Chinese sportswear brand Anta counts Olympic freestyle skier Eileen Gu among its brand ambassadors
China’s economy was just starting to open up in the late 1980s when a determined high school dropout made his way to Beijing with 600 pairs of shoes.
Ding Shizhong had them made in a relative’s factory, and now he was going to sell them. The money he earned paid for his first workshop, where he began making footwear for other companies.
The 17-year-old was one of China’s many newly minted entrepreneurs as capitalism took off under the watchful eye of its Communist Party rulers.
But, as it turns out, Ding had much bigger plans.
His business has since grown into a sportswear powerhouse called Anta, which has been building a stable of international brands, including Arc’teryx and Salomon. Most recently, it bought a stake in Puma.
Now it is trying to take on the likes of Nike and Adidas, a goal that Ding spelt out in 2005: “We don’t want to be the Nike of China, but the Anta of the world.”
Anta may not be a household name in the West yet, but it has more than 10,000 shops in China and sponsors top athletes like freestyle skier Eileen Gu.
In February, it opened its first US outlet – a flagship store in Los Angeles’ upscale Beverly Hills area.
The company’s global push, which comes as Donald Trump aims to bring factory jobs back to the US with tariffs, highlights just how essential and competitive Chinese supply chains have become for manufacturing.
The rise of Anta, which means “safe steps,” is not exactly unique. Decades of being the world’s factory have given several ambitious Chinese companies the opportunity to take on the very firms they once counted as customers.
From shoe maker to global brand
Founded in 1991, Anta began far from the glitz and the glamour of Beverly Hills as a small manufacturer in Jinjiang city in the southeastern province of Fujian.
Jinjiang grew rapidly from a quiet agricultural county into the “shoe capital” of the world as part of the government’s plan to develop specific industries across provinces.
Soon, there was an influx of investment from sneaker giants seeking overseas factories to help lower their production costs.
Several clusters focusing on different sorts of footwear emerged in Jinjiang and neighbouring cities along the eastern coast, each with its own specialised supply chain.
At the Jinjiang hub’s core lies Chendai town, an area of around 40 sq km (15.4 sq miles) that is home to thousands of factories and suppliers. The district helped cement the city’s reputation, making shoes for global brands such as Nike and Adidas.
Each hub brought together suppliers of laces, soles and fabric, as well as logistics firms that help to quickly turn designs into store-ready products and ship them out.
By 2005, Fujian alone accounted for nearly a fifth of the world’s shoes, according to UN estimates.
As much as a third of Jinjiang’s workers are still employed by one of thousands of shoe-makers in the city, which is among the highest-earning economic districts in China.
Something similar has played out in various parts of China – Jinjiang was just one of many manufacturing clusters on the eastern coast alone. The others made clothes or electronics.
This level of specialisation in manufacturing was unseen elsewhere in the world at the time, says University of Bath associate professor Fei Qin, who studied factories across eastern China in the 2000s.
As foreign customers flocked to strike deals with these factories, the country reaped more than income.
“They learned not only how to make more, but how to produce better, faster and more consistently,” Fei adds.
It was along these streets that Anta grew, making shoes in bulk and at low cost for global brands.
It established a vast distribution network to retailers across China, which is crucial for manufacturers seeking to expand.
At the same time, Anta was slowly getting its name out domestically, opening new shops and partnering with major sporting events, including national basketball and table tennis competitions.
Firms like Anta know that there is more value in being a known brand than in being a subcontractor, Fei says.
In 2007, Anta listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, raising around HKD3.5bn (£330m; $450m) – a record then for a Chinese sports company.
Branding consultant Wei Kan, who worked with Converse and Nike in China, says Anta stood out to him because of its fully-fledged production hub, which enabled it to design and sell shoes faster than its rivals.
It was also among the few Chinese firms that targeted the same buyers as big Western brands, Kan says.
Companies like Anta, which start out making goods for global brands, gradually learn the fundamentals of running a business, do well in China, and “naturally go on to bigger things”, Kan adds.
There are many others, such as technology firm Xiaomi, which began as a software developer customising Android-based systems, before making its own phones, electronics and now, electric vehicles (EVs).
Likewise, DJI made camera gear and drone components before becoming an international drone maker in its own right.
The best-known example is perhaps BYD, once a battery-maker for EV pioneers like Tesla and now the world’s top manufacturer for the sector.
“Each of these firms is now a giant in its field,” Kan says.
Wooing the West
Anta is now eyeing markets in the West.
It runs more than 12,000 shops in China. The company also has more than 460 outlets outside of the country, with plans to have 1,000 shops operating in South East Asia alone in the next three years.
But Nike, which still has the largest market share in sports footwear, has only 1,000 shops worldwide.
Chinese firms are known to expand quickly within the country before venturing abroad, where they face greater challenges as they scale up.
For one, there is a perception challenge. Chinese products are often viewed as cheap, low-quality or copycat goods.
Anta has tried to beat that with acquisitions, as part of an approach it calls a “multi-brand strategy”. The first big move was buying the rights to Fila in China in 2009 and turning the Italy-founded brand into a major earner for its business, says Elisa Harca from Chinese marketing agency Red Ant Asia.
In 2019, Anta bought a controlling stake in Finnish athletics brand Amer Sports. The deal gave Anta control of Amer’s companies, which included upmarket brands Arc’teryx and Salomon.
Anta also owns Wilson, the US maker of tennis rackets and balls used by the National Basketball Association. And this year, it bought a 29% stake in Puma, pledging to help the German firm grow in China.
These are moves that help Anta avoid “forcing” its goods into every market and instead use its Western brands as gateways, says business analyst Rufio Zhu at global sports marketing agency IMG.
That way, Anta can reach buyers who may be wary of a “made in China” brand, Zhu says.
Celebrity sponsorships are a key commodity for a truly global brand. Nike, for instance, had its groundbreaking deal with Michael Jordan in the 1980s.
Anta has signed basketball players like Klay Thompson and Kyrie Irving, but deals of the kind that earned Nike or Adidas their brand are yet to happen.
And being a Chinese brand comes with hurdles, given Beijing’s rocky relationship with the West and especially the US.
American-born skier Eileen Gu, an Anta brand ambassador, proved a polarising figure after her decision to represent China over the US at the Olympics came under scrutiny.
Companies that grow large need to walk a fine line between China and the West, Kan says. “Brands like Anta need to be ready for it.”
A turning tide
Anta’s rise comes as rivals like Nike and Adidas face their own challenges globally and in China.
US tariffs have hit their earnings, given that they import goods made in Asia. Nike is also fighting to revive sales after its e‑commerce push backfired following Covid-19, and demand in China has slowed due to low consumption.
Their struggles put Anta in a favourable position abroad, especially given consumers’ growing appetite for other brands, says sports marketer Zhu.
“The question isn’t whether Anta will raise their profile. It’s whether competitors can adapt quickly enough to defend their home turf.”
Meanwhile, China is “setting its manufacturers up for the future” by rapidly deploying robots in factories, speeding up production and potentially cutting costs, Fei adds.
The opening of Anta’s first US outlet came after years of selling in the country through department stores.
Its walls are lined with shelves of sneakers and basketball shoes – markets that Anta needs to win in the US to compete with Nike or Adidas.
The company admits that it has some way to go.
“We’re realistic about the competition, but the global sportswear landscape is not a zero-sum game,” an Anta spokesperson tells the BBC.
“We are confident that sports lovers will recognise Anta’s innovations and brand value.”
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