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In 2006, the company bought Jibbitz, a company that produced accessories for Crocs shoes, and Fury, a lacrosse and hockey company that uses croslite material in its products.[2] Of note, Mr. Snyder, CEO, has estimated that stores offering Jibbitz sell 10% more shoes. Crocs went public in 2006, and the stock price escalated quickly from $50 to "split" at around $100 a share. A stock "split" occurs when shares double but does not change the market capitalization, all other things equal, and occurs usually when the stock's price has increased dramatically.
[edit] ManagementThe company is essentially the old Flextronics International (FLEX) team. FLEX is a mass producer of cheap plastic used to mass produce a wide area of commodity products, for example, the plastic casings on computers, mice, medical devices like Insulet (PODD), etc. The chairman of the board is Richard Sharp of Richmond, VA. Mr. Sharp has a long career as the person who took Circuit City Stores (CC) to the next level, introducing the concept of no haggle pricing on electronics. While at CC the concept of no haggle car buying was tested, and CARMAX (KMX) was born from its electronics retailer parent. In 2007 Mr. Sharp resigned as chairman at KMX and has been devoting more time to CROX. So in many ways CROX is run by a group of folks that can mass produce cheap plastic in a reliable form all around the globe.
[edit] Recent DevelopmentsIn the 3rd quarter of 2007, the CEO said at a UBS conference that international sales were to exceed US sales. It is worth noting that CROX only started selling internationally (in a significant way) only 12 months prior. The company can now produce over 4 million pairs of Crocs a month. Crocs funds all production and capacity additions with cash flow from operations. [edit] ProductsCrocs has a wide variety of new products.
To this point the primary accomplishment of Crocs is to have ultra successful uptake in test markets. The first time selling with college logos was in the 2006 NCAA football championship. The Ohio State lot was sold out in the first day, and it is cold in Ohio in the winter.
[edit] Legal ProceedingsCrocs has been in a legal battle with Wally's, a Maryland company who sold to footwear to people at boat shows who were on their feet all day long. While the croslite material came from a Canadian foam company, Wally's claims that the original design idea was theirs. [edit] References |
The Shelf
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