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<<   作成日時 : 2007/10/17 18:33   >>

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NikeBauerいきなりですが、ホーケー関連のニュースとして Nike がアメリカでの販売不振によりホッケースケートから撤退すると10月9日に TheStar.com で報じられました。ホッケーは完全にブラインドでした、この影響がフィットネスにも波及するのか気がかりなところです。なお、Nike Bauer CEO からのメッセージは今まで以上に努力すると言う事のようで、Nike が退いても Bauer ブランドは残るようです。

From the CEO

September 20, 2007 5:35 PM
As you may have heard, Nike Inc. has decided to explore the sale of Nike Bauer Hockey. As this process unfolds, we want to assure you that we remain focused on delivering hockey's most innovative products and providing the industry's best service. Just as we've done for the past 80 years. We will also continue to create engaging marketing campaigns to build on the excitement that already exists around the Nike Bauer brand. You can look forward to new product launches like the Nike Bauer Vapor XXXX stick and others that you will hear about soon.

As our loyal consumers, we will keep you updated in the months ahead. We welcome your feedback and as always, thank you for the loyalty and support you have shown for Nike Bauer Hockey.

Mark Duggan
CEO, Nike Bauer Hockey
NIKE BAUER BLOG: From the CEO
NikeBauer: USA and Japan and Korea

Nike abandons hockey

Falling sales of hockey gear cause clothing giant to put NikeBauer on the block
by Rick Westhead :Staff reporter

Nike just couldn't do it.
Thirteen years after it skated into the hockey industry with its purchase of the world's largest hockey company, Nike is abandoning Canada's national game.

Last week, the iconic sports company whose simple swoosh logo is among the world's most recognized, said it was putting on the block its flagging hockey division, known as NikeBauer.

It wasn't supposed to be like this.

In 1994, the year Nike bought Montreal's Canstar Sports, maker of the popular Bauer skates and other equipment, hockey was surging.

PAUL HUNTER/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO
Leafs defenceman Pavel Kubina, right, sports a helmet made by NikeBauer, along with jersey with the Reebok logo.

The NHL had just added four expansion teams in the U.S. Sunbelt and relocated the Stars franchise to Dallas from Minnesota. Wayne Gretzky was starring for the Los Angeles Kings, and broadcaster ABC was airing NHL playoff games on U.S. network television for the first time since 1980.

Hockey's amateur and minor leagues were making similar strides.

By 1993-94, some 303,000 amateur players were registered with USA Hockey, the sport's governing body in the U.S., up 55 per cent from 1990-91. The sport had generated such a buzz that media company Walt Disney was even investing in hockey overseas, buying a stake in Russia's famed Central Army team.

"I remember (Nike CEO) Phil Knight saying at the time that hockey was North America's fourth-most culturally-significant sport," said John Collins, a former senior executive in Nike's hockey division. "He wanted in."

Nike would wind up paying a frothy $395 million (U.S.) for Canstar, a 50 per cent premium above the level its shares were trading in prior months.

Industry executives now say even though a number of suitors will probably emerge for NikeBauer, it's doubtful the division will sell for more than $150 million – less than half what Nike originally paid for it.

Nike said its hockey unit posted sales of about $160 million a year ago, and several industry officials said they estimate the division generated a profit of $20 million. (Sports-equipment companies these days are valued at roughly six or seven times their annual profits, executives say.)

While Nike maintains it's the leading company in the hockey equipment business with 35 per cent of a market some estimate is worth $480 million, several retailers, distributors and competitors said Nike has nevertheless struggled to navigate many obstacles during its tenure in the hockey business.

Nike initially viewed Canstar as a springboard into the rollerblade business, which was sizzling in the mid-1990s.

Canstar's Bauer brand had started selling in-line skates in 1990 and within two years, they accounted for a fifth of the company's $133 million in sales.

By 1994, at least 14 companies were battling for a piece of the $300 million in-line-skate market. One company, First Team Sports, signed up as pitchmen the likes of NHL stars Gretzky and Brett Hull and some in the industry predicted the in-line-skate market would blossom into a $1 billion business.

Rollerblade president John Hetterick said of Nike's purchase of Canstar: "Nike will ... help us get in-line speed skating and roller hockey into the Olympics. This sport will surpass ice hockey in a few years."

That's not what happened.

Within five years, sales of in-line skates were beginning to slip, and companies were either folding or looking to see off their rollerblade assets. (In 2004, the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association said there were 17 million in-line skaters, compared with 32 million in 1998.)

"It really went south," said Jim Rennie, who published Jim Rennie's Sports Letter, a widely read sporting goods newsletter, from 1977 to 2002.

"Skateboarding came on in popularity and they just marketed in-line skating wrong," Rennie said. "They were too focused on the extreme rollerblader who was doing jumps and everything, not the average skater."

It was no easier on the ice for Nike.

After buying Canstar, Nike decided to allow the Canadian company to operate independently. While Canstar factories churned out Bauer and Cooper branded skates, facilities in the U.S. and overseas produced a separate Nike line.

There were immediate setbacks.

Retailers were returning an inordinate number of skates to Nike because they didn't fit comfortably. The company's top NHL endorsement agent, Detroit Red Wings high-octane star forward Sergei Fedorov, reportedly cut ties with Nike over similar concerns.

Nike subsequently merged the two hockey divisions. Last year, it combined all of its hockey offerings under the NikeBauer brand.

NikeBauer president Mark Duggan said even though Nike may be quitting hockey, there's reason for optimism.

"We've done nothing wrong," Duggan said. "This company has never performed better. Some markets like Eastern Europe and Russia are positioned to grow," Duggan said, adding that because Russia will host the 2014 Winter Olympics, the country will probably try to bolster its amateur programs.

Ice Hockey Federation of Russia executive director Sergey Arutyunyan said in an interview there are roughly 200,000 players in his country's amateur program. Russian television shows about 300 games from the country's top pro hockey league, Arutyunyan said, and some teams have budgets of $60 million – more than some NHL clubs.

"The main obstacle is a poor number of ice rinks," he said. "However, this problem is actively being resolved."

Duggan also said that even though Reebok has an exclusive agreement to provide hockey jerseys to the NHL – a move that has dramatically bolstered its exposure – Nike has ties to some of the sport's top young stars, like Carolina Hurricanes star forward Eric Staal and his three brothers.

Still, Rennie is less sure about NikeBauer's prospects.

"The reality is hockey's a declining market in the U.S.," he said.

Indeed, USA Hockey figures show that in 2005-06, the most recent year for which statistics are available, there were 442,077 registered players in the U.S., down from 445,245 in 2004-05 – the second-straight year of decline.

By contrast, Hockey Canada had 545,363 registered players in 2006-07, down slightly from the previous year's 552,040.

One unlikely factor in hockey's drop-off in the U.S. may be aging baby boomers, Rennie said.

"Old-timers hockey is key to the business. If you're a dentist playing old-timers, you're going to spend money on good equipment."

Trouble is, many old-timer league players quit the sport for good when they reach their early 60s, Rennie said.

Firenzo Arcadi, who owns Toronto sporting goods store Toronto Hockey Repair Ltd., has another theory about why the hockey business has swooned.

"It's the $900 skate," Arcadi said, referring to NikeBauer's latest offering, a sleek silver, black and blue skate called the Supreme one90 that retails at some stores for $899.

"These companies like Nike are pricing themselves right out of the market," said Arcadi, whose store sells about $2.5 million worth of equipment each year, down from $3 million just four years ago.

"It's at a point where families are having to decide whether they want to pay a $1,100 mortgage or buy skates," he said.
TheStar.com: Nike abandons hockey or for Printing (Oct 09, 2007)

Nike が2億ドルで投資グループにBauerホッケーを売却。

Nike to sell Bauer hockey unit to investor group for $200 million

(February 21, 2008)
Nike Inc. said Thursday it will sell its Bauer Hockey unit to an investor group for $200 million (€136 million) in cash.

The group is led by investment company Kohlberg & Co. and Canadian businessman W. Graeme Roustan.

Nike announced in September that it was exploring the sale of the subsidiary.

The deal is expected to close by the end of the current fiscal year, but under the terms of the deal Bauer will keep using the Nike Bauer Hockey trademark on existing products for up to two years.

Nike has made several changes to its subsidiary lineup as part of an aggressive growth plan, such as selling Nike Bauer, the Starter brand and purchasing European soccer business Umbro PLC.

Nike said its subsidiaries contribute more than $2 billion (€1.36 billion) in annual revenue. Bauer brought in about $160 million in 2006.

"Selling this great hockey company was a tough decision, but one that was in the best interests of Nike and Bauer as we each look to maximize our respective growth opportunities," Nike President and CEO Mark Parker said in a statement Thursday.

Nike acquired Canstar Sports Inc., which included the Bauer brand, in 1995 for $395 million. At the time interest in hockey and in-line skating was surging, although the market later softened.

Nike had trouble securing its position in its Nike-brand hockey business and eventually consolidated the Nike brand and Bauer hockey business.

New Hampshire-based Nike Bauer Hockey is the top hockey manufacturer and continues to make and distribute hockey skates, apparel and equipment, as well as equipment for in-line skating and street and roller hockey.

The purchasers were not immediately available for comment.

Steve Jones, spokesman for Nike Bauer Hockey, said both buyers are "very passionate and know about the hockey industry," which would help the company put an emphasis on its core hockey business.

Kohlberg & Co. was formed by the senior founding partner of the private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. Roustan owns Roustan Arena Solutions, which designs, builds and supplies ice arenas and rinks.

The sale of Nike Bauer did draw the interest of a number of would-be buyers, including hockey legends Mario Lemieux and Wayne Gretzky, major competitors, private equity firms and investor groups, who expressed interest in buying Nike Bauer by filing letters of intent with Lazard, the investment bank handling the transaction.
International Herald Tribune: Nike to sell Bauer hockey unit to investor group for $200 million

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