Entertainment

Adidas plans to sell Yeezy stock from axed Kanye West deal and donate proceeds

Adidas has decided to try to sell some of the Yeezy stock it has in storage after it terminated its partnership with the musician.
Adidas has decided to try to sell some of the Yeezy stock it has in storage after it terminated its partnership with the musician. Adidas has decided to try to sell some of the Yeezy stock it has in storage after it terminated its partnership with the musician.

Adidas plans to sell trainers from its axed partnership with the US rapper Kanye West and donate some of the money to charity.

The German sportswear giant announced it was ending production of Yeezy branded products with “immediate effect” at the end of October after West made antisemitic remarks on social media and in interviews.

Cutting ties with West’s popular trainer brand reportedly cost Adidas some £351 million in lost sales in the first three months of this year.

The company has said the break-up could reduce its earnings by £439 million in the coming year and it reportedly has some £1.05 billion worth of unsold Yeezy shoes in storage.

Vogue Festival – London
Vogue Festival – London Adidas cut ties with Kanye West in October 2022 (Jonathan Brady/PA)

At Adidas’s annual general meeting in Fuerth, Germany, on Thursday, its chief executive Bjorn Gulden said destroying Yeezy stock is not the answer.

In a translated version of his comments provided by Adidas, Mr Gulden said: “For the last four months we have been trying to find solutions on what to do with it.

“Burning the goods is not the solution.

“Now, talking to all the NGOs, and a lot of organisations that have been hurt by Kanye, they all say, no, that’s not the solution.

“What we are trying to do now over time is to sell parts of this inventory and donate money to the organisations that are helping us and that were also hurt by Kanye’s statements.

“When we will do that and how we will do that is not clear yet, but we are working on those things.

“But I think burning the products is not the point.

“And we will update you as soon as that decision is made.”

The company previously condemned West’s antisemitic comments as “unacceptable, hateful and dangerous”.

Earlier this month, Mr Gulden said that losing the Yeezy brand “is of course hurting us”, after Adidas’s break-up with Yeezy contributed to the firm’s first annual loss in 31 years.

West now goes by the name “Ye” after legally changing it.