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The Business of Fashion Podcast

TikTok, Tariffs and Luxury's Fake News Problem

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 13 May 2025

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A strange new genre of TikTok videos is challenging long-held assumptions about how luxury products are made. Often shot in anonymous Chinese factories, these videos claim that the so-called "superfakes" flooding the market are indistinguishable from, and sometimes made in the same factories as, high-end bags from the likes of Chanel or Louis Vuitton. 


While all evidence points to these claims being false, the repetition of these videos has amplified a growing narrative: that luxury pricing is inflated, quality is slipping and production secrets are being exposed. Fuelled further by the U.S.-China tariff dispute and the allure of buying a $10,000 bag for $300, this narrative is resonating with a social media audience increasingly disillusioned with luxury’s mystique. 


In this episode, BoF's chief sustainability correspondent Sarah Kent joins hosts Sheena Butler-Young and Brian Baskin to break down what’s really happening behind the scenes – and why silence might not be a viable strategy for brands much longer.


Key Insights: 


  • TikTok's "superfake" narrative may be fiction, but it's feeding real consumer doubt. While only a few viral TikTok videos explicitly claim to produce fakes in the same factories as luxury goods, that idea has travelled widely and taken root. "It is supremely unlikely that any factory that had a real relationship with any luxury brand would go on TikTok to market superfakes," Kent notes. Yet the repetition of these claims underscores luxury's ongoing transparency issue. In the absence of accessible facts, falsehoods thrive.


  • Today’s best craftsmanship isn’t always in Europe as high-quality manufacturing has shifted globally. “For instance, if you were making performance footwear or sneakers in particular, China, Cambodia, and Vietnam are probably the best factories you can find in the world to do that,” Kent explains. “If you want to make a luxury product of that quality, you probably don’t want to make that in France or Italy."  


  • The fake bag narrative is irresistible but damaging to luxury. Even those who know the claims are likely untrue find them hard to shake. "It's a delicious narrative," Kent says. One that plays into an existing story of overpricing, declining quality, and aloofness in luxury. Brands have long relied on mythology and mystique. But as Kent notes, that strategy is less effective in a social media age, where misinformation travels fast and reputations can erode overnight. 


  • Consumers are questioning whether luxury is worth the price and Kent says consumer doubt "isn’t going away". Luxury brands need to explain more clearly why their products carry such high price tags to slow this erosion of trust that has accelerated since the pandemic, as prices rose and quality concerns mounted. "If brands aren't giving compelling information that explains where their stuff is made and why it’s valued in this manner then those questions aren't going to fade," Kent warns.


Additional Resources:



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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the debrief from the Business of Fashion, where each week we delve into our most popular BELF professional stories with the correspondents who created them.

0:17.2

I'm executive editor Brian Baskin. And I'm senior correspondent Sheena Butler Young. This week,

0:23.1

we're talking about a strange new genre of TikTok videos that claim to be pulling back the curtain

0:28.2

on the luxury industry's best kept secret. These videos are claiming that many of the super fake

0:33.7

bags on the market come from the same factories as the real ones. It's a great sales pitch, but is it true? And what does the popularity of these videos,

0:42.3

true or not, say about consumer trust in luxury brands and the mythologies around them,

0:48.3

especially as those mythologies and the prices that they charge have grown so much in recent years?

0:53.3

Here to help us make sense of it

0:55.1

all is BOF's chief sustainability correspondent Sarah Kent. Hi, Sarah. Welcome back to the debrief.

1:00.9

Thanks for having me, Sheena, and I think for this story, my title has actually changed. I'm now chief

1:05.0

TikTok correspondent. Noted. We'll update that for the next one. Yeah, please. So Sarah, talk to us about what these

1:13.5

TikTok videos that have gone viral to the nth degree, what are they claiming? So it's a combination.

1:20.1

It's actually really interesting because Brian, you mentioned that, you know, the videos are

1:23.7

claiming to produce super fakes in the same bags as luxury products are made, only a handful

1:31.7

of them are actually making that claim. A lot of them are just sort of saying, we can make

1:36.7

these products that are as good as what the luxury brands make. But the way this trend has

1:42.8

traveled and gone viral is other influences and content creators have picked up on this narrative of these bags being made in China and created their own videos repeating this over and over until what people who view the videos take away is, oh, luxury products are being made in China.

2:00.3

You mean people online don't understand fact from fiction in a TikTok video?

2:04.7

Wait, what?

2:06.3

It gets confusing, you know?

2:08.2

It does.

2:09.0

And that's the headline of your story, right?

...

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