Radoff Companies and Jumana Capital filed a 13D on December 27 disclosing a newly formed group holding 7.6% of Genesco Inc., the Nashville footwear and accessories operator that runs Journeys, Johnston & Murphy, and Schuh. The group now controls 1.14 million shares worth roughly $28 million at Friday's close of $24.58. Neither firm has disclosed board demands or specific operational changes, but the filing structure signals coordination beyond passive observation.
Genesco trades at 0.4x trailing twelve-month revenue and 6.2x forward earnings despite operating 1,425 retail locations and generating $2.26 billion in annual sales. The company has shed 18% year-to-date while peers in the footwear wholesale and specialty retail segment held closer to flat. Management spent $42 million on share buybacks in fiscal 2024 but paused repurchases in Q3 as comparable-store sales declined 4.8% and gross margin compressed 110 basis points to 48.3%. Inventories remain elevated at $531 million, up 7% year-over-year, while free cash flow turned negative in the most recent quarter.
Radoff Companies operates as a private investment vehicle with a history in distressed retail situations and balance-sheet restructurings. Jumana Capital maintains a concentrated portfolio focused on small-cap consumer and industrial names with asset backing. The combination suggests interest in either asset realization through divestitures or capital allocation discipline rather than a growth narrative. Genesco's brand portfolio carries distinct liquidation values: Johnston & Murphy owns 168 retail locations and a wholesale channel with $311 million in revenue, while Journeys contributes $1.1 billion through 877 mall-based stores. Schuh, the UK operation, generated $407 million but faced margin pressure from sterling headwinds and reduced foot traffic.
The last activist engagement at Genesco came in 2019 when Legion Partners pushed for cost cuts and board refreshment, resulting in two new directors and a $50 million accelerated buyback. That engagement ended without a proxy fight after the company adopted several operational recommendations. This time the setup differs: Genesco's enterprise value sits at $890 million with $147 million in net debt, and the company faces a March 2025 lease maturity on 83 Journeys locations in secondary malls where traffic declined 12% year-over-year. The activists likely see value in either separating the brands, monetizing real estate in owned Johnston & Murphy properties, or forcing a sale process to strategic buyers in the fragmented footwear wholesale market.
Operators should track the February 2025 earnings call for any disclosure of activist dialogue and watch for 13D amendments indicating increased stake or board nomination notices. The company's annual meeting typically occurs in late June, leaving a five-month window for private negotiation or public campaign preparation. Institutional ownership sits at 89%, with Dimensional Fund Advisors holding 9.1% and Vanguard at 8.3%, meaning the Radoff-Jumana group ranks as the third-largest holder. Any move toward a proxy contest would require additional coalition-building among the top ten holders, who collectively control 48% of shares outstanding.
Genesco's next decision point arrives in 32 days when it reports fiscal Q4 results for the period ending February 1, 2025. Management guidance calls for comparable sales down 3% to 5% and earnings per share between $0.85 and $1.05, both below street expectations set before the holiday season. The activists filed six days after the company's December 20 preliminary holiday sales update, which disclosed a 5.2% comparable decline at Journeys and flat performance at Johnston & Murphy.