The FTC Lays Out Its Case Against Tapestry’s $8.5B Buyout of Capri

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Fashion has entered a new dealmaking phase.

While antitrust regulators have always been a kind of distant concern as two big companies sought to combine, there were rarely any serious worries that Washington would step in and try to block a buyout.

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But after years of consolidation in fashion, that has now changed with the Federal Trade Commission’s suit to nix Tapestry Inc.’s $8.5 billion acquisition of Capri Holdings.

The complicated process of deciding whether or not a company is leaning toward monopoly requires that the FTC look to see if a company dominates the market it operates in. At least in fashion, the thinking has long been that there is enough competition to protect consumers.

As Joanne Crevoiserat, chief executive officer of Tapestry and the deal’s architect, told WWD on Monday: “Consumers are fully in charge here and if we don’t deliver innovation that they value, they have other choices.”

Joanne C. Crevoiserat
Joanne C. Crevoiserat

After poring over the details of the deal and internal documents from both companies, regulators are arguing otherwise. And they said they see danger in bringing together Tapestry’s Coach, Kate Spade and Stuart Weitzman brands with Capri’s portfolio of Michael Kors, Versace and Jimmy Choo.

“With Tapestry’s acquisition of Michael Kors, the closest competitor of Coach and Kate Spade, consumers will lose the benefit of head-to-head competition on price, discounts and promotions, innovation, design, marketing and employee wages and workplace benefits,” the FTC said in its suit, filed in Manhattan federal court.

It’s a suit that hits right to the heart of the idea of “accessible luxury,” a category that Coach is given credit for inventing.

“Today both companies compete on everything from clothing to eyewear to shoes,” the suit said. “But where Coach, Kate Spade and Michael Kors most fiercely compete, and where they boast eye-popping market shares, are in handbags — specifically, ‘accessible luxury’ handbags — where the parties offer high-quality products purchased by tens of millions of Americans.”

The suit also puts industry consolidation under the microscope and under the scrutiny of new antitrust regulations that were established last year.

“The proposed acquisition is also part of Tapestry’s pattern and strategy of serial acquisitions,” the FTC said. “The merger guidelines state that a ‘firm that engages in an anticompetitive pattern or strategy of multiple acquisitions in the same or related business lines may violate Section 7.’ The proposed acquisition builds on a deliberative, decade-long M&A strategy by Tapestry — and is just one in a string of acquisitions for Tapestry to achieve its goal to become the major American fashion conglomerate.”