Exercise brand Peloton is attracting bid attention from the likes of Amazon and Nike, according to reports.
They have been attracted by the soaring sales of Peloton’s exercise bikes and treadmills during the pandemic. Suitors have not been put off by the return to gyms post-lockdown, which has left the firm worth less than a fifth of its peak $50bn valuation.
There have also been recent PR disasters when TV characters had heart attacks when using Peloton machines.
Amazon declined to confirm or deny whether it was considering making an offer for the US exercise equipment maker.
When the rumour was reported in the Wall Street Journal on Friday it sent shares in the firm surging more than 30% in after-hours trading.
The Financial Times first reported Nike’s decision to look at a deal.
“We don’t comment on rumours and speculation,” an Amazon spokesperson told the BBC, while Peloton and Nike did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The once-stock market favourite has seen its shares slump in recent months, losing more than 80% of its value in the past year.
When the Covid pandemic led to gyms closing in 2020, demand for Peloton’s exercise equipment and remote workout classes jumped, sending its share price soaring.
However, as lockdowns eased the appetite for its bikes and treadmills has dwindled.
In August, the firm cut the price of its flagship bike by 20% to $1,495 (£1,105), as it revealed that its losses had widened and revenue growth had slowed.
In the same month, the US Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security said they were investigating the company after a child was pulled under one of its treadmills and killed, while other customers had reported injuries.
In November, Peloton warned investors that it expected revenue to slow in the year ahead.
“The primary drivers of our reduced forecast are a more pronounced tapering of demand related to the ongoing opening of the economy, and a richer than anticipated mix of sales to our original bike,” it said in a recent letter to shareholders.
Last month, investment firm Blackwells Capital called for Peloton’s chief executive John Foley to be removed from his post and the business to be put up for sale.
Peloton and its customer base are “extremely attractive” to companies like Nike, Apple, Disney and Sony, that are looking to boost their presence in the home, health and wellness and media spaces, Blackwells said in a letter to Peloton’s board.
The company also made headlines after two television dramas, the Sex and the City revival And Just Like That and Billions, featured story lines in which characters suffered heart attacks while using Peloton bikes.