Melinda Whittington
Analyst
Yes. Thanks for that question, Bobby. You're right. It's been, gosh, a little over 2 years ago now, where [ FCS ], which was a publicly traded company and our biggest customer globally, which is kind of crazy given the relative size of our international business, but was actually bought out by a private company that chose not to work with brands anymore. And so, we pretty quickly pivoted. We had long-time discussions with DFS, which as you astutely noted, is 3x, 4x bigger than FCS and probably a better fit for our brand and our customer base. But between FCS and DFS, they'd always required exclusivity. So we are well underway with DFS. They continue to be super pleased. We've had some introductions where they've called out that we've been one of their fastest-growing, if not the fastest-growing introduction they've had. But at the same time, it just -- it's taking a while. It's taking longer, frankly, than we probably forecasted to just get up to the kind of run rates of where we were with FCS, particularly given that U.K. economy and the macroeconomic environment is also quite challenged. So we are super pleased with DFS. They are pleased with us. We are continuing to grow that business, and we want to serve that consumer. That said, at the kind of volume levels that we're seeing through this multiyear transition, it just didn't make sense to have a fully dedicated plant there in the U.K. So, as we leverage our overall global network, we think we're getting that rightsized. We think we get that cost structure right as well, so it makes sense for us, it makes sense for DFS and it makes sense for the consumer to grow that business. And we actually think, to your point, it will accelerate it -- accelerate that growth. And then, historically, our U.K. business margins were fairly consistent with other wholesale that we would see like in our core North America, and we anticipate being able to get back to those kind of ranges over time.