Signage at an Anta Sports activities Merchandise Ltd. pop-up retailer in Beijing, China, on Saturday, Aug. 24, 2024. Anta is scheduled to launch earnings outcomes on Aug. 27.
Na Bian | Bloomberg | Getty Photos
Shares of Puma surged Tuesday after China’s Anta Sports activities stated it will purchase a 29% from the French billionaire Pinault household, because the German sportswear firm works to show itself round amid struggling gross sales and model momentum.
Anta pays 1.5 billion euros ($1.78 billion), or 35 euros per share, to take a 29.06% stake in Puma and change into the most important shareholder within the firm.
The deal would make Anta Puma’s largest shareholder, nevertheless, Anta stated it has “no present plans” to make a takeover supply, which might be required underneath German securities legal guidelines at 30% possession.
Puma shares rose as a lot as 20% in early buying and selling however later pared positive factors. The inventory was final seen buying and selling 9.4% greater at 23.7 euros, however continues to be buying and selling near its 10-year low.
The deal, which is anticipated to shut by the tip of the 12 months and topic to regulatory approvals, comes as Puma has struggled to revive gross sales and comply with by way of on a enterprise overhaul after Arthur Hoeld, a former Adidas govt, took the reins final 12 months.
It may additionally assist Hong Kong-listed Anta improve its world footprint.
Anta has a observe file of increasing world footprints by buying and revamping Western sports activities and way of life manufacturers. In 2019, it led a consortium to accumulate Amer Sports activities, whose portfolio options Wilson, Arc’teryx, Salomon and Atomic. The Puma deal additional underpins Anta’s world growth and multi-brand progress technique, stated Metzler analyst Felix Dennl, including that the market will probably view the funding as a lift to Puma’s ongoing turnaround efforts.
Hoeld’s turnaround plan has up to now concerned slicing jobs, narrowing the agency’s product vary, and enhancing advertising and marketing operations, and the corporate referred to 2025 as a “12 months of reset.”
The 1.5 billion-euro valuation seems “cheap” in comparison with peer multiples within the sportswear sector, significantly given Puma’s present “loss-making standing,” stated Melinda Hu, China shopper analyst at Bernstein.
“Anta is actually shopping for a model with deep heritage and traditionally robust merchandise at a distressed valuation,” Hu added.
The deal builds on Anta’s efforts to increase its foothold outdoors of China, the place it has confronted rising competitors from the likes of Nike and Adidas. By leveraging Puma’s heritage, Anta may diversify into a brand new product class and markets the place it has not established a robust foothold, Hu stated.
“Puma fills the mass-market athletic footwear and sports activities way of life hole — a section positioned between Nike, Adidas and finances manufacturers,” stated Julia Zhu, companion and head of shopper retail at consultancy agency CIC.
Puma is powerful in Europe and Latin America however weak in China and North America, which creates “minimal overlap and most synergy potential,” Zhu added.
Puma
Puma’s shares got here underneath heavy stress final 12 months, falling almost 50%, in response to LSEG knowledge, as U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff coverage rattled traders and retailers grew nervous that tariffs may hit shopper demand. Coming into Tuesday buying and selling, Puma shares had fallen over 3% up to now this 12 months.
“This isn’t a takeover [as] Anta doesn’t have full management and Puma stays an impartial firm with its personal administration,” Hu famous. Reuters reported Tuesday that Anta administration crew stated they might converse to counterparts at Puma “very first thing this morning.”
World M&A rebound
The Anta-Puma deal additionally got here as world companies more and more reassess their dangers and returns, within the face of expertise disruptions, heightened geopolitical uncertainty, and trade consolidation.
“Corporations will make bolder strikes to double down on some elements of their world footprint and decrease publicity to much less favorable elements,” in response to a survey by Bain & Firm launched Tuesday. Greater than half of surveyed corporations had been making ready property on the market within the coming years, Bain stated, pushed by the need to sharpen enterprise focus, unencumber money, and capitalize on greater valuations in at this time’s market.
World dealmaking exercise has roared again into life since final 12 months, with deal worth surging 40% to $4.9 trillion, the second-highest deal worth on file, in response to Bain.
The consultancy expects world dealmaking momentum to maintain in 2026, citing easing geopolitical tensions and deeper capital swimming pools as non-public fairness and enterprise capital companies look to exit the rising backlog of property.
In the meantime, corporations “urgently must reinvent themselves to get out forward of the massive forces of expertise disruption, a post-globalization financial system, and shifting revenue swimming pools,” stated Suzanne Kumar, govt vice chairman of Bain’s world M&A and Divestitures apply.

