Mike Ashley, the billionaire founder of Sports Direct, has made a brazen play for total ownership of German fashion house Hugo Boss. Sources confirm that Frasers Group, the British retail conglomerate, has submitted an offer to acquire the remaining 34 per cent of shares it does not already own, valuing the company at approximately £1.73 billion. The bid, delivered through Frasers’ investment vehicle, represents a premium of around 15 per cent on Hugo Boss’s closing share price on Tuesday.
This is not a friendly takeover. It is a power grab. Ashley’s group already holds a 66 per cent stake, built up through a series of aggressive purchases since 2020. The move to buy out minority shareholders would give Frasers total control over one of Europe’s most storied luxury brands. Documents filed with the German financial regulator show the offer price of €68 per share, a figure that some analysts have dismissed as opportunistic given the company’s struggling performance in recent quarters.
Hugo Boss has been a battlefield for corporate control. The company’s management has long resisted Ashley’s influence, but they are now cornered. The supervisory board is expected to meet this week to discuss the offer. Insiders say the response has been frosty. One senior figure described the bid as “undervaluing the brand and its long-term potential”. But Ashley does not need their approval. With a supermajority already in his pocket, he can force through a squeeze-out under German law, leaving minority shareholders with little choice but to sell.
The financial mechanics are brutal. Frasers Group will fund the acquisition through a combination of cash reserves and new debt facilities, according to documents leaked to this newsroom. The group’s net debt, already swollen after years of acquisitions including luxury retailer Flannels and a stake in Mulberry, is expected to balloon. Credit rating agencies have expressed concern. Moody’s placed Frasers’ debt on review for a downgrade earlier this afternoon. They are not alone in their pessimism.
This is not about saving Hugo Boss. It is about Ashley’s relentless expansion. Frasers Group has transformed from a high-street sports retailer into a sprawling retail empire that now includes designer brands, department stores and property holdings. Buying Hugo Boss outright would give Ashley direct control over sourcing, pricing and distribution. He could flood the market with discounted Boss suits at Sports Direct, a move that would horrify the brand’s traditional customers but excite bargain hunters.
The real story here is the risk. If Ashley’s gamble fails, the fall could be spectacular. Hugo Boss has already seen sales slip in China and the United States, two key markets. The luxury sector is in a downturn. Consumers are tightening their belts. Yet Ashley is doubling down. Uncovered financial projections prepared by Frasers’ own advisors show a scenario where the combined group struggles to service its debts if interest rates remain high. The margin for error is razor thin.
Regulators are watching. The German government has powers to block foreign takeovers on national security grounds, though fashion retail is unlikely to trigger such measures. Brussels may also scrutinise the deal for competition concerns. Ashley’s tactics have drawn the ire of European watchdogs before. A source close to the European Commission’s competition directorate confirmed that preliminary inquiries have been made.
For now, the ball is in Ashley’s court. Minority shareholders have four weeks to decide. If they hold out, he can force a compulsory purchase. The outcome is almost certain. Mike Ashley is not a man who takes no for an answer. But he stands to lose everything if his audacity overtakes his judgment. This is a story of power, money and the thin line between genius and madness.








