Luxury shoe maker Jimmy Choo is the go-to for celebrities looking to wear a pair of killer heels on the red carpet.
Now the British firm is going on a strut of its own, as its board puts the business up for sale.
Valued
at about £700m, analysts believe Jimmy Choo could attract attention
from rival luxury houses along with Chinese, Middle Eastern and Russian
buyers.
As well as shoes, Jimmy Choo produces a range of luxury goods, but has seen sales slow in recent years.
The move received backing from Jimmy Choo's main shareholder JAB Holdings, which said on Monday it was also prepared to offload Bally
, the Swiss heritage shoe and handbag-maker.
A sale would be the latest twist for Jimmy Choo, which started as a bespoke shoemaker in east London.
The firm was co-founded by Malaysian shoemaker Jimmy Choo, who
trained at the renowned Cordwainers Technical College in London, and
former Vogue journalist Tamara Mellon in 1996.
It quickly built up
a dedicated client list of musicians, actresses and royalty. The
Duchess of Cambridge is a fan of the British shoe designer, as is singer
Beyonce and Oscar winning actress Emma Stone.
But it has gone
through a number of different owners over the years. Ms Mellon and the
first of several different private equity suitors bought out Mr Choo in
2001.
Ten years later Ms Mellon left the business to launch her
own clothing line. In 2014, Jimmy Choo listed on the London Stock
Exchange, by which time JAB, owned by the German billionaire Reimann
family, was the main shareholder.
Supportive'
Jimmy Choo's shares hit a record high on news of the possible sale, rising more than 10% in London.
The firm said in a statement:
"The board of Jimmy Choo announces today that it has decided to conduct
a review of the various strategic options open to the company to
maximise value for its shareholders and it is seeking offers for the
company.
"Jimmy Choo has discussed the strategic review process
with its majority shareholder, JAB Luxury GmbH, and JAB Luxury has
confirmed that it is supportive of the process."
The fashion house said it had not received any bids yet and was also weighing other options.
JAB Luxury, which owns 68% of Jimmy Choo, said on Monday it backed the move.
But
JAB, also an investor in Krispy Kreme doughnuts and household goods
giant Reckitt Benckiser, added there was "no certainty that a sale"
would take place.
Over the years, Jimmy Choo, which has more than
150 stores worldwide, has moved into men's shoes and launched a wide
range of luxury goods, from handbags to sunglasses.
But its sales growth slowed to 2% in 2016 compared with 7% in 2015 and 12% in 2014, analysts at HSBC noted last month.
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