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      Table of contents

      • Fascinating Facts about Adidas
      • History of Adidas
      • Adidas's Annual Revenue from 2009 to 2024 in $US Billions
      • Adidas Q2 2025 Earnings
      • Adidas’s Earnings per Share from 2010 to 2022
      • Adidas’s Net Sales Worldwide from 2000 to 2024 in Billion Euros
      • Global Share of Adidas Retail Sales in 2024 by Region
      • Adidas’s Number of Retail Stores Worldwide from 2016 to 2024
      • Global Brand Value of Adidas from 2016 to 2024
      • Global Brand Value Comparison of Adidas and Nike from 2015 to 2024
      • Number of Employees of Adidas Worldwide from 2010 to 2024
      • Adidas’s Stock Forecast
      • Adidas’s Emphasis on Innovation  
      • Adidas’s Sponsorships and Partnerships
      • Adidas’s Frequently Asked Questions
      • InvestingPro: Unlock Additional Adidas Data

      Academy Center > Statistics

      Statistics Beginner

      Adidas: Pushing Sports Performance Further and Further with Ground-Breaking Technology

      written by
      Demi Sher
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      Brokers Analysis, Marketing Automation

      Content & Marketing Operations Associate | Investing.com

      BA & Honors in Public Diplomacy & Affairs, The Raphael Recanati International School Reichman University | DPIJI, Daniel Pearl International Journalism Institute | HarvardX

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      | updated October 31, 2025

      With its 76-year pedigree and remarkable achievements under its belt, Adidas (ADDYY) is still going strong, having no intention of giving way to other companies in the sportswear industry. In its latest quarterly results, for the quarter ending June 30, 2025, Adidas’s quarterly operating profit of €546 million far outweighed investors’ pessimistic prediction of roughly €520 million, and even though the company’s sales edged just 2.2 % higher (slightly down in euro‑terms due to a €300 million FX translation hit), they still exceeded the anticipated €6.2 billion revenue mark.

      Despite a gloomy forecast following the loss of the profitable Yeezy line—which had accounted for around 8 % of its sales and has now been completely exited—the company showed that it was more resilient than analysts predicted, reaffirming its full‑year guidance of high‑single‑digit sales growth and operating profit of €1.7–€1.8 billion

      Its Chinese market has continued to recover, with Greater China posting almost 11 % growth in Q2, while its Latin America market witnessed a significant increase in sales of 22 % (nearly 23 % excluding Yeezy) in the said quarter. Adidas completed the sale of its remaining unsold Yeezy trainers by the end of 2024, so there is no longer €1 billion worth of stock to be offloaded in a charity fire sale. s has happened before in its history, this time around, Adidas is again showing itself capable of overcoming crises and staying firm in the competition with the other sportswear giants, Nike and Under Armour.

      Fascinating Facts about Adidas

      Although Nike continues to lead globally in revenue, Adidas remains highly influential in North America and abroad. The company continues to draw attention through high‑profile collaborations, notably with Raf Simons and Beyoncé, and not just Jeremy Scott. Adidas’s innovative technologies, such as Ultra Boost (first introduced a decade ago), remain popular, although newer lines like Samba, Gazelle, and low-profile running shoes have driven recent growth.

      • In 2024, Adidas’s worldwide net sales reached $23.683 billion, and $21.427 billion in 2023.
      • In 2024, approximately 32% of Adidas’s total net sales came from Europe.
      • Adidas produced 340 million pairs of shoes in 2021 and about 420 million pairs last year.
      • Adidas still outsources nearly 100 % of its production
      • Around 65 % of Adidas’s manufacturing partners have been collaborating with the company for a decade or more.
      • Adidas’s most iconic sneaker “Stan Smith” was initially intended to be named after the French tennis star, Robert Haillet.
      • Adidas almost filed for bankruptcy in the ‘90s.
      • Adidas Superstar was the first basketball shoe with a low-top silhouette featuring an all-leather upper portion.
      • Jeremy Scott had collaborated with Adidas for many years before the company produced a version of the Forum Hi sneaker with the designer’s face on it.
      • The first pair of Adidas shoes were track spikes made for track and field.
      • Adidas pioneered a sneaker with an embedded microchip—the Micropacer—allowing pace and calorie tracking.
      • Adidas’s stripes, the most easily recognizable feature of its brand, were put on the sneakers for stability, not for the beauty of the design.
      • The first piece of sports apparel created in 1967 by Adidas was the Franz Beckenbauer tracksuit. The tracksuit was named after the legendary footballer.
      • Adidas is the parent company of Runtastic and holds an 8.33 % stake in Bayern Munich; it formerly owned Reebok until its sale in 2022 to Authentic Brands Group for about $2.5 billion.
      • The Adidas Superstars were made for basketball players but became popular with skateboarders in the early ‘90s.
      • The original Adidas Superstars were the only line in the series to feature a golden trefoil on the sneaker’s tongue.
      • While Adidas’s roots are in Germany, today its shoes are largely produced across Asia—in China, Indonesia, Thailand, and Taiwan.
      • Adidas’s Tubular line of sneakers was inspired by car tires. The “tubular snake” was created as an emulation of tires and their threading.
      • The company continues to maintain a share in the German club Bayern Munich
      • This year, North America and Greater China are some of Adidas’s most important markets. Combined, these regions account for more than 40% of the company’s annual retail sales.
      • As of 2024–2025, North America and Greater China have been crucial markets: together they accounted for roughly 37 % of total revenue (North America ~22 %, Greater China ~15 %) in 2024.
      • In 2015–2016, Adidas signed a 10‑year kit deal with Manchester United worth £750 million—the most valuable kit deal in sports history to date.

      History of Adidas

      • “Adidas” is not an acronym of “All Day I Dream About Sports,” as some people think. The name of the company is the combination of the shortened name of its founder, Adolf Dassler – Adi – and the first syllable of his family name – Das.
      • Adi Dassler was born in Herzogenaurach, a small German town, whose residents mostly worked in shoe manufacturing factories.
      • Adi was the younger brother of Rudolf Dassler, founder of Puma. Having worked for some time together, the brothers split up in hatred after World War II because of Adi’s alliances with Nazis, establishing separate companies. Once the business was divided, the brothers never spoke again.
      • Adi Dassler could not find a job after the end of World War I. Therefore, he started making shoes in the bathroom of his mother’s laundry.
      • He registered the ‘Gebrüder Dassler Schuhfabrik’ in 1924 and began the mission to provide athletes with the equipment enhancing their performance.
      • The Dassler brothers had their first breakthrough when they persuaded the sprinter Jesse Owens to wear their leather track shoes with extra-long spikes during the Olympics in 1936. Owens became the first African American athlete to receive a sponsorship and, galvanized by the innovative shoes, won four Olympic Gold medals. After Owens’s victory, the demand for the Dasslers’ shoes increased.
      • Adidas company was registered on the 18th of August 1949.
      • After experimenting with different numbers of stripes on his shoes, Adi decided on three to give his sportswear a distinctive look. In March 1949, Dessler registered the three-stripe logo as the company’s trademark.
      • In 1954, when the German National football team became the World champion, rumors started that the footballers’ shoes gave them a decided advantage. Indeed, Adidas then developed the team’s shoe with exchangeable cleats that could adapt to different pitch conditions. With the German team’s victory, Adidas became known worldwide.
      • In 1967, the Franz Beckenbauer tracksuit became the first piece of apparel for Adidas, allowing the company to venture into the sports apparel industry.
      • Adidas created the official ball, Telstar, for the 1970 FIFA World Cup for the first time.
      • The trefoil logo was designed in 1971 and launched in 1972 just before the Summer Olympics in Munich.
      • Adi Dassler was honored with a statue outside the Adi Dassler Stadium in Herzogenaurach. It was created by Josef Tabachnyk and unveiled in 2006.
      • At the time of his death in 1978, Adi Dassler had 17 factories and annual sales of one billion marks.
      • Adidas was transformed into a private limited company in 1989, remaining family-owned until its IPO in 1995. In 1995, Adidas also launched its first website.
      • Some of the most famous Adidas innovations – Torsion, the Equipment concept, the Streetball campaign, and the Predator football boot were created between 1989 and 1995.
      • In the new century, Adidas shifted its focus to sports-inspired streetwear. The collaborations with Yohji Yamamoto and Stella McCartney produced interesting labels such as Y-3 (2003) and Porsche Design Sport (2007).
      • Adidas bought Reebok, including the brands Rockport and Reebok-CCM Hockey in 2006 and was re-named Adidas AG.
      • In 2013, Adidas introduced the Energy Boost running shoe featuring a completely new cushioning material.
      • Reebok stopped being part of Adidas in 2021.

      Read on to learn more historical and statistical information about Adidas.

      Adidas’s Annual Revenue from 2009 to 2024 in $US Billions

      A company’s revenue is the amount of money it receives from its customers in exchange for the sales of goods and services. Revenue is the top line item on an income statement from which a company’s costs and expenses are subtracted to arrive at net income. For the last several years, Adidas’s annual revenue has presented an uneven line, probably affected by lockdowns when people could not train in gyms and outdoors and needed sportswear less than usual. In 2019, the company’s annual revenue reached $26.477 billion, registering a 2.3% growth from 2018. In the first year of the pandemic, Adidas’s annual revenue declined by 14.39 % to $22.688 billion, compared to the previous year. When lockdowns eased worldwide in 2021, the company’s yearly revenue climbed by 10.83% from 2020 to $25.122 billion. Its revenue for the twelve months ending September 30, 2024, was $27.191 billion, equivalent to about $7.19 billion USD—reflecting a 4.23% increase over the same quarter in 2023 (which was €6.9 billion estimated). The table below illustrates the uneven trajectory of Adidas’s annual revenue since 2009.

      Adidas’s Annual Revenue from 2009

      YearRevenue in $US Billions
      2009$14.481
      2010$15.923
      2011$18.586
      2012$19.141
      2013$19.250
      2014$19.320
      2015$18.782
      2016$21.347
      2017$23.983
      2018$25.882
      2019$26.477
      2020$22.668
      2021$25.122
      2022$22.511
      2023$23.19 
      2024$25.63

      Adidas’s Quarterly Revenue Since 2019

      QuarterRevenue in $US Billions
      19-03-2019$6.682
      30-06-2019$6.192
      30-09-2019$7.128
      31-12-2019$6.475
      31-03-2020$5.244
      30-06-2020$3.941
      30-09-2020$6.972
      31-12-2020$6.512
      31-03-2021$6.351
      30-06-2021$6.117
      30-09-2021$6.783
      31-12-2021$5.871
      31-03-2022$5.950
      30-06-2022$5.955
      30-09-2022$6.454
      31-12-2022$5.65
      31-03-2023$6.25
      30-06-2023$7.10
      30-09-2023$6.00
      31-12-2023$6.00
      31-03-2024$6.5
      30-06-2024$5.8
      30-09-2024$6.25
      31-12-2024$6.15
      31-03-2025$7.15
      30-06-2025$6.93

      Source: Macrotrends

      Adidas Q2 2025 Earnings

      Adidas reported its 2025 second‑quarter earnings on Wednesday, July 30, with revenue growing 2.2 % to €5.95 billion, while earnings for the Adidas brand rose 12 % at currency‑neutral rates. The company also saw operating profit surge 58 % to €546 million, significantly outperforming expectations. Revenue climbed in all regions except Europe (which grew more modestly), led by double‑digit growth in Latin America and North America.

      Adidas’s Earnings per Share from 2010 to 2022

      A company’s earnings per share are defined as its net earnings or losses attributable to common shareholders per diluted share base, which includes all convertible securities and debt, options, and warrants. For the quarter ending June 30, 2025, Adidas’s EPS was €2.03, registering a 85.9% year-over-year increase (up from €1.09 in Q2 2024); and diluted EPS including discontinued operations came in at €2.07, compared to €1.06 a year earlier. In 2023, Adidas posted a diluted EPS of –€0.42 (i.e. a net loss per share), marking a turnaround from positive earnings in 2022*; in 2024, EPS rebounded strongly to €4.28, representing a full recovery and robust improvement compared to the prior year.

      *Note: Adidas’s 2023 EPS of –€0.42 corresponds to the loss per share figure—negative net income of €75 million.

      Adidas’s EPS from 2010 to 2024

      YearEPS
      2024$2.32
      2023$0.23
      2022$1.76
      2021$6.45
      2020$1.26
      2019$5.60
      2018$4.97
      2017$3.04
      2016$2.76
      2015$1.75
      2014$1.30
      2013$2.58
      2012$1.62
      2011$2.11
      2010$1.87

      Source: Macrotrends

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      Adidas’s Net Sales Worldwide from 2000 to 2024 in Billion Euros

      Net sales are the sum of Adidas’s gross sales minus its returns, allowances, and discounts. The table below shows Adidas Group’s net sales worldwide. Last year, the company reported net sales of €23.683 billion, up 11% year-over-year and 12% on a currency-neutral basis.

      Adidas’s Net Sales Worldwide from 2000 to 2024

      YearNet Sales in Billion Euros
      2024€23.683
      2023€21.427
      202222.511
      202121.234
      202018.435
      201923.640
      201821.915
      201721.218
      201618.483
      201516.915
      201414.534
      201314.203
      201214.883
      201113.322
      201011.990
      200910.381
      200810.799
      200710.299
      200610.084
      20056.636
      20045.860
      20036.267
      20026.523
      20016.112
      20005.835

      Source: Statista

      Adidas’s E-Commerce Net Sales from 2014 to 2024

      Adidas America, Inc. operates adidas.com, an online store, tailored for American customers. The company’s e-commerce net sales are generated mostly in the United States. It is noteworthy that adidas.com achieves the greatest part of its e-commerce net sales in the “Toys, Hobby and DIY” category. It also offers products in the “Fashion” category. To track the upward trajectory of Adidas’s e-commerce net sales, see the table below:

      Adidas’s E-Commerce Net Sales in Billion US Dollars from 2014 to 2024:

      YearE-Commerce Net Sales
      20244.7
      20235.7
      20221.431
      20211.497
      20201.417
      2019892
      2018688
      2017516
      2016306
      2015179
      2014136

      Global Share of Adidas Retail Sales in 2024 by Region

      In 2024, about 32% of Adidas Group’s net sales were generated in the EMEA region; that is, in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Sales shares stood at 22% in North America and at 15% in Greater China. In the latest quarter (Q2 2025), sales in Greater China increased 11% year-over-year (currency-neutral), while North America grew 15% and Europe (EMEA) rose 11%—all on a dual-digit growth trajectory for the adidas brand across regions despite macro‑ and geopolitical headwinds.

      Global Distribution of Adidas Retail Net Sales in 2024

      RegionShares of Net Sales
      EMEA32%
      North America22%
      Greater China15%
      Asia-Pacific14%
      Latin America12%

      Adidas’s Number of Retail Stores Worldwide from 2016 to 2024

      In 2024, the Adidas Group continued its strategy of store optimization and portfolio streamlining. The company operated approximately 1,863 physical stores worldwide, down from 1,990 in 2022—which in turn had declined from nearly 2,200 in 2021 after exiting Russia. At its peak in 2016, Adidas had over 2,800 brick‑and‑mortar locations. The 2024 store count reflects Adidas’s ongoing shift toward a leaner retail network focused on profitability and efficiency.

      Adidas’s Global Number of Stores Since 2016

      YearNumber of Stores
      20241,863
      20231,863
      20221,990
      20212,184
      20202,185
      20192,533
      20182,395
      20172,588
      20162,811

      Adidas’s Number of Retail Stores by Store Type from 2008 to 2022

      Adidas sells its footwear, apparel, and other goods in concept stores, factory outlets, and concession stores. A concept store is a shop selling a unique and carefully curated collection of items. Adidas footwear and apparel evoke an active lifestyle, appealing to a sports-minded target audience. In such stores, Adidas products are mixed and attractively displayed to convince customers of the need to buy them. Adidas factory outlets sell footwear and apparel at a heavily discounted price. Items sold in its factory shops are either first-quality or discontinued or irregular or canceled orders. There are also Adidas concession stores, which are small shops located within malls and larger stores. To learn where Adidas has preferred to sell its products since 2008, see the following table:

      YearConcept StoresFactory OutletsConcession Corners and Other
      20228341,05799
      20219871,086111
      20201,0291,044112
      20191,3331,075125
      20181,342933120
      20171,557895136
      20161,757902152
      20151,698872152
      20141,746851316
      20131,661779300
      20121,437730279
      20111,355734295
      20101,352725193
      20091,203755254
      20081,019681184

      Global Brand Value of Adidas from 2016 to 2024

      A company’s brand value measures the sales performance of a brand or product, using financial data. Adidas was valued at approximately €16.6 billion or nearly $17.5 billion in 2024. This was a healthy growth of about 23% year-over-year, , reflecting improved brand perception and stronger global positioning. Adidas remained the second‑most valuable sportswear brand behind Nike, which in 2024 was estimated at over $45 billion in brand value. It is also noteworthy that the Adidas brand is structured into three divisions: Forever Sports, Originals, and Adidas Equipment. These divisions are separate organizations because they produce different products to cater to different audiences, from different walks of life.

      Source: Statista

      YearBrand Value in $US Billions
      202417.5
      202315.5
      202214.636
      202114.342
      202016.481
      201916.669
      201814.295
      201710.169
      20167.098

      Global Brand Value Comparison of Adidas and Nike from 2015 to 2024

      Adidas brand was valued in 2024 at approximately $17.5 billion. Last year, the company celebrated the eighth consecutive year of growth following two years of decline. By comparison, its main competitor, Nike, has increased its brand value year over year since 2010. It reached around $45.4 billion in 2024. Both companies drive growth in the sportswear market around the globe, though Nike is more popular at home, in its North American market. Nike generates about 43.4% of its total revenue in the region. Only about 22% of Adidas’s global revenue comes from North America. The increase and decrease in the brand value of the two sportswear companies are reflected in the table below:

      Brand Value Comparison of Adidas and Nike from 2015 to 2024 in Billion US Dollars

      YearAdidasNike
      202417.545.4
      202315.531.3
      202214.63633.176
      202114.34230.443
      202016.48134.792
      201916.66932.421
      201814.29528.030
      201710.16931.762
      20167.09828.041
      20156.81126.000

      Number of Employees of Adidas Worldwide from 2010 to 2024

      At the end of the 2024 fiscal year, the Adidas Group employed 62,035 people worldwide. As the company closed its stores in Russia after the start of the Russian-Ukrainian war, the number of its employees decreased. In 2019, the company accounted for over 65,000 employees.

      YearNumber of Employees
      202462,035
      202359,030
      202259,258
      202161,401
      202062,285
      201965,194
      201857,016
      201756,888
      201658,902
      201555,555
      201453,731
      201349,808
      201246,306
      201146,824
      201042,541

      Adidas’s Stock Forecast

      As of writing, on July 28, 2025, Adidas’s stock price is $202.94 , trading between its 52-week high of $302.22 and low of $201.79. Analysts’ average 12-month price target is $249.24, implying an approximately 23% upside from the current price. The high-end forecast reaches $343.96, while the low-end estimate is $189.18. Analysts continue to view Adidas favorably relative to its arch‑competitor Nike, noting that over the past five years Adidas stock has outperformed Nike’s. The general expectation remains that, with middle-class growth supporting greater consumer bases globally, Adidas will continue to expand over the coming decades.

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      Adidas’s Emphasis on Innovation  

      Since its inception in the last century, Adidas’s strength has always been innovation. Adi Dassler’s shoes were invariably sensational. After the German National football team won in 1954, Adi Dassler’s boots on the German footballers’ feet gained international recognition. They were only half the weight of orthodox English football boots, boasted screw-in studs adaptable to ground conditions, and made running faster with a foam rubber interior. Forward-thinking, Adidas also was the first company in the world to put a computer into sports shoes in the ‘80s when computers were still a novelty on people’s desks, let alone in their footwear. An innovation ahead of its time, the Micropacer featured a system that provided performance statistics to athletes. These days, Adidas’s innovative projects boggle the most progressive minds used to technological creativity. The company works on shoes made from plastic and mushrooms, experimenting with these unusual materials not to impress the public but, as it has always done, to improve sportsmen’s performance. The Boost technology for shoes in Adidas’s Y3 series has recently changed the game in the footwear market. It is innovative cushion technology using thermoplastic polyurethane material in the soles to improve shock absorption. In such shoes, sportsmen run faster and more consistently because of the high energy return. 

      Indeed, whatever innovative detail Adidas has introduced into its sportswear or apparel, its aim has always been to cater to sportsmen’s needs to help them reach better results. Adi Dassler always attentively talked to athletes, listened to their wishes, and created footwear according to their requirements. Because of Dassler’s thoughtful approach to sports shoes, wearing Adidas has become synonymous with winning Gold Medals and breaking records. After Wilma Rudolph won three Gold Medals in the 1960 Summer Olympic Games, 75% of sportsmen competing in the Olympics put Adidas shoes on their feet. They continue wearing Adidas until now. Witness the most recent sports event: FIFA World Cup 2022. Its title winners, Argentina, clad in Adidas shirts, outscored France in a thrilling match and brought home the trophy. Adidas’s emphasis on sportsmen’s comfort and improved performance ensures its longevity and prosperity and secures it a place of honor among other sportswear titans. Inferior only to Nike, Adidas is now the most dominant sportswear and sporting goods company with a current market capitalization of 29.56 billion euros. To learn more curious facts about Adidas and gather statistical evidence of its success, continue reading. The paragraphs below elaborate on the reasons why Adidas has long been the key force in the sportswear industry.  

      • Adidas partnered with Parley for the Oceans to design shoes from ocean plastic.
      • Together with the biotech startup Bolt Threads, Adidas released vegan shoes made from mushrooms.
      • Adidas also released a vegan option of its classic, Stan Smith.
      • Adidas launched its circular running shoe in 2021.
      • Adidas is working on a game-changer, Futurecraft.4D.Strung. Adidas collects data about the shape and movement of a person’s foot and inserts the information into the algorithm that produces a personalized shoe. The shoe is made from one material without seams. Meanwhile, the company designed the prototype for short-distance training runs at 5m/s, and it plans to use the Strung technology in other sports as well.

      Adidas’s Sponsorships and Partnerships

      Football has always merited Adidas’s undivided focus. For over seventy years, the company has invested in developing football boots, apparel, and a ball, becoming an integral part of the history of this popular sport. As a global leader in football, Adidas has long been an official supplier of the most significant football tournaments in the world: the FIFA World Cup, the UEFA Champions League and Major League Soccer, and the UEFA European Championship. Adidas also sponsors some of the top football clubs, including Real Madrid, Manchester United, Arsenal, FC Bayern Munich, and Juventus. Its sponsorship also received such top Federations as Germany (DFB), Spain (RFEF), Belgium (RBFA), Argentina (AFA), Japan (JFA), and Italy (FIGC).  

      Adidas has also formed partnerships with the star performers on the football field. Among them are Leo Messi, Mohamed Salah, Paulo Dybala, Karim Benzema, Catarina Macario, Jude Bellingham, Vivianne Miedema, Trinity Rodman, Jennifer Hermoso, Serge Gnabry, Pedri, Joao Felix, Lindsey Horan, Wendie Renard. In the past, the greatest footballers sponsored by Adidas included Phillip Lahm, Steven Gerrard, Frank Lampard, Iker Casillas, and David Beckham. Many of these footballers were featured in Adidas commercials. The world’s favorite English football player, David Beckham, was the face of Adidas’s campaigns several times. He teamed up with Adidas in 2019, on the David Beckham Ultraboost commemorating his 1989/1999 season. In 2021, Adidas launched the Ultraboost 2021, in a commercial that describes running in Adidas Ultraboost shoes as similar to participating in your own video game.

      Adidas has supplied the official match ball for all FIFA World Cup matches since 1970. For every World Cup, Adidas designs a new ball by combining the latest technologies and unique designs. Among Adidas’s memorable balls was the Tango (1982), which was the first ball made from leather and polyurethane. The Azteca, created in 1986, was the first fully synthetic ball, whereas the Questa made in 1994 was the polyurethane foam-based ball. The +Teamgeist presented in 2006 was a revolutionary ball with its innovative and highly iconic design and panel technology.

      Source: FIFA

      Adidas’s Frequently Asked Questions

      Q: When was Adidas founded?

      Adi Dassler founded Adidas on August 18, 1949.

      Q: Who are Adidas’s founders?

      Adi Dassler started the company with only 47 employees in the small town of Herzogenaurach.

      Q: Who owns Adidas?

      Adidas is a public company that is traded on the stock market. 

      Q: Where are Adidas products made?

      Adi Dassler used to make his shoes and apparel in Germany. Now, however, Adidas products are made around the world, mostly in the Asian region, in countries such as China, Indonesia, Thailand, Taiwan, India, Brazil, Turkey, Cambodia, and the United States.   

      Q: How much is Adidas worth?

      How much a company is worth is typically represented by its market capitalization, or the current stock price multiplied by the number of shares outstanding. Adidas AG’s net worth as of August 2, 2025, is approximately $34.4 billion.

      Q: How much is the Adidas logo worth?

      The Adidas logo is estimated to be worth around $17.5 billion.

      Q:  What does Adidas stand for?

      The company’s name is the combination of the shortened name of its founder, Adolf Dassler – Adi – and the first syllable of his family name – Das.

      Q: Where is Adidas headquartered?

      Adidas is headquartered in Herzogenaurach (Germany) and has additional key locations: Portland (USA), Shanghai (China), Costa del Este Panamá, and Amsterdam (Netherlands). 

      Q: Does Adidas own Reebok?

      Adidas owned Reebok from 2006 to 2021. After the sell-off, Reebok is now owned by Authentic Brand Group. 

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