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Peloton is looking for a major company like Apple or Amazon to buy a stake of around 20 percent in its business in an effort to improve the company's fortunes amid dwindling demand for its products and fierce competition from services like Apple Fitness+, according to a report from Bloomberg.

peloton-tv-workout-cardio.jpeg

Sources believed to be familiar with the matter speaking to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman and Ed Hammond claim that Peloton is seeking a big-name corporation or private equity firm that could help to validate Peloton's business in a show of confidence with a significant investment. The company is reportedly already contacting potential buyers, but the process remains at an early stage.

Following months of bleak news about Peloton's "precarious state" as demand for the company's products has dried up, including the revelation that it had halted production of its bikes and treadmills, Apple was floated as a potential buyer of the troubled fitness business at the start of this year.

In January, it emerged that Peloton was temporarily stopping production of its connected fitness products for up to six months due to a "significant reduction" in consumer demand, a pressing need to control costs, and amplified competitor activity. As a business, Peloton has high customer acquisition costs, translating to high product pricing. Toward the end of last year, the company reduced the price of its entry-level bike by almost 20 percent to $1,495 in an attempt to drive up sales through the end of 2021. It then emerged that the company was planning to lay off 41 percent of its sales and marketing staff.

The company's fiscal forecasts did not take into account new delivery and setup fees between $250 and $350 that customers had to pay on top of the cost of the Bike or Tread. In addition, Peloton saw low email capture rates for its $495 strength training product, "Peloton Guide," and has struggled to rekindle momentum after heightened interest in its products during lockdowns in 2020 stalled. There are also indications that Peloton is losing market share in the connected fitness industry.

Peloton CEO John Foley said that the company is "taking significant corrective actions to improve our profitability outlook and optimize our costs." The Information reported that Peloton's production halt and the precarious state of its business looks like a prelude to an acquisition by a bigger company, positing that Apple is the ideal candidate to buy Peloton:
If Peloton is to have a future, it would be better off as part of a bigger, more diversified company. Apple is an ideal candidate to take on that project. It has the Fitness+ subscription service for classes and it markets the Apple Watch as a device that can help with jogging and other exercise activities. It could close Peloton's stores and sell the equipment through its own stores. And hey, after today, Peloton's market capitalization is down to $7.9 billion. Cook could pay for that by dipping into the change jar in his kitchen.

The idea of Apple acquiring Peloton then gathered steam among some market observers, with the possibility being weighed up by The Motley Fool, Inc., and more. Even so, Apple has expressed no interest in acquiring Peloton or buying a stake in the company.

It is highly unlikely that a company like Apple could acquire Peloton's entire business by aggressive means since Peloton co-founder John Foley is part of a group that controls the company with super-voting stock, while CEO Barry McCarthy has said that this sort of deal is not his wish.

Currently, Peloton's main goal appears to be to obtain a single, significant investment from a well-known backer, rather than be acquired in its entirety. Receiving a major new supporter like Apple or Amazon could help to calm panicked investors, but the news that the company was seeking further investment caused Peloton shares to fall further this week. The stock is already down around 80 percent over the past year.

Apple may also be disinterested in any stake in Peloton due to possessing its own connected fitness brand, Apple Fitness+. Analyst Neil Cybart previously highlighted how Peloton is actively threatened by Apple Fitness+, not least because it is considerably cheaper, costing up to $388.01 less annually for digital classes alone. Cybart cautioned that without major changes in 2022, "Peloton is on track to be a Fitbit 2.0 - a company unable to compete with the giants subsidizing health and fitness tracking as an ecosystem feature." Peloton will report its latest quarterly earnings next week.

Article Link: Peloton Looking for Investor Like Apple to Buy 20% of Company
 
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zubikov

macrumors 6502
Sep 3, 2014
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Translation: give us your money, and your untarnished brand, and we'll maybe give you a board seat but give up no control.

Lol, no!

How about this...the CEO can keep buying houses in the Hamptons while throwing parties only for models and trainers, while the rest of the company stays alienated and lost. This way you'll bleed out all the cash and equity, and Apple, Amazon, Google or someone else can just buy you for pennies on the dollar.
 

icanhazmac

Contributor
Apr 11, 2018
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Waste of money now, perhaps they should have looked for a partner before completely ruining their reputation. Just wait until they fold and buy the scraps for pennies.
 

Floop

macrumors regular
Jan 14, 2003
182
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I have a Peloton bike, and enjoy using it and the classes... so it's a bit worrying.

I got a substantial discount on the purchase, which is fortunate because I think the purchase price is too high and I wouldn't have purchased without that discount; furthermore the ongoing monthly subscription is also too high, but I'm fortunate enough to be able to justify it. Many other potential customers are no doubt turned off by the high price.

I'd be fine if Apple acquired part/all of it but question whether this will ever happen, particularly given that the bike screen is essentially a massive Android tablet. I don't see that point going over well at Apple...
 

PBG4 Dude

macrumors 601
Jul 6, 2007
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Why would Apple only buy 20% of the company? If they are interested they would surely just acquire it.
Apple has invested in companies before without totally buying them out. Examples include Acorn Computer (now ARM), Akamai, and a $150M investment in Samsung in 1997 to bring down the cost of LCD panels.

Edit: this post is not to say a partial investment in Peloton would be a good idea, just that Apple has done partial investments in the past.
 
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LeeW

macrumors 601
Feb 5, 2017
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Apple would only either buy it all or let it die and then mop up with their own equipment. Does not make sense to just go in at 20% for them.
 

GLS

macrumors 6502a
Jun 26, 2010
561
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Sigh.

I bought a bike 4 months ago. In my adulthood, it is, without a doubt, the single most important thing exercise wise I've ever done for myself. Nothing appealed to me. But after months of research, reading reviews, watching videos, etc I jumped in, ordered a bike right after Christmas, received it...and I've done 150 classes since. I've also lost almost 20 lbs, feel better, well, you get the idea.

And now, it's highly possible the company is not long for this Earth. Their content blows away Apple fitness, their bike is high quality (can't speak of their treadmill, since I don't have one), and their interactive features are well designed and engineered. They literally have the entire package, right now, today.

But their stupid ass founder literally set piles of money on fire and now, they have nothing to show for it other than a gloomy future.
 

sparkinstx

macrumors 6502a
Nov 1, 2017
573
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There's only so much of a market for $1500 stationary bikes, and the delivery and setup fees are ridiculous. They've probably already hit their saturation point, as far as the hardware goes. They're just looking for a sugar daddy to keep the gravy train going. Apple could buy them out, but I don't think they'd want to have to support the existing screens under Apple Fitness.

Sadly (for Peloton and its customers), I think Peloton will be dead by the end of 2023 - maybe by the end of this year.
 
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