Radoff Companies and Jumana Capital filed a joint Schedule 13D disclosing a 7.6% ownership stake in Genesco Inc., the Nashville-based footwear and accessories retailer with a market capitalization near $370 million. The filing marks the formal assembly of an activist group, a structure typically reserved for coordinated strategic pressure rather than passive investment.
Genesco operates 1,425 retail locations across North America under the Journeys, Schuh, and Johnston & Murphy banners, reporting $2.14 billion in trailing twelve-month revenue. The company trades at approximately 0.17x sales, a discount reflecting compressed margins in specialty retail and the ongoing structural headwinds facing mall-based footwear chains. Radoff, a Connecticut-based investment firm with a history in small-cap retail activism, and Jumana Capital, a lesser-known partner in this engagement, have not yet published a formal letter outlining demands. The 7.6% threshold places the group among Genesco's ten largest shareholders, sufficient to command board attention without triggering Delaware poison pill provisions.
The timing is precise. Genesco reported fiscal Q3 2024 earnings in December with comparable store sales declining -3.8% year-over-year, driven by softness in the teen footwear category that anchors the Journeys brand. Management guided fiscal 2024 adjusted EPS to a range of $3.50 to $4.00, down from prior expectations, and announced 40 store closures across underperforming locations. The company carries $127 million in net debt and maintains a $400 million credit facility, providing operational flexibility but limiting aggressive buyback capacity. Activist entry at this valuation suggests the group sees either undervalued real estate optionality in owned store locations, private equity interest in a take-private, or a case for accelerated portfolio rationalization that management has been slow to execute.
Radoff's prior campaigns include positions in regional retail where asset sales and cost discipline drove shareholder returns. Jumana Capital's involvement is less precedented in public filings, raising questions about whether this is a capital partner or a principal with independent operational views. The joint structure implies negotiated board engagement rather than a public proxy fight, though the 7.6% stake leaves room for incremental purchases if management resists. Genesco's board includes representatives with private equity backgrounds, which may accelerate receptiveness to structural alternatives.
Allocators should monitor for a follow-on 13D amendment within 30 days detailing specific demands or board nomination intentions. Genesco's next earnings call, scheduled for mid-March 2025, will be the first public forum for management commentary on the activist presence. If the group pushes for strategic review, sell-side research will likely model break-up values for the Johnston & Murphy wholesale business and the Schuh UK operations, both of which have generated interest from strategic buyers in prior cycles. Any sale process would take six to nine months from formal announcement to close, assuming antitrust clearance and customary due diligence.
The 7.6% stake is large enough to matter, small enough to grow. Genesco's enterprise value sits at a level where a 15% to 20% premium would clear $425 million to $444 million, within reach for mid-market private equity or a strategic consolidator in the DTC footwear space. The next filing will clarify intent.
The takeaway
Radoff and Jumana surface with **7.6%** Genesco stake, activist structure suggests operational or sale process pressure by March earnings call.
genescoactivistretailradoffjumana capital13d
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