Khaleej Times

Fashion M&A, like a crop top, is a bit hard to pull off

- Lauren Hirsch

new york — Mergers and acquisitio­ns for fashion retailers are like a crop top T-shirt: a risk best braved by a select few and avoided after a certain age.

Abercrombi­e & Fitch Co, the teen brand with a 125-year heritage, became the latest to demonstrat­e that on Monday, ending talks about a potential sale after failing to agree terms with potential suitors.

Successful deals in the mercurial world of US fashion are rare, and now look even less likely to succeed as sales dip across the board. Cost savings can be counterpro­ductive if it means squeezing money out of marketing and design, and buyers are taking a risk on a style that can easily go out of favour. As a result, establishe­d brands like Abercrombi­e are having problems finding a saviour.

“Often, as well as spending the money to buy the brand or business, you then have to spend more to do something strategic that will propel growth, and that means paying out twice before getting a return,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of market research firm GlobalData Retail.

Five of the 20 companies involved in the biggest private equity apparel deals of the last decade have been restructur­ed or gone bankrupt. All struggled under the debt load of a leveraged buyout. The biggest acquisitio­n, Apollo Global Management’s roughly $3.1 billion leveraged buyout of Claire’s Stores Inc, restructur­ed in 2016.

The second-largest acquisitio­n, J. Crew Group, which TPG Capital and Leonard Green & Partners bought for about $3 billion, is now being restructur­ed. Gymboree Corp filed for bankruptcy last month, seven years after Bain Capital’s $1.8 billion purchase.

Many US fashion bosses are finding they have no option but to consider a sale as pressure mounts from more affordable fast-fashion chains from Europe such as Zara and H&M, and customers abandon malls in favour of Amazon.com Inc and other online retailers.

Outerwear brand Eddie Bauer, for example, is exploring a sale while also seeking relief from its debt load, sources have told Reuters. Teen brand American Apparel explored a sale last year before ultimately filing for bankruptcy.

As Abercrombi­e’s experience shows, finding a willing buyer at the right price is difficult.

“Public company board members are reticent about greenlight­ing large-scale mergers and acquisitio­ns because it’s hard to find a good example of a business that has been rewarded by the equity market for doing so,” said Rohit Singh, who specialize­s in retail at UBS Investment Bank, not speaking specifical­ly about Abercrombi­e.

Struggling retailers are a tough sell to potential acquirers. Merging with another company risks double the trouble — more brands falling flat and more stores bereft of customers. Most fashion retailers are locked into store leases, and as landlords watch their malls empty out, they are increasing­ly unwilling to give their tenants and easy path out.

“Perhaps the reason the Abercrombi­e deal didn’t get done was that they’ve got way too many stores in way too many malls that don’t make any money, and the cost to unwind those pieces and get out of those stores is just too great to compensate for the upside,” said Mark Belford, a retail specialist at KPMG Corporate Finance.

After failing to strike a deal, Abercrombi­e now has no choice but to go it alone. On Monday, the New Albany, Ohio-based retailer said it will focus on its growing surf-wear brand Hollister and try to reposition its flagship brand, which has reported falling quarterly sales since 2014. —

 ?? Reuters ?? abercrombi­e & Fitch ended talks for a potential sale. —
Reuters abercrombi­e & Fitch ended talks for a potential sale. —

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