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27 April 2026 · Issue 01
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~7 min read
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A POLYMATH publication
THE DEBRIEF.
Consumer brand intelligence, every other Sunday.
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OK so I've been watching capital do a really specific thing for the last few months and this fortnight is where it actually broke into the open. Jersey Mike's filing at $12B. White Claw paying $325M for Finnish Long Drink, of all things. L Catterton bundling athletes into a whole fund. Westman Atelier quietly raising another $15M.
It's not that money's moving. That's not new. It's WHERE it's moving and what it's quietly walking past. Capital has stopped betting on categories and started betting on very specific positions inside them, and it's being really picky about which positions count. If you're inside one of those right now you're getting funded. If you're not, you're not.
That's a much sharper market than it was a year ago, and the brands you'll see below are all sitting on one side of that line. Scroll down for the detail.
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Lucy x
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On your radar
The Headlines.
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beauty |
Charlotte Tilbury opens her first standalone UK store on Carnaby Street, twelve years after launch. The whole beauty category is retreating from physical retail as DTC margins compress; Tilbury is leaning in instead. Counter-cyclical, by design. Drapers → |
Mecca opens its first standalone fragrance store in Melbourne. Mecca already does roughly 30% of premium beauty in Australia, and splitting fragrance into its own banner is a clean signal of what the next category split looks like. UK department store buyers are quietly studying it. Inside Retail AU → |
fashion |
Frame closes five US doors and concentrates capital on its Madison Avenue flagship. Fashion's version of the Charlotte Tilbury move: retreat from broad physical retail, double down on the rents that justify themselves. WWD → |
Ganni opens its first Tokyo flagship after quietly reducing its US footprint. The brand is concentrating capital where the customer pays full price; Asia's premium consumer is the target. Business of Fashion → |
food and beverage |
Bread Ahead opens in NYC, and the UK numbers explain why. 12 sites, £14.2M revenue, margins compressed last year. The US bet isn't growth, it's mix: American foot traffic at premium price points is the only way the unit economics breathe. The Grocer → |
Jersey Mike's files for a $1B+ IPO at a $12B valuation. Store count more than tripled in a decade. Fast-casual is becoming the bond market of consumer right now, and the four-wall margin in the S-1 will set the comp range for two years. TradedVC → |
retail |
M&S Food's Selfridges shop-in-shop is doing 2.4x the basket size of standalone sites. Same SKUs, same prices, different shopper. A reminder that retail performance is a story about adjacency more often than it's a story about product. Retail Week → |
QVC files for bankruptcy with $5B+ debt as live commerce takes the audience. A 30-year cable-shopping business undone in five years by people doing the same thing on phones for free; the second-order effect for UK brands is a wave of mid-market US suppliers losing their largest channel. Yahoo Finance → |
capital |
L Catterton and Patricof launch CHAMP, a fund built around athlete-aligned brands. Athlete equity used to be the sweetener at the end of a deal. Now it's the thesis. PR Newswire → |
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Behind the curtain
The Strategy.
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Why Ocado doesn't refrigerate its vans
Refrigeration that doesn't require a fridge.
If you watched an Ocado van pull up on your street this week, you'd assume the back of it was a moving fridge. It isn't. Ocado runs standard, unrefrigerated Mercedes Sprinter vans, the same chassis your local plumber drives. The cold comes from gel packs and dry ice, packed alongside your prawns at the depot.
The Numbers.
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Capital · per van
£30k vs £60k
Saves £30,000 on day one.
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Annual fuel · per van
~£1,200
15-20% more efficient.
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Lifetime · 7 yrs
£42k+
Capital plus seven years of fuel and lighter servicing.
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Across the fleet · 1,800 vans
≈ £75M
Total saved over 7 years.
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* Figures illustrative, built from public Ocado fleet data and standard commercial-vehicle benchmarks.
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This isn't a corner cut. It's the entire model. What Ocado figured out, and what most of their competitors didn't, is that the cold chain doesn't need to live in the van. It needs to live in the delivery window.
Their depots are surgical: orders are picked at temperature, packed into insulated totes with phase-change cooling, loaded onto vans within minutes, and delivered inside a sub-90-minute window. The cold doesn't degrade because the journey doesn't last long enough for it to matter.
Refrigerated vans are what you'd build if you optimised for the van. Ocado optimised for the system. Ocado →
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Key insight
The Take.
Every category has an Ocado-vs-the-rest decision sitting inside it. The brands that win the next decade are the ones whose ops team gets to question the obvious before the marketing team commits to it.
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Inside the work
The Practice.
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From my desk
Two days deep on a fashion brand's SKU-level data this fortnight. The headline gross margin looked healthy. Underneath, 18% of SKUs were margin-negative once returns and shipping were properly attributed. That bottom 18% was quietly eating the profit on the rest.
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For your business
If you sell physical product, you almost certainly have margin-negative SKUs hiding in your top sellers. Returns, shipping and promo happen below the gross margin line, where most P&Ls stop reporting. Finding out which products pay for themselves is the best half-day of your year.
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In conversation with
The Founder.
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Laura O'Connell · Oatco
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Laura O'Connell, Oatco.
From a kitchen in Cork to 800+ stores across Tesco, Aldi, Spar and Applegreen. We talked about Dragons' Den, the moment her costing model stopped working, and the wholesale conversation she nearly walked away from.
Laura is unusually clear-eyed about a business that, on paper, shouldn't exist. Energy snacks are a graveyard category: thin margins, brutal distribution, and the supermarkets hold the data. She found the corner of it nobody had really claimed.
What she said about the wholesale conversation she nearly walked away from is going to stay with me for a while. Read the full feature on LinkedIn →
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That's the fortnight. Hit reply and tell me your thoughts.
Lucy x
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01
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02
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Growth partner for consumer brands
POLYMATH
The commercial intelligence behind your brand.
Business · Management · Consulting
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You built the brand. Now build the business behind it.
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