
Le Coq Sportif: The bid backed by Xavier Niel and Teddy Riner 'hampered', according to their lawyers
The court is due to take a decision in a particularly electric climate surrounding a company that remains a modest player in world sport. The brand is still 75% owned by the Swiss company Airesis, which acquired it 20 years ago and has yet to unveil its annual results for 2024. At the end of the first half of 2024, Le Coq recorded sales of 82 million euros, up 30%, for a net loss of 18 million euros. In 2023, total sales were 121 million euros, with a loss of 28 million euros.
Yet the brand, which employs some 300 people and has a workshop in Romilly sur Seine near Troyes, is far more powerful than its sales would suggest, particularly in France. As a result, the French Ministry of the Economy has been keeping a close eye on the case, attracting a number of key players to the takeover. Since mid-May, both parties have been making a series of discreet announcements in an attempt to tip the balance in their favor.
The most likely bid is that of Franco-Swiss businessman Dan Mamane. Born in Toulon, the entrepreneur, as described in his profile in the Swiss media outlet Le Temps, moved to Switzerland at the age of 18 and graduated from HEC Lausanne. The Vaud-born entrepreneur built up his fortune in the electronics trade with the creation of his Powerdata group. He moved into retail in 2021, with the takeover and turnaround of Conforama Suisse, and earlier this year acquired the Ogier ski brand. At his side is former Fusalp CEO Alexandre Fauvet. Les Echos reports that Cédric Meston, head of Tupperware France, may also join the project. Although the details are not known, the fact that he would maintain jobs at the group's head office in Troyes would be a factor, as would the issue of receivables, which would limit the impact on local authority finances.
The second offer came from a consortium comprising French billionaire Xavier Niel, judoka Teddy Riner, investment company Neopar, American group Iconix, as well as the current boss of Airesis, parent company of Le Coq Sportif, Marc-Henri Beausire, and the Camuset family, founders of the brand.
In a five-page letter dated June 26 and addressed to the president of the court and the Paris public prosecutor - which AFP has obtained - the business law firm August Debouzy "requests the reopening of the debates within the framework of the examination of the draft recovery plans, in that the process followed to date has, in many respects, been vitiated by breaches of the fundamental principles governing collective proceedings."
"It appears that the plan presented by the consortium made up of Iconix, Neopar, Airesis and their partners, despite having been duly submitted within the prescribed deadlines, has been deliberately hindered, weakened and then effectively ousted from the examination process," asserts the firm, which denounces a "methodical obstruction by the court-appointed administrators."
According to August Debouzy, "the plan presented by the consortium was not rejected because of its economic or legal characteristics, but because the court-appointed administrators decided, from the very first weeks of the procedure, to make the plan supported by Mr. Mamane their own plan."
According to the takeover plan made public in May, the consortium is 51% owned by Neopar, an investment company specializing in "company turnarounds" and owned by the Poitrinal family, 26.5% by investors, and 22.5% by the American group Iconix.
The consortium had told AFP that it planned to contribute a total of 60 million euros, which would be "injected immediately" into the company.
With AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
4 hours ago
- France 24
No Grand Slam Track in 2026 till athletes paid for 2025: Johnson
Johnson admitted in a statement "we are struggling with our ability to compensate" athletes from the three meetings that took place in 2025 in Kingston, Jamaica, Miami and Philadelphia. The four-time Olympic sprint gold medallist said he had taken the decision to cancel the fourth and final meeting in Los Angeles "to avoid further losses and start the lengthy process of stabilising the company to get back on track. "But unfortunately, we saw circumstances change in ways beyond our control," he said. He added: "The 2026 season will not happen until those obligations are met -- and that is my #1 priority." Johnson launched Grand Slam as an alternative to the Diamond League series of international meetings with an important difference -- it would only feature track events and not field events.


France 24
5 hours ago
- France 24
Lyles hints at hitting Olympic form before Thompson re-match
Lyles won a thrilling race at the Stade de France just over a year ago by the narrowest of margins and went on to claim bronze in the 200m when suffering from Covid. For the first time since that Olympic 100m final, the self-proclaimed showman will on Saturday come face to face with Kishane Thompson, the 24-year-old Jamaican he pipped by just five-thousandths of a second in Paris. "The 100m is obviously the glory race, it's obviously the one that gets you the most attention," Lyles said on Friday ahead of the Silesia Diamond League meet in the Polish city of Chorzow. "I can say that if I'd won the 200m and lost the 100 it wouldn't have hit the same going back to the US for sure and probably even in the world it'd be a lot different." Lyles played down the fact that he had not met Thompson since that balmy night in the French capital. "Personally, I wanted to just do a one-on-one race in Jamaica," he said. "I thought that would have just been amazing, me and Kishane right next to each other, lane by lane, just us two duking it out. "I feel like we could have sold out the crowd for sure, I thought that would have been a lot of fun." Instead, the duo will face off in Poland with Lyles describing his run-in to the September 13-21 world championships in Tokyo as "the most important races of the year". "These are the biggest competitions, at high levels. This is literally prepping myself to say, 'This is what it's going to be like, if not more intense, as I get closer to Tokyo'. "I need to get in that frame of mind. So I need to be in those situations." Lyles said he was rounding into form: "The results I've seen in practice have shown that I'm exactly where I was last year, or heading in the same direction as I was last year, if not better." The 28-year-old American predicted a fast race on Saturday, with a quartet of tried and tested US teammates in the shape of Kenny Bednarek, Christian Coleman, Lindsey Courtney and Trayvon Bromell, as well as South African Akani Simbine in the field. "You basically have the Olympic final maybe missing two people, but adding in some just-as-fast people," Lyles said. "Having Kishane there makes it even better. It's going to be a moment that everyone's looking at their calendar, saying 'OK this is what I'm basing my world championships picks off'." Lyles, however, was in no doubt about who was the biggest draw. "I'm going to just put it like this: there are definitely races that have Noah and there are races that don't have Noah and I've watched the numbers for races that don't have me and they don't do very well," he said. "You watch the races with me and you're like, 'Oh wow yeah there's a lot more viewership'. I'm not saying I'm the face of the sport, I'm just saying that there's a lot more interest when I run it. "A showman, a rock star, yes that's a very good way to describe how I like to view myself when I go into a track meet and how I want to interact with the crowd."


Fashion Network
5 hours ago
- Fashion Network
Why Swatch is facing tough times
The Swatch brand is credited with having saved a Swiss watch industry that had been laid low by the so-called quartz revolution. Back in the 1970s and 1980s, these less expensive and more accurate watches from an ascendant Japan upended European mechanical watchmaking. Swatch's response? Tap into the '80s zeitgeist with colourful, low-priced designs—funky, artistic, eclectic and made for collectors along with a whole new demographic that saw them as fashion, not function. Swatch used its skyrocketing revenue to support its more staid, traditional brands while acquiring new ones. But fast forward to today, and the market's changed: phones and smartwatches have undercut low-cost watches, leaving luxury as the main engine for growth. And a new set of problems, from low sales in China to Donald Trump 's tariffs, have made matters even worse. The luxury spending slowdown in China has hurt all brands, but Swatch got hit more than most, given that 27% of its 2024 sales were attributable to the Asian nation. While the company said last month that sales data now show a possible turnaround, any recovery in China is expected to be slow. Meanwhile, Trump's radical imposition of a 39% tariff on imports from Switzerland puts high-end watch brands in a corner, since they can't raise prices much more in the current environment. Simultaneously, investors have been calling out Swatch, urging it to capitalise on the still-lucrative high-end segment. Steven Wood, founder and chief investment officer of New York-based GreenWood Investors, even mounted a campaign to win a seat on Swatch's board. He was defeated, but his intervention may underline the frustration among investors worried about the company's future. The Hayek family, which controls more than 40% of Swatch voting rights, has pushed back by saying it shouldn't just be making watches for the wealthy. To be sure, Swatch managed some mainstream success as recently as 2022, with the MoonSwatch. The quartz-driven timepiece leaned on the heritage and look of the Omega Speedmaster Moonwatch, an iconic watch worn on Apollo moon missions. Swatch sold more than a million of them that year, but it's struggled to generate the same sort of buzz across the rest of the group.