Dick's Sporting Goods to buy struggling shoe chain Foot Locker for $2.4
billion
[May 16, 2025] By
MICHELLE CHAPMAN
Dick’s Sporting Goods is buying the struggling footwear chain Foot
Locker for about $2.4 billion, the second buyout of a major footwear
company in as many weeks as business leaders struggle with uncertainty
over U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs.
Dick’s said Thursday that it expects to run Foot Locker as a standalone
unit and keep the Foot Locker brands, which include Kids Foot Locker,
Champs Sports, WSS and Japanese sneaker brand atmos.
“Sports and sports culture continue to be incredibly powerful, and with
this acquisition, we’ll create a new global platform that serves those
ever evolving needs through iconic concepts consumers know and love,
enhanced store designs and omnichannel experiences, as well as a product
mix that appeals to our different customer bases," Dick's CEO Lauren
Hobart said in a statement.
Both companies are led by women. Hobart became CEO at Dick's in 2021,
while Mary Dillon has served as CEO of Foot Locker since 2022.
Foot Locker announced a turnaround plan in 2023 in part to help improve
its relationship with big brands. Speaking at the J.P. Morgan Retail
Round Up Conference last month, Dillon said that Foot Locker is working
closely with Nike, specifically in categories including basketball,
sneaker culture and kids.
Earlier this month Skechers announced that it was being taken private by
the investment firm by 3G Capital in a transaction worth more than $9
billion.

The retail industry has been growing increasingly concerned over Trump’s
trade war with other countries, particularly China. Athletic shoe makers
have invested heavily in production in Asia.
Shares of sporting goods and athletic shoe companies have been under
pressure all year. Foot Locker's stock has plunged 41% this year. It is
also facing pressure elsewhere, with major athletic companies like Nike
and Adidas shifting their sales strategies.
Skechers had fallen almost 8% this year.
About 97% of the clothes and shoes purchased in the U.S. are imported,
predominantly from Asia, according to the American Apparel & Footwear
Association. Using factories overseas has kept labor costs down for U.S.
companies, but neither they nor their overseas suppliers are likely to
absorb price increases due to new tariffs.
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This photo taken Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2017, shows a Dick's Sporting
Goods sign at a store in Miami. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz, File)
 Foot Locker, based in New York City,
offers Dick's a lot of potential, namely its huge real estate
footprint, and would give the Pittsburgh company its first foothold
overseas.
Foot Locker has about 2,400 retail stores across 20 countries in
North America, Europe, Asia, Australia and New Zealand. It also has
a licensed store presence in Europe, the Middle East and Asia. The
company had global sales of $8 billion last year.
Jefferies analyst Jonathan Matuszewski said that about 33% of Foot
Locker's sales come from outside the United States. He anticipates
that the combined company would generate approximately 12% of sales
internationally on a pro forma basis.
The deal also broadens Dick’s customer base, with sneaker collectors
anxiously anticipating new drops from Foot Locker.
Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData, said in an emailed
statement that Foot Locker, which has a 4.3% share of the sporting
goods market, would give an immediate boost to Dick's.
“It would also give Dick’s substantially more bargaining power with
national brands, especially in the sneaker space,” he added.
Foot Locker shareholders can choose to receive either $24 in cash or
0.1168 shares of Dick’s common stock for each Foot Locker share that
they own.
Dick’s said that it anticipates closing on the Foot Locker deal in
the second half of the year. The transaction still needs approval
from Foot Locker shareholders.
Dick's stock dropped more than 10% before the market open, while
shares of Foot Locker surged more than 82%.
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