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REEBOK IN DMX-TASY? ARE NEW INITIATIVES ENOUGH OF A BOOST?

          Reebok's DMX technology has "begun to pick up steam,"
     as "sneakers equipped" with it have "accounted for" 35%, or
     $78.2M, of the company's third quarter sales of $223.5M,
     according to Suzanne Kapner of TheStreet.com, who wrote that
     the "popularity" of the shoes is "expected to increase, now
     that Reebok has given the sneakers a facelift."  While First
     Security Van Kasper analyst John Stanley said the sneaker's
     "problem for most of the past year" was that it was
     "perceived by many retailers as ugly," Reebok has "focus[ed]
     on the cosmetics."  Reebok President & CEO Carl Yankowski:
     "We're already getting a very positive response."  Other
     Reebok "initiatives in the works" include a major ad
     campaign around the Classics line of "lifestyle shoes" and
     the "limited release" of the Steve Francis-endorsed Blacktop
     Collection.  Yankowski said that the company "already has a
     major retailer committed to buy half a million pairs" of the
     Blacktop line, but he declined "to provide a name." 
     Additionally, Reebok will introduce a new line of kids
     sneakers, called Traxstar.com, this Christmas.  The sneakers
     contain a computer chip that allows kids to measure how high
     they can jump and to "compare their leaping skills with
     others" on the Traxstar Web site.  But Kapner wrote that
     "whether these plans will be enough to pull Reebok out of
     its slump is a question up for debate" and that the
     company's "marketing dollars may be misspent unless Reebok
     defines its image more clearly" (TheStreet.com, 11/5).
 

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