Design maven Martha Stewart sells namesake company for $353M

Agence France-Presse

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Design maven Martha Stewart sells namesake company for $353M
Martha says the company has accepted the $6.15 a share, half-cash half-stocks offer from Sequential Brands Group

NEW YORK, USA– The company of Martha Stewart, whose suburban American Dream lifestyle and decor vision swept the US in the 1990s, announced Monday, June 22 it would be bought by a brand manager for $353 million.

Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia said it had accepted the $6.15 a share, half-cash half-stocks offer from Sequential Brands Group, which manages mainly clothing brands.

The two companies said that Stewart, 73, who founded the company in 1997 and remains a key shareholder, would stay on as chief creative officer.

After more than a week of rumors of the looming buyout offer, the boards of the two companies said they had approved the proposal.

“This is a transformational merger for Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, the company I founded in 1997. This merger is positioned to further the growth and expansion of the unique Martha home and lifestyle brand,” Stewart said in a statement.

“The Sequential team is smart, hardworking, and understands the power and limitless opportunity of the Martha Stewart brand and its formidable design, editorial and marketing teams.”

Sequential said the addition to its collection of brands, including Avia sports clothing, Ellen Tracy, and Linens ‘n Things, would increase its sales to $3.75 billion.

The sale comes as the homemaking brand built by Stewart from the 1980s on the back of best-selling decorating guides, cookbooks, and then wildly popular television shows, has frayed.

Stewart’s style vision and advice was turned into licensed products from 1997 with Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, which marketed everything from cake-decorating kits and kitchenware to Martha Stewart-branded wine, flooring and drapery.

The products were sold by major mass-market chains like Macy’s and Home Depot, and rode on the housing boom of the early 2000s, with company’s annual revenue hitting $328 million in 2007. The company’s shares soared, making Stewart a billionaire.

But sales have not recovered with the housing market since the 2008 economic crisis, falling from $231 million in 2010 to $142 million last year.

Her daily television talk show ended three years ago and the magazines that helped build her empire,  Martha Stewart Living and  Martha Stewart Weddings, were handed over to Meredith, another magazine publisher, last year. 

Stewart lost some of her own superstar cachet with aspiring homemakers in 2004 when she was jailed for five months in an insider trading scandal that cost her, for several years, her seat on the board of her company.

Her jail time was marked by stories of helping inmates in a West Virginia prison practice yoga, collecting wild salad greens and complaints over the food served. When her time was up she left the prison in style, by private jet.

Martha Stewart shareholders gave the Sequential offer a thumb’s down as less than expected Monday.

Rumors of a deal pushed the shares from $5.10 to $6.98 last week. On Monday they fell 12.8 percent to $6.10 on the New York Stock Exchange. – Rappler.com

 

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