Japan’s XEBIO Eyes Move to Acquire Drummond Golf by 2027
Japanese sporting goods giant XEBIO Holdings Co., Ltd. announced it has approved key terms to acquire 100% of the shares of Drummond Golf Pty Ltd, one of Australia’s largest golf equipment retail chains.
The transaction aims to officially transition Drummond Golf into an XEBIO subsidiary by April 2027.
The acquisition marks a major strategic push into the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region for XEBIO, which is looking to anchor a stable growth platform overseas. Drummond Golf is a heavyweight in the Australian golf market, operating a robust ecosystem that includes franchise and directly managed stores, wholesale operations, golf simulator-related services, and an e-commerce platform. For the fiscal year ended June 2025, Drummond Golf generated more than ¥10 billion in net sales.
According to the company, the move is heavily motivated by Australia’s steady population growth and highly resilient golf market.
By securing Drummond Golf, XEBIO plans to combine the Australian retailer’s extensive store network and strong local brand recognition with its own corporate strengths. Specifically, XEBIO aims to leverage its large-scale procurement power, private-brand development expertise, and digital know-how to boost Drummond Golf’s profitability while accelerating XEBIO’s broader international retail footprint.
Market and Company Context
XEBIO Holdings positions sporting goods retail as its core business, expanding its footprint both in Japan and internationally. The group has recently focused on strengthening its product procurement, private-brand portfolios, and e-commerce capabilities to drive medium- to long-term corporate value.
The announcement comes at a time of mixed market indicators for the Japanese retailer:
- Current Market Capitalization: ¥42.4 billion
- Average Trading Volume: 138,161 shares
- Technical Sentiment Signal: Sell
Despite the current negative technical sentiment in the market, the acquisition underscores XEBIO’s commitment to long-term structural growth outside of its domestic Japanese market.











