Radoff and Jumana Capital stake 7.6% of Genesco in joint activist filing
Two specialist retail activists form 13D group targeting the $500M footwear operator's margins and real estate strategy.
Activist investors Jonathan Radoff and Jumana Capital disclosed a combined 7.6% stake in Genesco Inc. through a Schedule 13D filed this week, marking the footwear retailer's first significant activist engagement in three years. The Nashville-based company trades at a $504 million market cap with shares at $32.80, roughly 40% below the five-year average multiple on trailing EBITDA.
The filing shows Radoff holding 4.2% while Jumana controls 3.4%, with both parties explicitly forming a group under Section 13(d)(3). The language in the filing references "ongoing discussions regarding operational efficiency and capital allocation" without naming specific board candidates or immediate proxy demands. Genesco operates 1,425 retail locations across Journeys, Schuh, and Johnston & Murphy brands, with 62% of revenue derived from mall-based footwear aimed at teen and young adult demographics. Comparable store sales fell 2.1% in the most recent quarter while gross margin compressed 180 basis points year-over-year to 47.3%.
This matters because Genesco sits in the crosshairs of two structural pressures: mall traffic erosion and promotional intensity in accessible footwear. Radoff previously pressed for store rationalization and omnichannel investment at Chico's FAS, where he pushed management to close 250 underperforming doors between 2019 and 2022. Jumana Capital, a smaller fund specializing in distressed retail turnarounds, led a similar effort at Stein Mart before its 2020 bankruptcy, advocating for real estate monetization and brand licensing. Their joint filing suggests the playbook here involves shrinking the physical footprint while extracting value from owned real estate and strengthening digital infrastructure. Genesco owns 18 retail properties outright and holds long-term leases on high-traffic mall anchors, a structure that gives activists leverage to argue for sale-leaseback transactions or outright divestiture.
The timing coincides with Genesco's recent commentary around "exploring strategic alternatives" for Johnston & Murphy, the higher-margin dress footwear brand that generates $180 million in annual revenue but accounts for less than 15% of total sales. Management has not committed to a timeline, but activist pressure typically accelerates these processes. Worth noting: Genesco's largest shareholder, Dimensional Fund Advisors, holds 11.2% and has historically supported activist proposals when operational targets are concrete. If Radoff and Jumana move beyond dialogue to formal demands, they need only secure 15% support under Tennessee corporate law to call a special meeting.
Operators should watch for three catalysts. First, any announcement regarding Johnston & Murphy's sale process, likely within 90 days given the explicit mention in the 13D. Second, a potential store closure plan affecting Journeys locations in C-tier malls, where traffic has declined 30% since 2019 according to mall REIT disclosures. Third, board composition changes, particularly if Radoff or a Jumana representative receives a seat before the next annual meeting in June. The company reports Q4 earnings on March 20, which will clarify whether management preempts activist demands with its own restructuring blueprint.
Genesco has $127 million in net debt and a credit facility that matures in 2027, giving it breathing room but not immunity from margin pressure if comparable sales continue negative.