Lululemon settled its proxy battle with founder Chip Wilson on Tuesday, granting him two board seats after four months of public criticism over the company's product strategy and brand positioning. Wilson, who still holds roughly $500 million in shares through investment vehicle Hold It All Inc., gets his nominees without forcing a shareholder vote at the upcoming annual meeting.
The settlement ends a dispute that began in December when Wilson issued a letter accusing management of abandoning the technical athleticwear core that built the brand. He specifically called out misses in women's design, sluggish innovation cycles, and an over-indexing toward lifestyle apparel that diluted margins. The company's stock had declined 14% since October when comparable-store sales growth slowed to 2%, down from mid-teens rates two years prior. Wilson's campaign framed the issue as governance failure, not operational hiccup, and named current Chair Glenn Murphy as the primary obstacle to course correction.
The two incoming directors have not been publicly named, but the settlement grants Wilson approval rights on candidates with athletic-apparel or retail-operations backgrounds. That constraint matters because Lululemon is navigating a footwear expansion into running—launched in March 2022 and now contributing roughly $250 million in annual revenue—while simultaneously defending its women's pants category against Alo Yoga and Vuori in North America. The company missed Q4 earnings estimates by 3 cents in March, and forward revenue guidance for fiscal 2025 came in $150 million below consensus at the midpoint. Wilson's critique was that leadership had no mechanism to self-correct when trend data turned.
The settlement preserves CEO Calvin McDonald, who has led the company since 2018 and overseen international expansion into China and Europe. McDonald's contract runs through 2026, and he retains operational authority under the new board structure. But Wilson's two seats shift voting dynamics on strategic matters, particularly around capital allocation. The company has been spending roughly $400 million annually on store expansion and another $180 million on digital infrastructure, while buybacks have averaged $600 million per year. Wilson has previously argued for reallocating growth capital toward product innovation and slowing the pace of new-market entries until the core assortment stabilizes.
Operators should track three developments over the next six months. First, whether the incoming directors push for changes to the product-development calendar, which currently runs on an 18-month cycle from concept to shelf. Second, whether the board revisits the company's wholesale strategy—Lululemon currently limits third-party retail to 8% of revenue, far below peers like Nike at 65%. Third, whether capital allocation shifts measurably in the fiscal Q2 update, particularly around the $1.2 billion share-repurchase authorization approved in March. The company reports Q1 earnings on June 5, and any early signs of product-mix adjustment or margin stabilization will indicate whether Wilson's board influence is already affecting merchant decisions.
The settlement avoids a proxy contest that would have cost both sides roughly $15 million in advisory fees and shareholder-relations expenses, but it formalizes Wilson's return to governance after he stepped back from active involvement in 2015. The company's market cap sits at $32 billion, down from a peak of $48 billion in November 2021, and institutional holders have been vocal about the need for margin improvement as the brand matures past its growth-at-any-cost phase.