South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Dollar stores a path to global ambitions for MAV

- By Stefanie Marotta

The dollar store isn’t typically the first destinatio­n shoppers might think of for salon-quality shampoo, but the bargain retailers are part of one Canadian company’s global expansion.

MAV Beauty Brands, the personal-care company founded by celebrity hairstylis­t Marc Anthony Venere, began selling his namesake Marc Anthony line in the second-biggest U.S. dollar store chain in the second quarter just as the Concord, Ontario-based company geared up for its $185.5 million initial public offering in July.

The IPO was the culminatio­n of three decades in the beauty business for Venere, 49, who started cutting hair in his family’s salon in North York, Ontario, and included stints as a stylist to such stars as Eva Longoria. MAV added the millennial-focused Cake and plantbased Renpure lines with acquisitio­ns earlier this year.

Venerre was 18 and competing in the world hairdressi­ng championsh­ips in Germany when he realized he wanted to do more than run a salon. “I was watching these beautiful models walking down the runway and all I remember thinking is that one day I want to build a global company,” he said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Toronto office.

The dollar-store push gives MAV exposure to a large, diverse population where the retailers have become a beauty destinatio­n, according to Chief Revenue Officer Tim Bunch.

“They really do serve a great population of the consumer in the U.S.,” said Bunch, who grew up in a small farming town in Missouri where there was only one mass retailer but multiple dollar stores. Dollar Tree Inc., which includes more than 8,000 Family Dollar outlets, is the second-largest dollar store chain in the U.S.

With products in more than 25 countries and the addition of Cake and Renpure, Venere is focused on organic growth and cross selling in the short term, rather than further acquisitio­ns. Of its 47 U.S. retailers, 36 carry just one of MAV’s three brands — an expansion opportunit­y that could add $27.8 million in sales in the next three years, according to Canaccord Genuity analyst Camilo Lyon.

If MAV were to increase the distributi­on of all three of its brands, the bottomline impact would “far exceed our guidance,” Venere said. He thinks the time is right as consumers gravitate toward independen­t brands and “masstige” products -those with an upscale appeal at lower costs.

Lyon has price target of $17.01 for MAV, one of five buys from analysts who initiated coverage after the IPO. The company posted a net loss of $2.3 million for the second quarter on revenue of $17.7 million. Sales were up 148 percent from a year earlier, with a 34 percent boost from organic growth.

MAV is trying to maintain the independen­t, entreprene­urial culture of the companies it acquires to develop products that follow the street trends. Venere said he can get his products to market in as little as three to six months compared with the two to three-year timeline of bigger brands, he said.

Consumer goods companies are hot on the trail of the independen­t brand trend though. Last year, London-based Unilever acquired SheaMoistu­re’s parent company Sundial Brands. With large platform companies overseeing mul- tiple brands at once, they tend to slow innovation, Venere said.

“Innovation is the lifeblood of our company,” Venere said, adding that natural products are a trend that’s only getting bigger and taking over the beauty industry.

 ?? JACKIE DIVES/BLOOMBERG ?? Marc Anthony Venere, chief executive of MAV Beauty Brands who is using bargain retailers to expand.
JACKIE DIVES/BLOOMBERG Marc Anthony Venere, chief executive of MAV Beauty Brands who is using bargain retailers to expand.

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