Victoria Beckham: ‘All we’ve ever tried to do is protect our children’

Victoria Beckham covers the latest issue of WSJ. Magazine, mostly to promote her fashion and makeup brand. She’s doing a collab with The Gap as well. Since more than half of this piece is about her business, it’s actually really funny to see how many of her quotes were devoted to denying that her business has lost millions of dollars for years and years through mismanagement and products which don’t sell. She’s hanging her hat on her (legitimately) successful makeup line, but she swears that the fashion line is doing well too. Recollections may vary, especially since she *just* lost another partner amid “mounting losses” for the label. Besides all of this business-talk, Victoria addresses some personal stuff too, like her estrangement from her eldest son Brooklyn. Some highlights:

She dreams big: For years, the Victoria Beckham brand was in the red, with Victoria and her staff spending wildly on fabrics and scrapping designs at the 11th hour in pursuit of perfection. But she is proud to say that the company’s latest phase has been one of radical transformation: It rose to record profits in the past year, with a Netflix documentary taking viewers behind the scenes of the turnaround that boosted sales. Now she’s laying plans for something bigger: a legacy brand selling everything from fragrances to handbags, one that she hopes will long outlive her. “I’m very optimistic,” Beckham, 51, says. “I dream big.”

Motherhood: “Being a parent of young adult children and adult children, gosh, I mean, it’s very different from having little children. I think that we’re trying to do the best we can.”

Meeting David Beckham at the age of 24: “At 24, you’re almost a child yourself.”

Brand Victoria Beckham: A than five years ago, Beckham’s brand was roughly $68 million in debt. Spending was out of control, says David Belhassen, founder of NEO Investment Partners, which entered as a stakeholder in 2017. “Of course Victoria would come with dreams of having big shows and spending there and doing the best fabric, and ‘Let’s redo the whole dress, it’s not working, it’s not what I want,’ ” he says. After hearing her ideas, her staff didn’t dare tell her no, he says. In Victoria Beckham, the documentary series, Belhassen describes the company spending roughly $90,000 a year on plants. In 2017, David Beckham funneled roughly $30 million into Victoria’s company through his own firm, DB Ventures. But it’s their money, Victoria says. “We share everything, and so we were both supporting the business really at a time where financially we weren’t really in a position to do that,” she says.

Her successful makeup line: The makeup provided a big cash boost. After 14 years of losses, the daily operations of the company finally climbed into the black in 2022. The returns have grown since then, and the company reported roughly $2.8 million in earnings for the 2024 fiscal year, before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. That’s four years of double-digit revenue growth. Projected revenue for 2025 is roughly $170 million. Beckham says her makeup child didn’t need to bail out her fashion child. “At a time when we’re reading so much about how fashion is really struggling, the huge houses are really struggling, to be an independent brand, be profitable, fashion in its own right—clothing is selling and we are profitable independent of beauty—is something that I’m so proud of.”

On Brooklyn’s Instagram Stories statement: “I think that we’ve always—we love our children so much. We’ve always tried to be the best parents that we can be. And you know, we’ve been in the public eye for more than 30 years right now, and all we’ve ever tried to do is protect our children and love our children. And you know, that’s all I really want to say about it.”

Her other children: “Cruz is on tour at the moment, bless him,” Victoria says of her 21-year-old indie-rocker son. “He has done this at very much a grassroots approach.” She spoke lovingly of her lower-profile family members, including 14-year-old Harper. “She’s very sweet, she’s very kind, she works hard, and she’s also very appropriate, which I think is really important as well.”

Therapy: In 26 years of marriage, she says, she and David have never been to couples therapy (though she’s been to a therapist herself). She praises laughter and communication. She’s spoken about suffering from an eating disorder that she overcame by focusing on health and fitness with help from David.

[From WSJ. Magazine]

Her statement about Brooklyn was purposefully vague and demonstrably false. David and Victoria absolutely used their kids to build Brand Beckham, so there was a mix of protection alongside exploitation. But in recent years, no, Victoria hasn’t protected Brooklyn or his wife. Victoria and David have gone out of their way to target Brooklyn in a really gross way. As for the business side of the conversation… Victoria’s comment about David funneling money to prop up her failing business is so funny. “But it’s their money, Victoria says” – sure. Did she have to remind David of that? That she would take half if they ever divorced?


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Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Backgrid.

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13 Responses to “Victoria Beckham: ‘All we’ve ever tried to do is protect our children’”

  1. Smarty pants says:

    Is she missing out on clicks or something?

    She got her pr to convince people she actually designs clothes. That worked! People believe she designs like they believe she sung! It was well known decades ago she neither sang or designed clothes. People are so fu@@ gullible. They believe the whole fake love story which was only ever a business arrangement with loads on the side. People are strangely gullible. He sleeps around and always has. Their relationship was business..she never sang nor designed.

    • Neeve says:

      What does she do? Does she sketch,does she know how to sew? What makes her a designer ,are they her original ideas and then she gets someone to craft them? I watched her doc and it was vague why she should be called a designer as opposed to just having a fashion brand!?

  2. All they have ever wanted to do was smother and control their children’s lives. There I fixed it for you Vicky!!

  3. GMHQ says:

    So she actually admits that the fashion business still loses money. In her world there is no such thing as interest, taxes and depreciation, which she casually says the Journal should ignore.

  4. Jais says:

    What does it mean that Harper is appropriate? As in dresses and acts appropriate? As in good manners? Anyways, look, best of luck to all these people as they build their brands. May they all keep each other’s names out of their mouths. Th learners, the kids, all of em.

  5. Sid says:

    Wow. I knew her overrated clothing line was always a money pit, but I didn’t realize it took 14 years for her makeup line to turn a profit. I get that most new businesses take a lot of time to become profitable, but 14 years?

  6. Lady Digby says:

    Love and protect your children but also as a responsible parent let them grow up and respect that when they are adult individuals entitled to make their own decisions and relationship choices whether you approve of them are not.

  7. YankeeDoodles says:

    This woman is so cringe. Just so hopelessly, horribly cringe. She reminds me of Vicky on Little Britain. “Yer, but, no, but yer, but no.” ..,Posh was the name she was given when she was baptised in the great British well of sarcasm.

    • Neeve says:

      I used to love the Spice Girls and her own band members said she wasn’t that posh she is just more posh than the rest of them. And I remember her accent vividly during the early days she sounded like an East Enders character,I think she did the Kate Middleton special in changing how she spoke .

    • kelleybelle says:

      And I think only because her family had money.

  8. Amy Bee says:

    I think eventually she will end up shutting down the clothing line. At some point she’ll have to accept that the clothing is not profitable. As for what she says about Brooklyn a statement that was probably crafted by her agent. She also says that Harper is appropriate what does that mean?

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