4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 12 November 2024
⏱️ 28 minutes
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For nearly a decade, the luxury sector has experienced what seemed like limitless growth, with brands like Louis Vuitton, Gucci, and Chanel pushing product prices higher — and seeing consumers pay up. However, recent quarterly reports have marked a sudden shift, with even industry giants reporting disappointing revenue. As luxury editor Robert Willliams explains, “These brands are omnipresent and people are seeing them everywhere. Whether consumers finally pull the trigger is so much about their economic confidence, this feel-good factor. Are things going to be better for me next month than they are today?”
This week, BoF executive editor Brian Baskin and luxury editor Robert Williams discuss the forces contributing to this downturn, the implications for top brands and potential strategies luxury players are exploring to reignite growth.
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the debrief from the Business of Fashion, where each week we dive into B.OF professionals most impactful stories with the correspondence who wrote them. |
0:17.0 | I'm Executive Editor Brian Baskin. |
0:19.0 | Today we're tackling a major shift in the luxury sector |
0:22.0 | that surprised even seasoned watchers of the industry. For about a decade, brands such as Louis Vuitton, |
0:27.9 | Gucci, Chanel, and Hermes experienced what seemed like limitless growth. They doubled prices on |
0:33.3 | some of their most popular products and people kept shopping. And then, sometime in the last |
0:38.5 | couple years, something changed. A few reports of slowing sales here and there turned into a |
0:44.1 | quarterly firestorm of disappointing revenue and profits. And it seems like things are only getting |
0:49.4 | worse if the latest results are any indication. Joining to discuss what's behind this downturn and how luxury is finding its way out is |
0:56.8 | BOS luxury editor, Robert Williams. |
0:59.4 | Robert, welcome to the debrief podcast. |
1:01.6 | Thanks so much for having me, Brian. |
1:03.5 | Robert, let's start with this last round of earnings. |
1:06.4 | What did we learn? |
1:08.1 | Well, this Q3 print was definitely not stellar. We saw that some groups managed to be |
1:17.1 | relatively resilient in their top line. The biggest groups, namely, well, the biggest LVMH, was down |
1:24.5 | 5%, which is not, you know, an enormous decline, but it's certainly a very |
1:30.7 | different dynamic than what we're used to seeing with them. They had kept up so consistently |
1:36.8 | double-digit growth since 2015, 2016. And they actually missed expectations, right, |
1:44.1 | which is very rare for them. Yes, people thought |
1:46.5 | they were going to do a bit better. LVMH, yeah, they were down 5% for fashion. I think when you |
1:51.9 | take into account some of their other categories like drinks, cosmetics, some things that were |
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