Adidas has officially washed its hands of Kanye West’s brand Yeezy.
The sportswear brand revealed Wednesday in an earnings report that it has sold its remaining Yeezy inventory. “You see there is no Yeezy at the end anymore,” Adidas chief financial officer Harm Ohlmeyer said on the earnings call. “I want to confirm that again, not one Yeezy shoe left in our inventory.”
Over two years ago, Adidas terminated its partnership with the controversial rapper due to his antisemitic remarks. “Adidas does not tolerate antisemitism and any other sort of hate speech,” the company shared in a statement in October 2022. “Ye’s recent comments and actions have been unacceptable, hateful and dangerous, and they violate the company’s values of diversity and inclusion, mutual respect and fairness.” The decision to part ways had an impact of up to €250 million ($246 million) on the company’s net income in 2022.
The following year, Adidas announced that it was working on plans to sell its remaining stock of the shoes.
Wednesday’s earnings report revealed that the remaining Yeezy inventory generated around €50 million in the fourth quarter of 2025, increasing revenues by about 24 percent to €5,965 million in 2024, compared to €4,812 million the year prior. However, for the overall year, North American sales declined by two percent “solely due to significantly lower Yeezy sales,” while sales increased in other markets, according to Adidas.
The brand also noted that the company’s outlook for 2025 does not include any Yeezy revenues or profits.
West, who still uses the Yeezy brand name, most recently aired a puzzling commercial during the 2025 Super Bowl, pushing people to the brand’s website. However, the website was shut down the following day by Shopify, which hosts the brand’s e-commerce website, after the rapper reduced his online shop to a single T-shirt with a Nazi swastika displayed on the front. Shopify stated that the Yeezy violated its policy.
The rapper has continued his hate-filled rants on social media recently, firing off controversial and antisemitic tweets, including praising Adolf Hitler and identifying as a Nazi.