The move comes three months after U.S. insurance company
MetLife Inc dropped the Peanuts characters it had been using as
mascots for more than 30 years - a blow to debt-burdened Iconix.
The characters, which include Lucy, Peppermint Patty and Pigpen,
have attracted the interest of Chinese companies as well as
other investors keen to snap up U.S. media and licensing assets,
the people said this week.
Created by Charles Schulz and licensed in over 100 countries,
the characters generate about $30 million in 12-month earnings
before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, the
people added. They declined to comment on the expected deal
valuation.
Besides Peanuts, Iconix is also looking to sell its Strawberry
Shortcake brand, which is based on a character that rose to fame
in the 1980s as a doll for young girls, the people said. They
asked not to be identified because the matter is confidential.
The New York-based company is working with investment bank
Guggenheim Partners LLC on an auction process to sell the
brands, the people added, cautioning that there was no certainty
that any deal would occur.
Iconix, which has a market capitalization of $553 million, did
not respond to a request for comment, while Guggenheim declined
to comment.
While MetLife will stop flying blimps featuring Snoopy this
year, Peanuts has agreements with brands such as chocolate maker
Nestle SA <NESN.S>, stationary company Hallmark Cards Inc, and
retailer Zara, according to a regulatory filing by Iconix.
In 2015, Twenty-First Century Fox Inc released The Peanuts
Movie, which was nominated for a Golden Globe award and grossed
$246 million worldwide, according to Box Office Mojo, a website
that tracks the revenue that movies generate.
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Peanuts' largest international market is Japan, where a new Snoopy
museum opened last year, according to the Iconix filing. The company
renewed a long-standing contract to air the popular Peanuts holiday
TV specials on U.S. network ABC in 2014 for five years.
Initially called "Li'l Folks", the comic strip was renamed "Peanuts"
in 1950, when it became syndicated in seven newspapers, according to
the Charles M Schulz Museum website. Schulz passed away in 2000.
Iconix, which also owns clothing brand Joe Boxer and outdoor wear
brand London Fog, purchased an 80 percent stake in Peanuts in 2010
from U.S. media company E.W. Scripps Co <SSP.N> in a deal valued at
$175 million.
The remaining 20 percent in the company is owned by Charles M.
Schulz Creative Associates, which is controlled by the Schulz
family.
Iconix sold another flagship brand, the Sharper Image, last year to
its biggest licensee, ThreeSixty Group Inc, for $100 million. The
transaction was used to pay down some of Iconix's debt, which
totaled $1.29 billion as of the end of September.
Last year, Iconix said it would help develop and produce a new
animated series based on Strawberry Shortcake. Iconix acquired the
brand about two years ago for $105 million from greeting cards maker
American Greetings Corp.
(Reporting by Liana B. Baker in San Francisco and Jessica DiNapoli
in New York; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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