IADS Exclusive: Everlane, Shein and the price of convenient transparency

Articles & Reports
 |  
Jun 2026
 |  
Maya Sankoh

Everlane made transparency its commercial proposition. Shein has now bought the remains of that proposition at a price shaped less by brand heat than by financial distress.

In May 2026, Everlane said it had reached an agreement to be acquired by Shein, the ultrafast-fashion platform IADS examined in its January 2026 Exclusive, ‘The Shein paradox: when digital ultra-fast fashion meets physical reality’. That article documented what happened when Shein tested that ambition at BHV Marais in Paris: 300,000 initial visitors gave way to near-empty floors within weeks, as in-store prices far above the online average undermined the very proposition that drove the brand. The Everlane acquisition extends the same question: can Shein acquire the trust it cannot earn, through a brand once built on radical transparency?

The reported price was about $100 million, although the companies did not publicly disclose financial terms. Six years earlier, Everlane had been valued at $550-600 million. By the time the sale was being discussed, the company had accumulated around $90 million in debt, and common shareholders were expected to receive no payout.


IADS Exclusive: Everlane, Shein and the price of convenient transparency   


IADS provides its members with a weekly in-depth analysis on retail-oriented topics.


*IADS Exclusives are for members only. You can subscribe to our Substack to receive our weekly exclusives here.*