Fashion’s Dealmaking Dilemma: Few Buyers, Many Sellers

The deal market in fashion has been something like a secret and brutal game of musical chairs.

Last year’s rush of big-time consumer initial public offerings — from Warby Parker to Allbirds to Rent the Runway — has privately held brands looking to connect with a buyer and cash in as well. 

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But the music has stopped, for now, and sellers still far outnumber buyers.

WWD broke the news this month that Proenza Schouler, Khaite and A.L.C. have all tested the market or are still looking today. Outdoor Voices was likewise said to be considering a sale, according to a Bloomberg report. The company did not immediately return queries on Monday.

Also said to be out in the market are Ganni, Isabel Marant and others, while the very strong and high-profile are most likely to connect with potential buyers at least willing to listen, as Tom Ford seems to have done through its reported talks with the Estée Lauder Cos. Inc., the brand’s beauty licensee. Ford is said to be looking for a deal that would value the company at about $3 billion.

But being a promising brand in apparel isn’t enough — sellers also have to find the right buyer.

Veronica Beard, for instance, is said to have gently tested the buyout market earlier this year but ultimately withdrew, finding no ready buyer willing to pay up for a brand of scale that’s growing.

That has the company biding its time, looking to keep growing and keeping an eye on the IPO market down the line, according to a source. 

A Veronica Beard representative declined to comment, but that would put the brand as part of the next wave of fashion IPOs — whenever Wall Street is willing to take a look at the industry again. There are others waiting and watching to go public as well, particularly Rihanna’s Savage x Fenty.

But those not quite ready for the klieg lights on Wall Street are in a tough spot — they have to prove themselves in uncertain times to a small set of potential buyers. 

“There’s been a renewed focus on sustainable profitability,” said David Munczinski, principal at investor Firelight Capital Partners. “There are deals that will get done before the end of the year, but I think the valuation, the multiple of [earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization] will reflect the uncertainty in where 2023 is going.

“What you’re seeing now is widespread recognition among investors, especially in the direct-to-consumer space, that sales through COVID[-19] — the online sales, the marketplace sales, the wholesale sales done online — are unsustainable,” Munczinski said. “There really was a COVID[-19] bump.”