
After months of being pushed aside as chief executive officer by the board of
directors, John Foley, executive chairman/founder of Peloton, and Hisao Kushi, chief legal officer, are leaving the company.
This comes after a long period where the once-soaring fitness
company has witnessed dramatically declining financial results — including a steep drop in its stock price.
Many believe Peloton has now a limited upside. “They might not be able
to add members really much further than they are right now,” said Simeon Siegel, managing director of BMO Capital Market, on CNBC on Monday.
The positive is that its 2.3 million or so
subscribers love the product, even with the prospect of possible price increases for the service. That could make it a good acquisition target for the likes of ever bigger streaming and fitness
businesses. Amazon or Apple, anyone?
There is an advertisement for something.
There is an advertisement for something.
Big subscriber acquisition costs will be needed to move the needle, Siegel says — something that only much bigger major media and consumer product
companies may be able to handle.
Asked for his reaction for the future of Peloton and its stock, Guy Adami, director of advisor advocacy at Private Advisor Group and regular analyst on
CNBC’s “Fast Money,” said:
“Eddy Merckx could be CEO with Greg Lemond, and it’s going lower.” For those not familiar with the name Merckx, he added:
“You can Google that in a commercial break.”
Adami was right on the last point: How many Peloton subscribers have ever heard of this guy named Merckx — perhaps the greatest road
cyclist ever. Think Michael Jordan for basketball; think Babe Ruth for baseball.
Put it with the name of the town.
Peloton users might have an idea what a peloton is when it comes to
road cycling. For those who do not, it defines a big field of cyclists — perhaps 100 to 200 — racing close together to save energy, benefitting from drafting. The word “peloton” comes from the
French word “platoon.”
And Merckx? Perhaps the greatest road cyclist champion ever: Five Tour de France general classifications wins; five times the Giro d’ Italia champion. All this in
addition to countless one-day race wins — a massive 525 total victories in 18 years.
You couldn’t do any better with this association.
Still, core customers may
not be all that interested in the “sport” connection. For them it is about easy “fitness” access and workout classes. Peloton’s business grew dramatically during the pandemic, but then witnessed
an equally dramatic slow down.
Adami, however, was not finished — understanding that he had, in fact, broken new ground: “Doing this show a long time, that was first time ever Eddy
Merckx was mentioned [on this program]”. Or perhaps ever on CNBC?
If it is all about a tough cycling workout, riding metaphorically (or virtually) alongside big-time bike-racing icons
may be just the push to get over that hard climb — and sprinting to the finish line.
“Chapeau!” would be said by Merckx.