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Advanced Sports International (ASI) is an American bicycle company whose flagship brand is
Fuji Bikes Fuji Bikes is a brand of bicycles and cycling equipment currently owned by Advanced Sports International. The company is a descendant of , a bicycle manufacturer originally established in Japan in 1899. The company took its name and logo from Moun ...
. It also owns smaller brands including triathlon-focused
Kestrel USA Kestrel is an American bicycle brand which specializes in high-end bikes for triathlons and road racing. Kestrel has been owned by Advanced Sports International since 2007.
, component maker Oval Concepts, Breezer bikes, Tuesday Cycles and
BMX BMX, an abbreviation for bicycle motocross or bike motocross, is a cycle sport performed on BMX bikes, either in competitive BMX racing or freestyle BMX, or else in general street or off-road recreation. History BMX began during the ea ...
maker SE Bikes. ASI is headquartered in
Philadelphia Philadelphia ( ), colloquially referred to as Philly, is the List of municipalities in Pennsylvania, most populous city in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania and the List of United States cities by population, sixth-most populous city in the Unit ...
and was led by Patrick Cunnane until filing for bankruptcy.


History

The company was established in 1998. The company has generally followed a strategy of buying struggling brands and returning them to profitability. ASI purchased Fuji Bikes in 1998 after Fuji's sales had declined due to missing the
mountain biking Mountain biking (MTB) is a sport of riding bicycles off-road, often over rough terrain, usually using specially designed mountain bikes. Mountain bikes share similarities with other bikes but incorporate features designed to enhance durability ...
boom. It soon repositioned the brand from a mass-market brand sold mainly in
sporting goods store A sporting goods retailer or sporting goods store is a retail business selling sporting and recreational goods, including sportswear, sporting equipment and related general merchandise. History Decathlon, the world's largest sporting good re ...
s to a higher-end brand sold by more independent bicycle dealers. In 2007, the company's total revenue was $50 million, with about 5% market share among bikes sold by independent dealers. By 2015, that had grown to $105 million. It is associated with the Taiwanese bicycle manufacturer Ideal Bike Corp. ASI bought Breezer Bikes in 2008, the bicycle component manufacturer Oval Concepts in 2009, and Phat Cycles in 2015. Other brands it has purchased include
Fuji Bikes Fuji Bikes is a brand of bicycles and cycling equipment currently owned by Advanced Sports International. The company is a descendant of , a bicycle manufacturer originally established in Japan in 1899. The company took its name and logo from Moun ...
, SE, Kestrel, and Tuesday Cycles. In August 2016, ASI purchased the bicycle retailer Performance Bicycle (owner of the e-commerce site and retailer Nashbar) for an undisclosed amount. As part of the deal, a new parent company called Advanced Sports Enterprises was created to "oversee brand development, wholesale and retail operations, while ASI’s wholesale and Performance Bicycle’s retail operations would be separately managed." The parent company ASE filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy two years later, listing debts of more than $100 million. Most of ASE's assets, including some Performance Bicycle stores, were tentatively purchased at a bankruptcy auction in January 2019 by the Amsterdam-based company Head Sport for $21.5 million. Another asset, the Roubaix bike trademark, was purchased by Specialized Bikes for $700,000. However, the deal fell through, and in February 2019, ASI was purchased for $16.1 million and split among three entities---Amain.com Inc, K&B Investment Corporation, and BikeCo, a partnership of Tiger Capital Group and Advanced Holdings. Amain received the Performance and Nashbar businesses and trademarks, K&B Investment Corporation received ASE's property and buildings, and BikeCo received ASI and its wholesale businesses and bike trademarks. In August 2019, ASE, renamed AE Bike Liquidation, Inc., sent letters against 30 suppliers seeking to recover "so-called "preferential payments" that suppliers received from Performance and the other brands in the weeks before than bankruptcy filing." The payments, if recovered, would go towards the company's bankruptcy obligations. Seven suppliers settled. In November 2020, lawsuits were filed against the other 27 for a total of $2.6 million.


References


External links

* {{cycling Bicycle framebuilders Companies based in Philadelphia Privately held companies of the United States Cycle manufacturers of the United States Companies that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2018