Kanye West Confirms Termination Of Yeezy's Partnership With Gap: 'A King Can't Live In Someone Else's Castle'

Zinger Key Points
  • Kanye West has confirmed that Yeezy's partnership with Gap has come to a close.
  • "A king can't live in someone else's castle. A king has to make his own castle," West Says

Rapper and designer Kanye West, who goes by "Ye," has terminated his Yeezy brand partnership with Gap Inc GPS two years after the deal was announced.

"Everyone knows that, you know, I'm the leader, I'm the king, right, so a king can't live in someone else's castle. A king has to make his own castle," West said Thursday on CNBC's "Closing Bell."

What To Know: In June 2020, West announced a partnership with Gap to design and sell a line of clothing under the Yeezy Gap brand.

Several reports have indicated that West's lawyers sent a letter to Gap on Thursday, notifying the apparel chain of a termination of its agreement with Yeezy.

The letter said Gap broke the agreement by failing to release apparel and open retail stores as planned. West confirmed those reports on Thursday afternoon.

"It was always a dream of mine to be at the Gap and to bring the best product possible to the masses," West said before explaining what went wrong. 

West wanted to bring the quality of some of the top fashion houses in the world to consumers at affordable prices, he said.

"We designed an entire collection and ... I wasn't able to set the actual price that I wanted for this collection," West said.

He told CNBC that he had designed shirts with Gap that were meant to be sold around $20, but the company priced the line of shirts at $200 and above. 

"Don't bring a leader in and have him not lead ... I'm sorry, I'm not going to argue with people that are broker than me about money," he said.

Furthermore, part of the agreement included Yeezy branded stores, but "they just ignored us about building stores constantly," he said: "It was very frustrating, it was very disheartening."

He went on to explain that there were also colors involved in designs that he didn't approve and products were being named and sent to places without his consent.

"Sometimes I would talk to the guys ... the leaders, and it would just be like I was on mute or something," West said.

He suggested that he is the only person in the world that could save Gap's business. 

Made In America: West has also taken issue with Adidas over his partnership on Yeezy footwear. The company wanted to manufacture the shoes in China, while West wanted the shoes to be manufactured in the U.S.

"They've even gone and specifically hired people from my team to do collaborations with to attempt to make fake versions or to try to dilute my message," West said. 

West said he has been buying factories in California in an effort to bring the manufacturing industry back to the U.S. 

"In a lot of ways, Europe has been the head of prestige with the luxury brands and luxury vehicles and China has been the head of manufacturing, but America, we invented rock and roll ... we are the youngest startup ever, you know, America itself," West said. 

"We invented Apple, we invented Ford and now we have Yeezy."

Closing Bell host Sara Eisen noted that it sounded as if West was trying to end his partnership with Adidas as well. 

He responded: "My momma said trying is failing. We not gonna fail. We will succeed."

GPS Price Action: Gap shares closed Thursday down 3.75% at $8.99. 

Photo: Kenny Sun from Flickr.

Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Comments
Loading...
Posted In: EntertainmentNewsContractsTop StoriesMediaGeneralCNBCKanye WestSara Eisen
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!