Yeezy shoes made by Adidas are displayed at Laced Up a footwear resale store in New Jersey last October.

Adidas has said it will not destroy the unsold merchandise from its defunct Yeezy partnership with Kanye West and will instead try to sell the stock and donate some money to those harmed by the rapper’s comments.

The German sportswear brand has been faced with a problematic pile of millions of pairs of Yeezy shoes since last October when it cut ties with West over antisemitic comments on social media.

The stock with a value of €1.2bn (£1bn) has been sitting in storage since being withdrawn from sale and the debacle contributed to Adidas’s first annual loss in 31 years.

Yeezy shoes made by Adidas are displayed at Laced Up a footwear resale store in New Jersey last October. Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP

On Thursday, Bjørn Gulden, the company’s chief executive, told investors at a meeting in Germany that destroying the goods was not the right move and the company was working on a plan for them to be sold. He said some of the proceeds would then go to unnamed charities that represented people who “were hurt” by the comment’s made by West, who changed his name to Ye in 2021.

“What we are trying to do now over time is to sell some of this merchandise … burning the goods would not be a solution,” Gulden said.

He defended the initial decision to collaborate with the rapper, saying: “As difficult as he [West] was, he is perhaps the most creative mind in our industry.”

By selling some of the stock, the company could mitigate a potential €500m hit to operating profits as a result of ditching Yeezy. Adidas has said that if it decides not to “repurpose” the Yeezy stock, the company would fall to a €700m loss from the writeoff of the value of footwear plus other one-off costs.

Boxes containing Yeezy shoes at a footwear store in the US last year.
Boxes containing Yeezy shoes at a footwear store in the US last year. Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP

It is unclear how much stock will be sold under the current plan and what proportion of the proceeds will be donated.

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Ed Stoner, a sportswear industry consultant who previously worked at Adidas, said the decision to sell the footwear and give the proceeds away was “a smart and responsible move”, adding: “It not only preserves the brand’s integrity but avoids a sustainability crisis.”

However, if the goods are sold, West will be entitled to previously agreed commissions of 15% of turnover, according to media reports. Adidas has declined to comment on this aspect.

Analysts had suggested Adidas could relaunch the popular Yeezy products under a different brand name. The brand has said it is the sole owner of all design rights to existing products as well as previous and new colour variations under the Yeezy partnership.

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