KEY POINTS
  • Brands like Warby Parker, Stitch Fix, FIGS, and Allbirds pioneered a new form of retail, one that went "direct to consumer" — via the internet — instead of selling through established outlets.
  • But now, a gloomy confluence of rising Facebook ad prices, worsening ad measurement, soaring shipping costs, newly-sober public markets, and smaller-than-anticipated customer bases are dealing DTC companies a harsh blow.
  • Together, they've lost billions in market cap in 2022, drastically underperforming the market in an already bad year.

In this article

A woman walks past an Allbirds store in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021.

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They were the hottest names in tech. Brands like Warby Parker, Stitch Fix, FIGS, and Allbirds pioneered a new form of retail, one that went "direct to consumer" — via the internet — instead of selling through established outlets. Riding the promise of low overhead, no middlemen, and a seemingly infinite pool of customers, these companies' valuations soared well into the billions. They appeared unstoppable. But today, they're crashing hard with no bottom in sight.

In this article