Marubeni Consumer Platform US (MCPU) is the new owner of UK-based Jacobson Group and its portfolio of lifestyle footwear brands that includes Gola, Lotus, Ravel, and Frank Wright.
Gola
It also operates licensed brands Dunlop and Lonsdale and they’re part of the deal — the price of which hasn’t been shared — too.
Marubeni is a major US-based dealmaker and MCPU is a sizeable consumer platform in the US. Its next generation of core businesses are “defined by attractive growth domains, high value creation, and scalable operating models” and UK-based Jacobson Group clearly fits the bill.
So what happens now? Jacobson Group will be integrated into MCPU’s lifestyle platform, with Marubeni’s RGB Brands “serving as the platform engine”.
The new owner also said that “to ensure continuity, a smooth transition, and the preservation of the deep industry knowledge and entrepreneurial culture that has shaped the business, Jacobson Group will continue to be led by its existing leadership team — Tony Evans, Gary Shutt, Jonathan Jacobson, and Donna Hill”.
Harvey Jacobson, executive chairman of the firm he co-founded in 1982, added: “I am hugely proud of everything Jacobson Group has achieved… and I would like to thank all our employees for the commitment and dedication they have shown. As we look to the future, Marubeni and RGB Brands offer the ideal platform, vision, and long-term commitment to take Jacobson’s brands into their next phase of growth. I wish everyone at Jacobson, RGB and Marubeni every success as they embark on this exciting new chapter together.”
Gola
Meanwhile MCPU highlighted how Jacobson has evolved from that family-founded British footwear business “into a globally recognised, multi-brand enterprise. Gola’s more than 120-year heritage and timeless design aesthetic in lifestyle and casual footwear anchors the portfolio, and strengthens the platform’s position in attractive, high-potential categories. At the same time, its established brands and select licensing partnerships will continue to fuel growth across the UK, US, and other international markets – delivering further category diversification alongside expansion into new territories”.
As mentioned, RGB will be key to deal with Marubeni saying its MCPU lifestyle platform “is anchored by RGB”, under the leadership of president and CEO Bob Mullaney. RGB has “more than 75 years of category expertise, with a consumer-focused, data-driven, digital-centric, and earth-first philosophy. It is the operational engine powering a portfolio of consumer brands, including Dearfoams, Baggallini, and Columbus Product Group, with the scale to reach millions across leading retailers”.
In November, RGB also announced an agreement in principle to acquire the global slipper license for Clarks and the US slipper license for Timberland from Green Market Services.
Gola has a long history
We’re told that “integrating Jacobson into this platform will unlock meaningful value through shared scale, enhanced go-to-market capabilities, and the opportunity to elevate heritage brands with significant untapped potential”.
Shana Randhava, president of MCPU added that the latest deal “advances the platform architecture we’ve been building, and comes at a particularly exciting time, fuelled by Gola’s rapidly expanding market resonance. This marks a defining step in establishing the MCPU lifestyle platform as a scaleable, multi-brand ecosystem. With RGB anchoring operational excellence, this move reinforces Marubeni’s strategy, advanced through its Next Generation Corporate Development Division, to build category-led consumer platforms powered by shared engines, capable of shaping the company’s growth trajectory over the coming decade.”
And Mullaney called the latest deal “a transformative moment for RGB. Gola brings cultural relevance and global ambition, and the broader Jacobson portfolio extends the platform’s reach across lifestyle and heritage categories. Our values are closely aligned, and we are committed to investing in what already makes these brands distinctive. By pairing Jacobson’s strengths with RGB’s scale, infrastructure, and operational excellence, we are well-positioned to accelerate growth across key international markets.”
Le Tout Paris celebrated France’s most famous fashion writer Sophie Fontanel this weekend, when the noted scribe was awarded the Chevalier de Légion d’Honneur.
Sophie Fontanel
Presented inside the Left Bank’s most happening art space Nemmours Gallery, there was practically designer gridlock at the event: with Jean Charles de Castelbajac, Simon Porte Jacquemus, Alexandre Mattiussi, Rabih Kayrouz, Elite Top, and Ines de la Fressange all in attendance.
After celebrating her 21 published books, dating back to her 1995 debut Sacré Paul, French costume designer and film producer Rosalie Varda pinned the famed medal onto the lapel of the classic two-button black Yves Saint Laurent jacket Fontanel wore with white sailor pants.
Sophie Fontanel with guests
“When I acquired this jacket in a vintage store, the boutique owner told me when I put it on that it would lead to something historic. And looks like he was right,” joked Fontanel, whose invitation read Sacré Sophie.
In a novel touch, the new chevalier pinned personal notes to scores of guests on the gallery’s white walls. “Honour to Veronique Nichanian for our so French stateless voyages,” read one referring to Hermès soon to depart menswear designer. “Honour to Simone Porte Jacquemus, for a regard that says everything,” or “Honour to (documentary filmmaker) Loïc Prigent for the fraternité carried out to this extent.” While de Castelbajac was lauded for his “true nobility. A smile.”
Notes by Sophie Fontanel
Colleagues were also kindly treated: Madame Figaro’s fashion editor Delphine Perroy praised “for the smile that heals everything,” while yours truly had a note that read: “Honour to Godfrey Deeny for the tender authority.”
In an impressive career, Fontanel has been editor in chief of French Cosmopolitan; TV star Nulle part ailleurs- France’s number one talk show of the 90s; Grand Reporter of Elle; and, for the past decade, columnist for news weekly L’Obs. Plus, her pithy commentary on all things fashionable has won her 489K followers on Instagram.
Sophie Fontanel’s note to Godfrey Deeny
Not bad going for a lady whose grandmother fled the Armenian genocide to France a century ago clutching, legend has it, a page of Vogue up her sleeve.
The house of Dior has named UK actor Josh O’Connor to be its latest brand ambassador, joining soccer legend Kylian Mbappé in the brand’s style diplomatic corps.
Josh O’Connor for Dior – George Eyres
“Dior is delighted to welcome Josh O’Connor as the new ambassador for Jonathan Anderson’s collections,” the Paris-based house said in a release.
The actor had previously been a presence at several runway shows of J.W. Anderson, who was appointed overall creative director of Dior in June 2025.
O’Connor first grabbed attention and international fame with his performance as Prince Charles in hit series The Crown- for which he won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor .
Subsequently, he has garnered critical acclaim in a variety of films, including Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers, in which he wore clothes designed by Anderson in this studied melodrama about competing players and emotions in tennis.
O’Connor has also worked with Guadagnino in an ad campaign for Aston Martin, shooting an elegiac road movie short in sun-dried Sicily.
“Josh O’Connor embodies a singular, sensitive, and undeniably modern expression of masculine elegance, perfectly in sync with the contemporary Dior style,” added Dior about the Cheltenham, England-raised thespian.
The Very Group has published its results for Q1 of FY26 (the 13 weeks to late September 2025) and they show the e-tail giant still loss-making but seeing “further improvements in profitability and a return to top-line growth compared to the same period in the prior year”.
The launch of The Very Collection in September 2025 was a key development for Very UK
It comes after what it described as “robust” results for FY25, even though they included a major pre-tax loss linked to a writedown of an inter-company loan made to the then-controlling Barclay family’s holding company as lenders prepared to take over the business.
Now owned by major lender Carlyle and reportedly up for sale, the company said that the market remains challenging but the group saw revenue growth of 2.4% to £460.8 million in Q1. At the star Very UK operation, revenue (which accounts for the bulk of the firm’s total retail sales) rose 3.7% to £406.7 million.
Growth was achieved in both Retail revenue with group sales of goods up 0.9% to £341.3 million and in Finance revenue, which jumped 5.8% to £112.9 million.
The company added that the Very UK operation saw strong results within its higher-margin Home category that rose 10.9% year on year, while its Sports offering increased 12.3% following the introduction of a number of key new brands in the second half of the previous year.
Meanwhile the Toys and Beauty category continue to perform well with 6.4% growth, of which Beauty alone saw 4.1% growth.
That said, Fashion and Sports combined declined 1% in a tough market but, as mentioned, Sports was strong. Parts of the Fashion market were buoyant as well with a 30.1% increase in casual womenswear sales, in part supported by the launch of its new own-brand offering The Very Collection in September 2025. Given that Q1 only ran until the end of that month, it looks likely that the collection will be able to contribute even more in the future.
This all led to gross profit rising to £173.4 million from £163.3 million, or a statutory gross margin rate of 37.6% up 1.3%pts.
It also said that its continued focus on cost controls contributed to a 16.3% increased in pre-exceptional EBITDA to £63.4 million.
That said, it still made a total pre-tax loss of £24.9 million, wider than the £23.1 million loss in the previous year. Similarly, the net loss of £31.4 million was larger than a loss of £23.1 million of the year before, although the company is clearly moving in the right direction on an underlying basis.