Zara Owner Inditex to Close All Stores in Venezuela, Local Partner Says

A man walks past a Zara retail store, with its shutters drawn, at a mall in Caracas September 30, 2014. (Reuters)
A man walks past a Zara retail store, with its shutters drawn, at a mall in Caracas September 30, 2014. (Reuters)
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Zara Owner Inditex to Close All Stores in Venezuela, Local Partner Says

A man walks past a Zara retail store, with its shutters drawn, at a mall in Caracas September 30, 2014. (Reuters)
A man walks past a Zara retail store, with its shutters drawn, at a mall in Caracas September 30, 2014. (Reuters)

Inditex, owner of brands including Zara, Bershka and Pull & Bear, will close all its stores in Venezuela in coming weeks as a deal between the retailer and its local partner Phoenix World Trade has come under review, a spokesperson for Phoenix World Trade said.

Phoenix World Trade, a company based in Panama and controlled by Venezuelan businessman Camilo Ibrahim, took over operation of Inditex stores in the South American country in 2007.

"Phoenix World Trade is re-evaluating the commercial presence of its franchised brands Zara, Bershka and Pull & Bear in Venezuela, to make it consistent with the new model of integration and digital transformation announced by Inditex," the company said in response to a Reuters request. "The five stores which remain open… will cease to operate in coming weeks".

Spanish group Inditex did not respond to Reuters' request for information about the closing measures.

The closures come as Inditex, the world's largest clothing retail group, scales back smaller outlets worldwide in favor of expanding flagship stores, with 1,200 closures expected by the end of 2021.

Up to 700 stores are due to close in Europe, as well as 100 in the Americas and 400 elsewhere in the world.

In at least three large Venezuelan malls, the spaces formerly occupied by Zara and Pull & Bear - another Inditex brand - are empty, said two local retail executives. Both spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to talk publicly about the decision.

In the capital, three stores have closed in May, according to Reuters witnesses. The Zara stores open until last week in Caracas were offering items from the spring collection.

Ibrahim became Inditex’ local partner in 2007 to assist in dealing with changing local regulations and keeping shelves stocked as socialist former President Hugo Chavez' government exerted tight control over the foreign-exchange market, and businesses needed approval from the government to buy the dollars needed to import clothing.

That occasionally left clothing stores empty as businesses struggled to obtain hard currency.

Despite the decision to shut Zara locations, Venezuelan businessmen are currently allowed to import goods and sell them at hard-currency prices, a break from years of price controls on many key items. Luxury stores known as bodegones, and coffee shops that advertise prices in dollars, have surged as part of a chaotic economic liberalization.

The white walls blocking the entrance of a closed Zara store in Caracas announce the upcoming opening of a store by the name of Lola, an unknown brand in the country. According to local sources, Ibrahim's group will reopen those stores, without the commercial agreement with Inditex.



Skechers to Be Taken Private for $9.42 Billion in Biggest Footwear Industry Deal

The outside of a Skechers shoe store is seen at Times Square in New York May 2, 2014. (Reuters)
The outside of a Skechers shoe store is seen at Times Square in New York May 2, 2014. (Reuters)
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Skechers to Be Taken Private for $9.42 Billion in Biggest Footwear Industry Deal

The outside of a Skechers shoe store is seen at Times Square in New York May 2, 2014. (Reuters)
The outside of a Skechers shoe store is seen at Times Square in New York May 2, 2014. (Reuters)

Skechers has agreed to be taken private by 3G Capital for $9.42 billion in the footwear industry's biggest buyout to date, at a time when the company grapples with the impact of steep US tariffs.

Investment firm 3G Capital has offered $63 per Skechers share in cash, the footwear brand said on Monday. That represents a 28% premium to the stock's Friday close, according to Reuters calculations.

Its shares jumped 25% to $61.86 on the day, after dropping nearly 30% this year as the company withdrew its annual results forecast in April and warned of the fallout from President Donald Trump's 145% import tariff on Chinese goods.

China accounts for a bulk of imports for the brand's US business.

Skechers, alongside Nike and Adidas America, were among the companies that signed a letter from the Footwear Distributors and Retailers of America (FDRA) urging President Trump to exempt shoes from reciprocal tariffs.

American shoppers are pulling back on spending to brace for potentially higher prices due to tariffs, leading to lackluster quarterly results from several consumer-facing companies including McDonald's and Harley-Davidson .

Founded in 1992, California-based Skechers is among the world's largest footwear brands, popular for its casual athletic styles such as the "Chrome Dome" shoe. It went public in 1999 for $11 a share and logged a revenue of $8.97 billion in 2024.

Needham analyst Tom Nikic said the deal talks may have been accelerated by the volatile macro environment - driven by tariffs, weakening consumer sentiment and troubled China-US relations - and the company may have wished to navigate these challenges without being under Wall Street's scrutiny.

The deal is "very surprising" as Skechers has always been viewed as a "family business", with the founding Greenberg family highly involved in the operations, he said.

Sources told Reuters Skechers was not running an auction and the deal was bilateral as 3G Capital has had a long relationship with the Greenbergs.

CEO and founder Robert Greenberg will continue to helm the firm, while president Michael Greenberg and operating chief David Weinberg would also retain their roles.

Buyout firm 3G Capital, controlled by Brazilian billionaire financier Jorge Paulo Lemann, is best known for its investments in the food and drinks sector through companies such as Kraft Heinz.

The Skechers deal is expected to close in the third quarter of 2025 and will be financed through a combination of cash provided by 3G Capital as well as debt financing that has been committed by JPMorgan Chase Bank.