Capri Holdings appointed Corey Moran Chief Marketing Officer of Michael Kors on Thursday, filling a vacancy that has persisted through the company's failed $8.5 billion merger attempt with Tapestry and into a critical fourth quarter. Moran arrives from DTC outdoor brand HOKA, where he served as Vice President of Brand Marketing, and before that spent four years at Nike running global basketball campaigns. The timing is surgical: Michael Kors generated $3.38 billion in revenue for fiscal 2024, representing 68% of Capri's total top line, and has posted seven consecutive quarters of comparable-store sales declines.
The role has been effectively open since Capri's former Chief Brand Officer, Pia Ruenzi, departed in May 2024 after less than eighteen months. During that span, Capri saw its stock price fall 43%, a federal judge block the Tapestry acquisition on antitrust grounds in October, and Tapestry formally terminate the deal in November while paying Capri a $45 million breakup fee. Michael Kors, once a $5 billion handbag juggernaut in the mid-2010s, has struggled with brand positioning as accessible luxury fragments across direct-to-consumer insurgents and heritage houses simultaneously push downmarket. Moran's mandate is clarification: arrest the perception drift, tighten channel discipline, and restore full-price sell-through in a category where promotional intensity now exceeds 40% of transactions at department-store doors.
The appointment matters because Michael Kors is no longer too big to fail within Capri's portfolio. Versace and Jimmy Choo, the group's other nameplates, combined for $1.58 billion in fiscal 2024 revenue and carry operating margins in the mid-teens, well below Michael Kors' low-twenties despite persistent underperformance. Capri CEO John Idol has publicly committed to reducing Michael Kors' wholesale exposure and closing underperforming stores—the brand ended fiscal 2024 with 544 directly operated locations globally, down from a peak near 900—but wholesale still represents roughly 35% of brand revenue and serves as the primary vector for discount erosion. Moran's HOKA tenure is instructive: the brand grew revenue 28% in fiscal 2023 and maintained ASPs above $150 while scaling from running specialty into broader sporting goods, a rare example of premiumization during distribution expansion. Whether that playbook translates to a heritage accessible-luxury brand with 40 years of equity and a handbag AOV closer to $350 is the open question. The risk is that Michael Kors lacks HOKA's performance moat and customer obsession, making channel discipline feel like managed decline rather than strategic editing.
Operators should watch three developments over the next six months. First, Capri's fiscal Q3 earnings in early February will reveal whether Michael Kors' comparable-store sales decline decelerated during the holiday period; consensus expects another mid-single-digit drop but any improvement in full-price mix would signal traction. Second, Moran's initial campaign work will likely surface in March or April, timed to pre-fall product launches; the creative tonality and media weight will clarify whether Capri is betting on brand heat or doubling down on accessible functionality. Third, Capri's fiscal 2026 guidance, expected in May, will indicate whether the company plans to stabilize Michael Kors revenue near $3.2 billion or attempt to grow back toward $4 billion, a distinction that will dictate everything from product development cycles to wholesale account strategy.
Moran starts the role in January, which gives him 90 days to influence fall 2025 product allocation and 120 days to shape the brand's first post-merger-collapse advertising posture. Capri has no remaining M&A backstop and no operating margin left to burn.