Lululemon is buying Mirror, the startup that sells a $1,500 high-tech mirror for streaming workout classes at home, for $500 million

The Mirror
The Mirror

Courtesy of Mirror

  • Lululemon has agreed to acquire the exercise-tech startup Mirror for $500 million, the company announced on Monday.

  • The athletic-apparel company invested in the startup last year and has a content partnership with the it.

  • Mirror sells a $1,500 device of the same name that allows customers to participate in fitness classes at home.

  • The acquisition comes as demand for streaming at-home workout classes has grown, particularly during the coronavirus pandemic.

  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The workout-apparel brand Lululemon has agreed to acquire the at-home-exercise startup Mirror for $500 million, the company announced on Monday.

Lululemon Athletica Inc. said in a press release that the deal would help the apparel maker boost its "digital and interactive capabilities." It also comes after Lululemon invested in Mirror in October as part of a $34 million funding round led by Steve Cohen's hedge fund Point72.

Brynn Putnam, Mirror's founder and CEO, will stay on as the company's chief executive, and Mirror will operate as a standalone company within Lululemon. The transaction is expected to close in the second fiscal quarter of 2020.

In addition to the investment, Lululemon has also worked with Mirror through a content partnership that included sweat and meditation classes from the apparel company's global ambassadors on Mirror's platform.

Mirror, as its name implies, sells a $1,500 high-tech mirror that's meant to serve a sleek gym alternative for working out at home. The product helps customers keep track of their form during exercises and doubles as a screen for interactive workout classes.

The mirror can be controlled via a smartphone app, and users can see exercise stats on the mirror's screen. The company also expanded into personal training in October.

The deal comes as the demand for streaming workouts and specialized equipment meant to replicate the experience of participating in a boutique fitness class at home has risen in recent years, following the popularity of brands like Peloton.

For Lululemon, the acquisition could help the company further expand into digital fitness as the company faces heightened competition in athleisure from rivals like Nike.

It also comes as there's an increased interest in working out from home amid the coronavirus pandemic. Peloton, which makes high-end fitness bikes and treadmills and offers digital workout classes, said its sales were up 66%when it reported third-quarter earnings in early May.

Putnam said her dissatisfaction with other at-home workout platforms led her to create Mirror, which launched in 2018.

"It was a passive, one-way experience," Putnam said in a previous interview with Business Insider in reference to at-home workout apps she's tried in the past. "There was no interaction. There was no community. There was no progress reporting."

It's unclear how many units Mirror has sold, but Putnam told Business Insider last year that the company had sold Mirrors in every state in the US within a couple of months of its launch.

Read the original article on Business Insider