The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
LONDON, United Kingdom — Global Fashion Group (GFG), the emerging markets online fashion retailer set up by German e-commerce investor Rocket Internet and Sweden's Kinnevik, is planning a stock market flotation, a magazine reported on Thursday.
GFG has previously said a public listing is one option open to the firm, but has not given specific plans. Rocket Internet, which holds a 20 percent stake in GFG, declined to comment.
The German monthly Manager Magazin cited unidentified insiders as saying GFG had already mandated investment banks, including Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, to prepare for a possible listing in March, and the management team was meeting investors in London.
The market is seen as ripe for online fashion listings after the New York flotation of Farfetch in September that valued the luxury e-commerce player at over $5.8 billion.
Rocket Internet has listed a string of startups in recent years, including food groups Delivery Hero and HelloFresh, and online furniture retailers Home24 and Westwing.
GFG, which runs fashion sites in Russia, Latin America, Australasia and south-east Asia, on Tuesday reported third quarter sales rose 17 percent in constant currencies to €265 million ($303 million).
Its loss before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation narrowed to €21.3 million, and it had a cash position of €109 million at the end of the quarter.
GFG is seeking a valuation of €1.8-2.5 billion, Manager Magazin reported, above the 1.5 billion it was valued at on September 30 by Kinnevik, which holds a 35 percent stake.
By Emma Thomasson; editor: Mark Pottter
After three days of inspiring talks, guests closed out BoF’s gathering for big thinkers with a black tie gala followed by an intimate performance from Rita Ora — guest starring Billy Porter.
Photographer Misan Harriman, artists Rita Ora and Billy Porter and designer Diane von Furstenberg shared their experiences translating pain into art and impact.
Designers Jonathan Anderson and Diane von Furstenberg, actor-filmmaker Dan Levy, Uniqlo’s John C Jay and others spoke about the state of creation in an age of artificial intelligence and corporate mediocrity.
Generative AI is already changing fields such as design and marketing, and while it presents a number of very real threats, it also holds potential benefits for all of humanity.