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BackDecathlon and Chinese Group Invest in Brompton Folding Bikes Amid Cycling Market Recovery
Decathlon and Chinese Group Invest in Brompton Folding Bikes Amid Cycling Market Recovery
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Guardian Business6/30/2026Business4 min readUnited Kingdom

Decathlon and Chinese Group Invest in Brompton Folding Bikes Amid Cycling Market Recovery

Quick Look

  • French retailer Decathlon and Chinese investment group BA Capital have acquired stakes in British folding bike maker Brompton for an estimated £18m.
  • The investment aims to fund expansion, leverage market knowledge, and provide liquidity for long-term shareholders, as the cycling market recovers from a post-pandemic slump.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Brompton, a British folding bike maker, secured investments from Decathlon and BA Capital, totaling around £18m, to support its growth and provide liquidity for long-term shareholders. This comes as the cycling market shows signs of recovery after a post-pandemic sales slump.

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The French sports gear retailer Decathlon and a Chinese investment group that was an early backer of Labubu soft toys have bought stakes in the British folding bike maker Brompton, as its boss said the cycling market was recovering from a slump in sales.

Decathlon has acquired a 10% stake in the manufacturer while BA Capital has bought 5% in a deal understood to collectively be worth about £18m.

Brompton said the new investments would enable staff, including the chief executive, Will Butler-Adams, and long-term investors to realise some cash from the sale of shares, while also bringing in market knowledge, supply chain efficiency and technology from the brand’s new investors.

“We are in this partnership to learn,” Butler-Adams said of the new deal with Decathlon Pulse, the chain’s investment arm which has previously backed brands including the bike computer maker Magene and sports watch Coros.

He said BA Capital, which also holds a stake in the bicycle brand Tenways as well as Labubu maker Pop Mart, would bring expertise on China, which is now Brompton’s biggest market.

Franck Vigo, the chief executive of Decathlon Pulse, said: “What convinced us goes beyond the product: we share the same values, a strong culture of quality, and a long-term vision of sustainable urban mobility. This partnership is about scaling that model while preserving what makes Brompton truly unique.”

Brompton bikes, which cost from £999 to almost £6,000 for a top-of-the-range titanium ebike, will for the first time will go into dedicated “Brompton corners” in a handful of Decathlon stores.

“We want to bring our bikes to a wider audience,” Butler-Adams said. He said that, despite cost of living challenges which continue to hold back sales of new bikes in Europe, the industry was now “over the worst” after a slump in sales following a pandemic boom and “cycling is in the ascendant.”

He said cities around the world were adding bike lanes amid increasing interest in healthy living and pollution-free transport.

Butler-Adams said many shareholders had backed Andrew Ritchie, who designed the bike in his shed in 1975 and set up the company, while staff also needed an opportunity to raise money from the sale of some of their share bonuses. Ritchie remains the largest shareholder.

“A lot of shareholders have owned shares for 50 years,” Butler-Adams said, with many now in their 80s or having passed the investment on to their children. “Those shareholders have been, by and large, unbelievably supportive but they have to live their lives as well.”

Butler-Adams took the helm in 2008, taking a significant stake in the business after a conversation with its then chair on a bus persuaded him to leave aside plans for an MBA.

Butler-Adams told the Guardian he mortgaged his home to support Brompton through some tough times as a pandemic-era boom in cycling sales turned into a crash as households reined in spending on new bikes once roads became busier and they returned to offices and schools.

He said the UK was not doing enough to encourage and support entrepreneurs who make a “massive personal commitment” to growing a business, meaning that “most people just go and work for a bank or a consultancy.”

“We need to create an environment of ambition with job and wealth creation,” he said.

He added that the UK government should crack down on the sale of illegal ebikes, which were dangerous because they “not only go too fast but because of how they are made”, which in some cases had led to battery fires.

“Well made quality ebikes are phenomenal for society and we have evidence of that in northern Europe,” he said. “[But] weak control of illegal ebikes is hampering the ebike market [in the UK].

Brompton had to reduce staff numbers amid an increase in employers’ national insurance contributions and other tax changes, and its workforce dropped by about 50 to 790 people. The number of bikes it sold fell 7.5% in the year to March 2025, to 78,530.

The total value of its sales fell 1% to £121.5m, but pre-tax profits rose to £130,476 from less than £5,000 a year before as the company cut costs.

Butler-Adams said sales rose slightly in the year to March 2026 but profits were depressed by the company’s decision to invest in expansion, including new stores and new versions of its bike.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Brompton will open new stores and launch new bike versions.

    Very likely · Within months

  • UK government will increase efforts to crack down on illegal ebikes.

    Possible · Within months

Open Questions

  • Exact number of Decathlon stores featuring Brompton corners?
  • Specific new bike versions planned for expansion?
  • Detailed impact of UK government's ebike crackdown on market?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian Business.

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