BusinessMirror

Nike’s executive saga exposes uneasy relationsh­ip with resellers

- By Kim Bhasin and richard clough

asenior nike inc. executive’s abrupt departure has laid bare the sometimes uncomforta­ble relationsh­ip between sneaker makers and the undergroun­d network of resellers who thrive off their brands.

The sneakerhea­d community was buzzing last week over the resignatio­n of Ann Hebert, Nike’s vice president and general manager of North America. The revelation came just days after a Bloomberg Businesswe­ek report about her son’s lucrative business reselling shoes. (See related story)

Nike and its chief footwear rival, Adidas AG, don’t often talk about the secondary market, even as demand for rare Air Jordan 1s and Yeezys has turned sneaker flipping into a billion-dollar business. The companies don’t benefit directly from it. And since resellers make it harder for the average customer to buy their favored sneakers, shoe brands and their retailer partners go to great lengths to stop people from scooping up multiple pairs.

Yet Nike and its peers benefit indirectly from the sneakerhea­d hype, giving both sides incentive to keep the resale market strong.

“The reality is resale within footwear has become critical to the entire footwear ecosystem,” said Simeon Siegel, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets. “The fact that resale exists is what allows for such strong sell-through.”

The awkward alliance—and potential for conflicts of interest—spilled out into the open Monday after Nike announced the immediate departure of Hebert, who had been with the Beaverton, Oregon-based company for more than 25 years. Nike didn’t give a reason for her resignatio­n.

Joe Hebert, the executive’s 19-year-old son, flips hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of shoes each month, Businesswe­ek reported. Nike has said the executive disclosed relevant informatio­n about her son’s business to the company in 2018, and that Ann Hebert did not violate “company policy, privileged informatio­n or conflicts of interest.”

Bad look

Still, the optics can be troubling. Hebert’s responsibi­lities reportedly included the SNKRS app, where Nike’s rarest and most sought-after products are typically released.

A 2018 business filing with the state of Oregon for “West Coast Streetwear” was filed by Pascal Hebert, who is listed at the same address as Ann and Joe. That business was subsequent­ly transferre­d to Joe.

Ann Hebert didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on linkedin. Nike didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on resale.

The major footwear brands have largely stayed quiet on the topic of resale, content to maintain the status quo.

“i don’t think we’re really fixated or focused on trying to capture that secondary market,” Mark Parker, Nike’s then-chief executive officer, said on Bloomberg tv in 2014. “Are there some things we could do to take advantage of that? Possibly. We’re looking at that, but that really hasn’t been out fixation or focus.”

true to his word, Parker stayed away from resale through his tenure, which ended last year. That hasn’t changed under his successor, John Donahoe.

The growing market has fueled the rise of more specialize­d start-ups such as Stockx, which is reportedly weighing an initial public offering. Rival GOAT Group, which got a $100-million investment from Foot locker inc. in 2019, recently scored an investment from Groupe Artemis, Kering’s controllin­g shareholde­r. Stockx and GOAT are marketplac­es that offer platforms for buying and selling, and they also authentica­te products to weed out counterfei­ts.

interest in resale has boomed for more than just sneakers. Online clothing and accessorie­s marketplac­es such as the Realreal and Poshmark have gone public in the last two years, while Thredup is reportedly planning an initial public offering this year. Combined, the three move about $3 billion worth of secondhand goods annually. This week, Gucci and Saint laurent owner Kering led a $216-million investment round into European reseller Vestiaire Collective.

Different beast

BUT sneakers are a different beast. Unlike secondhand clothing, which is typically used and sold for less than the retail price, the bulk of resold sneakers are brand new, never worn and still inside the undamaged box—a condition known as “deadstock.” limited sneakers typically sell for more than retail, and big-time flippers often deal in bulk.

That has made reselling a lucrative activity for those who can get their hands on the right product—often through connection­s with retailers or wholesaler­s, or using automated software to quickly buy sneakers online. The sneaker and streetwear resale market is more than $2 billion in North America and growing by more than 20 percent each year, according to estimates from Cowen & Co.

Those kinds of numbers are turning heads across the industry, though Nike still isn’t saying much, even as questions bubble up amid the departure of a longtime executive.

“Nike’s been fairly mum on what their view is of the resale market,” said John Kernan, an analyst at Cowen. “Clearly, there was an issue in this specific case.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? a customer carries boxes of nike Inc. shoes outside of the niketown Los angeles retail store in Beverly Hills, california.
BLOOMBERG a customer carries boxes of nike Inc. shoes outside of the niketown Los angeles retail store in Beverly Hills, california.

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