidas had tried to revive the brand’s performanc­e for more than a decade.

Adidas shares rose as much as 2.5 per cent in Frankfurt trading after the announceme­nt. They closed up 1.6 per cent to 312 euros.

At $2.5 billion, Reebok is the biggest deal that acquisitiv­e Authentic Brands has done since its inception, Salter said in an interview on Thursday. It’s also the largest transactio­n in his career, he said.

‘One of the best’

“It’s one of the best athletic, footwear, apparel brands in the world,” Salter said. The brand’s global distributi­on is on par with that of Nike and its Jordan brand, he said.

Already this year, Authentic Brands has bought Eddie Bauer with Sparc Group, its joint venture with Simon Property Group. Authentic Brands, whose portfolio companies include Forever 21 and Sports Illustrate­d, also acquired a collection of brands from PVH Corp. that include Izod and Van Heusen.

The deal won’t change Adidas’ financial outlook for this year or its previously announced long-term targets, the company said. The bulk of the cash proceeds will be distribute­d to shareholde­rs.

Reebok has long fascinated industry players, both as a cautionary tale and for the tantalizin­g potential of recapturin­g some of its old success. Propelled by the aerobics boom, it became a giant seemingly overnight in the 1980s and even exceeded Nike for several years in terms of US sneaker sales. That momentum quickly sputtered, however, and even Adidas never managed to reignite the brand.

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