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Shein Just Bought Everlane For $100 Million. Five Years Ago It Was Worth $600 Million

Published Jun 20, 2026
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Summary:
  • Shein acquired Everlane for around $100 million, confirmed by Everlane CEO Alfred Chang in a letter to employees in May 2026.
  • Everlane was valued at roughly $600 million in 2020 during an $85 million round led by L Catterton.
  • Everlane had accumulated about $90 million in debt heading into the deal, and the $100 million price effectively covered the debt with no payout to common shareholders.

Everlane was the millennial brand that promised radical transparency: published factory photos, itemized markups, and a whole identity built on knowing exactly what you were buying and from whom. It just got bought by Shein for less than its outstanding debt.

How Everlane Got Here

Founder Michael Preysman launched Everlane in 2011, and by 2020 L Catterton led an $85 million round that valued the brand at roughly $600 million. That was the peak.

The same year, the brand's positioning started cracking after layoffs hit days after employees petitioned to unionize, drawing public condemnation from Bernie Sanders. Months later, former employees released a document alleging a toxic workplace and systemic anti-Black racism inside the company.

Revenue, once estimated near $200 million a year, drifted toward $170 million heading into 2026. Debt climbed to around $90 million, including a $65 million revolving credit facility and a $25 million term loan from Gordon Brothers.

When L Catterton moved to exit, the $100 million sale price did one thing - clear the debt. Common stockholders got nothing.

Get the kind of breakdown on retail deals like this one in Market Briefs - five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass thrown in when you join.

What Shein Is Buying

Shein already has scale. What it doesn't have is Western brand trust, after years of labor and supply-chain criticism that made it a tough sell to higher-income U.S. shoppers and a target for regulators.

Buying a California-based brand built on sustainability messaging doesn't fix that overnight, but it gives Shein something it couldn't manufacture on its own: a brand consumers already trust, sitting one tier above its own price point.

This is the same playbook Shein used with its 2023 Forever 21 partnership and earlier purchase of UK-based Missguided. Acquire the trust. Skip the work of building it.

What To Watch

Chang told Everlane employees the brand will continue as an "independent subsidiary." How long that lasts is the real question, given Shein's last two acquisitions both ended up looking a lot more like Shein within a year of closing.

The bigger story sits one level up: AI capex is sucking up consumer attention and investor capital while values-based DTC brands are quietly being sold off for parts.

Want more reads on deals that quietly reshape entire industries? Join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - you also get a free 45-minute course on finding investments as a sign-up bonus.

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