Hollywood loves Azzas 2154. Brazilian investors do not.
Meryl Streep wore the brand's black heels to "The Devil Wears Prada 2." Sarah Jessica Parker fronted its latest winter ads.
And Justin Bieber turned up in a wild puffer.
But the stock is down 60% since the 2024 merger that made the firm.
The Backstory On A Bad Marriage
Azzas was born when two Brazilian fashion firms joined up. Alexandre Birman's Arezzo, known for shoes, merged with Roberto Jatahy's Grupo Soma.
Soma owns dresses, sports wear, and baby clothes. The deal brought more than 30 brands under one roof.
The pitch was simple. One mega-group could fight global names and cross-sell across styles.
The reality has been messy. Birman and Jatahy run their firms in very different ways.
Sharing control has not worked.
Their fight spilled into the open last week. The two ended up in a legal spat over how to run the firm.
At least nine top execs have left in the past two years.
The market now values Azzas at less than half of its peak. The market cap sits below R$5 billion.
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Now They Are Talking About A Breakup
Per Brazilian outlet O Globo, Azzas hired Itaú to look at a split. Itaú is the country's biggest private bank.
A split would undo the 2024 merger.
Wall Street has seen this script. Firms merge for synergies, fail to deliver, and unwind the deal years later at a big loss for shareholders.
For people who bought at the peak, it is a long ride down before things turn good.
The brand on the runway is still hot. The firm that owns the brand is not.
The deeper risk for Azzas is brand drift. Big fashion groups work best when each brand has its own clear voice.
When the leaders are fighting, that voice gets muddy.
Bigger fashion peers like LVMH have spent years showing how to run a group of brands well.
They give each brand its own boss and let each one grow on its own terms.
Azzas tried to run more than 30 brands with a split top. It has not worked.
What To Watch
If Itaú lands on a split, the next big question is which side keeps the celeb deals. The other side gets to keep the cash flow.
Right now neither one is locked in. Both sides will fight for both.
A breakup at the celeb end of Brazilian fashion is the rare market story that walks the red carpet.
For now, the brands keep showing up on big stars. The stock keeps falling.
Until the founders find a fix or sign off on a split, that gap will stay wide. And the longer it stays open, the harder the firm will be to fix.
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