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Michael Kors Is Close to Buying Versace for $2 Billion

Deal may be announced this week valuing Versace at $2 billion.

Michael Kors Is Close to Buying Versace for $2 Billion
A woman shopper walks past a Versace store in the Dubai Mall which is owned by Emaar Properties PJSC in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (Photographer: Andrew Parsons/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Handbag maker Michael Kors Holdings Ltd. is nearing an agreement to buy Gianni Versace SpA after the Italian fashion house known for its baroque designs drew interest from several suitors, people familiar with the plans said.

Michael Kors may announce a deal as early as this week that values Versace at about $2 billion, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the discussions are private. Donatella Versace, who has helped run the company with her brother Santo Versace since the murder of their sibling Gianni in 1997, has called a meeting with employees Tuesday to announce the sale, according to two people familiar with the situation. Kors shares slumped the most since May.

Michael Kors Is Close to Buying Versace for $2 Billion

Blackstone Group LP owns 20 percent of Versace, which sells leopard-print sweatshirts for 2,100 euros ($2,470) and 995-euro tartan-covered sneakers. The private equity firm plans to sell its stake in the deal, according to a person familiar with the situation.

A representative for Versace declined to comment on the potential transaction. Michael Kors couldn’t immediately be reached. A spokesman for Blackstone had no comment. While talks are advanced, no final agreements have been reached, the people said.

London-based Kors last year snapped up shoemaker Jimmy Choo Plc for about 896 million pounds ($1.2 billion), expanding beyond its namesake brand. Now, it’s vying with Coach owner Tapestry Inc. to build a U.S.-based multibrand fashion empire along the lines of Paris-based conglomerates LVMH and Kering SA.

Michael Kors Is Close to Buying Versace for $2 Billion

Kors, whose shares are listed in New York, alarmed investors earlier this year when it reported a decline in retail sales under its main brand in the Americas, even as the smaller European and Asian markets fared better. The shares had recovered since then, trading 15 percent higher for the year through the end of last week, with Choo boosting the latest quarterly results.

But word that a deal is close sent Kors shares down almost 9 percent to as low as $66.33 in New York Monday, the biggest intraday drop since May 30.

Versace, known for its flamboyant style and Medusa-head logo, hired Chief Executive Officer Jonathan Akeroyd in 2016 from Alexander McQueen. The company had been working toward an initial public offering, though market conditions haven’t allowed it to move ahead.

Versace Family

The Versace family, which owns 80 percent of the company, will continue to have a role under any agreement, the people familiar with the situation said. Donatella serves as creative director, while Santo is chairman.

Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera reported earlier that Versace could be sold this week for about $2 billion, with several groups interested including Kors and Tiffany & Co. LVMH, PVH Corp. and Tapestry also looked at Versace in recent months, according to a report on Sunday by Women’s Wear Daily.

Versace had revenue of 686 million euros and returned to profit in 2017, according to figures provided by the company. The brand has been at its most prominent in years since a hit show last September at Milan Fashion Week. In a tribute to Gianni, Donatella Versace brought back the most iconic looks from his collections spanning the 1990s, including silk blouses mixing leopard prints with images of baroque architecture. She closed the collection by walking the runway herself, arm-in-arm with 1990s models including Carla Bruni and Cindy Crawford.

--With assistance from William Mathis and Ben Stupples.

To contact the reporters on this story: Tommaso Ebhardt in Milan at tebhardt@bloomberg.net;Sarah Syed in London at ssyed35@bloomberg.net;Robert Williams in Paris at rwilliams323@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Eric Pfanner at epfanner1@bloomberg.net, Marthe Fourcade, Amy Thomson

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