meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Great Luxury E-Commerce Reckoning

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 29 November 2024

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In 2024, luxury e-commerce faced a harsh reckoning. A pandemic-era boom gave way to a bruising downturn that exposed deep-seated weaknesses, as rising marketing costs, excessive discounting, outdated technology management and intensifying competition hit profitability. 


MatchesFashion went into administration at the start of the year, shortly after it was sold off in a fire sale to Frasers Group. Farfetch’s share price plummeted by 98 percent, bringing the company to the brink of bankruptcy, only for it to be rescued by South Korea’s Coupang. Richemont sold off Yoox Net-a-Porter to rival luxury e-tailer Mytheresa in October, ending a years-long effort to offload the struggling business.


This week on the podcast, Mytheresa CEO Michael Kliger and Lauren Santo Domingo, co-founder and chief brand officer of Moda Operandi, join BoF Founder and CEO Imran Amed on stage at BoF VOICES 2024. Together, they explore what went wrong in the luxury e-commerce sector, how they are navigating the ongoing luxury slowdown, and what comes next for the industry.


“We didn’t know that this big slowdown in aspirational demand would happen, but we were well prepared,” Kliger said.


Key Insights: 


  • What separates the winners and the losers in the luxury e-commerce reckoning comes down to preparedness, said Kliger. Mytheresa also “felt the pressures,” but the business was better suited to handle an environment laden with high inflation, high interest rates and middle-income shoppers retreating. 
  • Kliger added that he still believes in the viability of the luxury e-commerce model because “there is a consumer that wants to shop like that.” “Rumours of our demise have been greatly exaggerated,” added Santo Domingo. 
  • Despite the challenging market environment, some customers are still spending. E-tailers need to create desirability and find ways to attract shoppers to their platforms through curation, storytelling and other forms of differentiation. “They want from us more experience than just access to product,” said Kliger. “That’s why the brands want to be with us. We are brand enhancing,” echoed Santo Domingo. 
  • Mytheresa has also invested in optimising its marketing funnel to identify customers who are more likely to remain loyal over the long-term. “We’re not bidding for traffic. We’re not bidding for revenue. We’re bidding for customers,” said Kliger. The business built an algorithm to predict based on past purchases, addresses, types of payment, and time of purchase, whether a customer is likely to return, and they focus their marketing efforts accordingly. 


Additional Resources:

BoF VOICES 2024: Fashion's Next Moves: Industry insiders including designers Simon Porte Jacquemus and Glenn Martens, H&M CEO Daniel Ervér, e-commerce executives Lauren Santo Domingo and Michael Kliger and more spoke about key challenges and opportunities for their businesses and fashion at large. Meanwhile, McKinsey provided an outlook for 2025.





Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion. Welcome to the Bof

0:09.6

podcast. It's Friday, November 29th. This was the year of the great luxury e-commerce reckoning.

0:17.7

Giants have fallen, fortunes have shifted, and the online luxury landscape has been completely

0:23.5

altered. It all started in 2000 when Netaporte and Yukes were founded in the UK and Italy,

0:30.7

paving the way for an entire industry to explore its relationship with e-commerce. By 2010, there were multiple luxury e-commerce players

0:40.3

competing on both sides of the Atlantic.

0:43.2

Financial investors wanted a piece of the action.

0:46.2

They poured billions of dollars into these companies.

0:49.5

Matches fashion was acquired by Apex partners

0:52.1

at a reported $1 billion valuation.

0:55.0

Farfetch raised more than a billion dollars in venture funding and then raised $885 million

1:01.0

during its IPO in 2015. During COVID, Farfetch's stock rose to an all-time high,

1:08.0

achieving a market cap of more than $26 billion.

1:12.5

And then, everything changed.

1:15.4

Three of the luxury industry's biggest e-commerce players were in big trouble.

1:19.8

Late last year, Match's fashion was acquired by Fraser's Group in a fire sale at a fraction

1:25.2

of its Apex valuation.

1:29.7

But the business wasn't viable and went into administration in March 2024. Meanwhile, Farfetch's share price plummeted by 98%, bringing the company

1:37.9

to the brink of bankruptcy, only for it to be rescued by South Korea's coupang. As a result, the long-muted merger between Farfetch and Yucs Netaporte was now on the rocks.

1:50.0

Richemont had to find a new owner to get Wynap off its books,

1:54.0

extending a year's long effort to offload the struggling business

1:59.0

and taking write-downs totaling almost 4 billion euros.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from The Business of Fashion, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of The Business of Fashion and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.