Lawmakers call on SEC to assess Shein supply chain before IPO
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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowA bipartisan group of two dozen lawmakers is asking the Securities and Exchange Commission to put the brakes on an initial public offering by Chinese fast-fashion retailer Shein until it verifies it does not use forced labor from the country’s predominantly Muslim Uyghur population.
Shein hasn’t said whether it plans to go public this year, but some news outlets have reported in the past few months that the company is raising money in anticipation of a U.S. listing in the second half of this year.
Headquartered in Singapore, Shein has major operations in Indiana. In summer 2022, the company opened its Midwest distribution hub just northwest of Indianapolis—a 659,000-square-foot center in Whitestown—and announced plans for a second, 550,000-square-foot warehouse on its Boone County campus. Shein expects to boost employment at the site from about 750 to 1,400 by the end of 2025.
The letter from lawmakers comes a few weeks after the launch of an anonymous coalition of “like-minded individuals and businesses” called “Shut Down Shein,” which is aiming to increase scrutiny on the company in Washington and ultimately get it booted out of the U.S. marketplace.
Chapin Fay, a managing director at Actum, a consultancy firm that works with the group, said he’s met with congressional offices to discuss Shein. Fay declined to disclose who funds “Shut Down Shein,” but said its members include American brands and human rights organizations.
In the letter sent to SEC Chair Gary Gensler, lawmakers cited a Bloomberg report from November that said some garments shipped to the U.S. by Shein were made of cotton from China’s Xinjiang region. They’re asking the SEC to certify via “independent verification” that the company does not use Uyghur forced labor.
“We strongly believe that the ability to issue and trade securities on our domestic exchanges is a privilege, and that foreign companies wishing to do so must uphold a demonstrated commitment to human rights across the globe,” lawmakers wrote in the letter.
Shein spokesperson Peter Pernot-Day said in a prepared statement that the company takes visibility across its entire supply chain seriously.
“We are committed to respecting human rights and adhering to local laws and regulations in each market we operate in,” Pernot-Day said. “Our suppliers must adhere to a strict code of conduct that is aligned to the International Labour Organization’s core conventions. We have zero tolerance for forced labor.”