Stone House Capital Management filed a Schedule 13D Wednesday converting its Designer Brands position from passive to activist, sending the stock up 3.2% to $4.70 on volume nearly double the 30-day average. The filing marks the second footwear-retail activist conversion this quarter and arrives three weeks before Designer Brands reports Q4 earnings on March 18.
Designer Brands operates 700 stores across DSW, Camuto Group, and The Shoe Company banners with trailing revenue of $3.1B and a market capitalization now at $460M. Stone House had held a passive stake since June but filed the conversion without disclosing specific demands or board representation targets. The stock trades at 0.15x trailing sales and 5.2x forward earnings, well below the footwear specialty median of 0.42x and 9.1x respectively. Management has closed 140 underperforming locations since 2019 but comparable store sales declined 2.8% in Q3 with gross margin compression of 110 basis points.
The activist conversion matters because footwear retail sits at an inflection point between permanent channel shift and temporary margin pressure. Designer Brands carries $585M in net debt, roughly 1.9x trailing EBITDA, with $92M in annual interest expense consuming most operating income. Stone House specializes in operational turnarounds at sub-$1B market cap retailers, previously forcing divestitures at Ascena Retail Group and extracting board seats at Christopher & Banks before its bankruptcy. The timing suggests Stone House sees either inadequate capital allocation or insufficient cost structure response to the 11% decline in mall traffic over the past eighteen months.
Allocators should watch for three events in sequence: Designer Brands' Q4 earnings on March 18 where management guidance will either validate or contradict activist pressure, a potential board nomination filing by April's annual meeting deadline, and any asset monetization discussions around the Camuto Group wholesale business which generated $340M in revenue but operates at half the margin of DSW retail. Stone House has not disclosed stake size beyond the 5% threshold triggering the 13D filing, leaving open whether they hold enough equity to force governance changes unilaterally or need coalition support from the 18% institutional holder base.
The stock now trades at $4.70 with $6.20 in tangible book value per share, implying the market prices a 24% permanent asset impairment before any operational improvement. That spread is where the money gets made or lost.