The Asian Age

Adidas begins sale process for Reebok

Timberland, North Face could be interested in buying brand

- THOMAS MULIER —Bloomberg

Adidas AG plans to divest its underperfo­rming Reebok brand as the German sportswear maker moves on after trying to revive its performanc­e for more than a decade.

Adidas is starting a formal process to exit the business, and it will present more details on its new strategy March 10, the company said on Tuesday. The apparel maker said in December it was weighing options for Reebok.

Adidas is throwing in the towel 15 years after acquiring the brand for $3.8 billion. While the pandemic could mute prospects for the sale somewhat, soaring stock markets are driving asset prices higher. Reebok is likely to attract interest from rival sporting goods companies, especially in Asia, as well as private equity suitors, Bloomberg reported in December, citing people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because discussion­s are private.

Reebok returned to profitabil­ity in 2018 and eked out 2 per cent sales growth in 2019. Bloomberg reported in October that Adidas was exploring a sale and might start a strategic review.

Since his arrival at Adidas in 2016, chief executive officer Kasper Rorsted has prioritise­d fixing Reebok's long-sluggish performanc­e. He closed underperfo­rming Reebok stores and allowed some licensing deals to expire, cutting sales at the long unloved sporting label while slashing expenses even more.

German publicatio­n Manager Magazin reported in October that interested parties include VF Corp, which owns the Timberland and North Face brands, as well as China's Anta Internatio­nal Group Holdings.

While Rorsted had hoped for about 2 billion euros ($2.4 billion) from selling Reebok before the pandemic, he would now be happy with less than that amount, Manager

has said. Reebok became an industry giant seemingly overnight in the 1980s, propelled by the aerobics boom. That momentum, however, quickly sputtered, and even Adidas has never managed to reignite the brand.

The chance to capitalise on Reebok's deep archive of classic footwear and apparel styles— from the clean white sneakers featuring the Union Jack to the black-and-white bullseye basketball kicks worn by Shaquille O'Neal— could be a motivating factor for potential buyers.

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