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- Adidas is selling Reebok to Authentic Brands Group (owner of brands such as Nautica, Forever 21, Sports Illustrated).
- ABG will buy Reebok for $2.5 billion—that’s $1.3 billion less than what Adidas had paid to acquire Reebok.
- Reebok, a US-based brand, was bought over in 2005 by German-based Adidas, hoping to gain an edge in its competition with Nike.
- Reebok started in England in 1958 but was bought over by an American businessman in the 1980s.
- And then it became an iconic brand in the US—in 1982, it became the first company ever to produce a fitness shoe specifically for women (Freestyle sneaker).
- Focus on women and fashion-outside-fitness worked for the brand, and for a brief period in the 1980s, Reebok had a bigger market share than Nike.
- The brand focused on nonconformist individualism with campaigns such as UBU (you-be-you), and never promoted itself as a sports brand.
- Then in 1988-89, the earnings started to decline—realising that Nike had begun focusing on fashion, Reebok decided to enter Nike’s core strength, i.e., performance/fitness.
- It introduced the tech-infused Reebok Pump in 1989 and signed several basketball players over the years as its brand ambassadors.
- While the Pump was successful, it exposed Reebok’s confused thinking (is it sports or fashion?).
- Soon, Reebok got into other sports, and insiders later confirmed that the several decisions during the time were reactive and not well-thought through.
- Another problem was Reebok’s delay in getting into the apparel market that Nike and Adidas quickly dominated.
- Soon other players (Puma & Under Armour) gained prominence, and Reebok could never recover.
- COVID was especially hard on Reebok—sales plunged by around 20% in 2020, and Reebok contributed just 7% to the overall Adidas revenue (it contributed 25% in 2007).
- Experts believe that Adidas also couldn’t do much to sort Reebok’s sports-or-fashion identity problem.
- By 1988, Reebok had annual revenue of $1.8 billion, while Nike was at $1.2 billion.
- Today, Nike is at $40 billion while Reebok is around $2 billion.
Image courtesy of Grailify through Unsplash
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