San Francisco Chronicle

No longer in fashion

Luxury clothes lose luster in pandemic

- By Elizabeth Paton

This is usually a busy month for the luxury industry. Not long after glossy fashion magazines publish their allimporta­nt September issues, thousands of retail buyers, journalist­s and clients embark on a tour of New York, London, Milan and Paris.

Rolling from city to city to attend fashion weeks, they decide the trends that will power a global luxury goods market worth hundreds of billions — in 2019, $334 billion.

Not this year. The ground beneath the industry is heaving under the weight of a pandemic that has caused a plunge in sales, shocked global supply chains and pushed American household names such as Brooks Brothers and Lord & Taylor to bankruptcy.

Those shifts have prompted big questions about the business model of luxury fashion. Should fashion weeks be dismantled and rebuilt? Are cycles of new items every six months still the best approach, at a time when garment overproduc­tion is under scrutiny, restricted lifestyles are commonplac­e and runway spectacles can feel out of step in a world with different priorities?

The second quarter of 2020 was the luxury fashion industry’s worst. According to estimates by Boston Consulting Group, global luxury sales are set to con

tract by 25% to 45% this year, with industry growth unlikely to return to prepandemi­c levels until at least 2023 or 2024. At a time when many companies are battling for survival, a lot of designers feel they cannot afford to skip an opportunit­y to show new wares.

So as the latest fashion week season began in New York this month, blockbuste­r catwalk shows and big crowds were out, replaced with a handful of smallscale or onlineonly presentati­ons. In Italy and France, some brands have said they plan to host larger physical events, despite having only a handful of internatio­nal guests, a number of highprofil­e designer absences and rising infection rates in Europe.

“Showing is not essential. However, sometimes you do need to show what you’re actually creating,” Antoine Arnault, head of communicat­ions at LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, told the New York Times on Sept. 9. “There’s a whole economy around these shows. That should not be underestim­ated,” he added, alluding to the thousands of freelance makeup artists, seamstress­es, drivers, security guards and photograph­ers who rely on fashion weeks for a sizable part of their incomes.

Large groups like LVMH, which owns brands including Dior, Louis Vuitton and Fendi, and its rival conglomera­te Kering, which operates the likes of Gucci, Saint Laurent and Balenciaga, have been more insulated from the bitter pandemic headwinds than most smaller standalone businesses. (LVMH, though, has entered a court battle in an effort to extricate itself from a $16 billion commitment to buy Tiffany & Co.)

In its latest quarterly earnings report, LVMH said it had seen a strong rise in sales in the summer from Asian countries like mainland China, Japan and South Korea, where recent virus rates have stayed low. But sales for its fashion and leather goods unit fell by 37%, as internatio­nal tourism ground to a halt and footfall into global stores was slow to recover. The impact has been even worse for brands in turnaround efforts like Salvatore Ferragamo and Burberry, debtridden department stores like Neiman Marcus (which exited Chapter 11 bankruptcy last week), and the cashpoor independen­t brands with large exposure to those types of retailers (many of whom scrambled to cancel and return orders). Most companies are now struggling with a large glut of unsold inventory from the spring and summer collection­s this year.

“The luxury sector currently has more than double the amount of stock on its hands than it usually would at this time of year, much of which is now unlikely to be sold at full price,” said Stefano Todescan, managing director of Boston Consulting Group. Many brands have been using brick-and-mortar discount outlets or online marketplac­es like Dutch startup Otrium to try to shift the designer clothes piling up in warehouses.

Todescan said the brands that fared better this year were generally those that relied on data to gain a granular understand­ing of where their stock was. This allowed them to move supply from the West to better performing regions like the Asian markets, where huge crowds unleashing pentup demand for luxury goods inspired the phrase “revenge shopping.”

“The pandemic has further polarized luxury’s winners and losers and accelerate­d trends that were already under way before the crisis began,” Todescan added. “Brands like Hermes and Chanel, who never discount, are less trendled and with product ranges that sell through multiple seasons, have emerged in particular­ly good shape.”

China, which was already the fastestgro­wing luxury market before the pandemic, will become even more vital to brands’ success as North American and European markets remain unpredicta­ble. And everywhere, offline retail has had to go online — and fast — as consumers turned rapidly to digital shopping.

Amazon, whose customers have ordered over 1 billion fashion items on its mobile app in the last 12 months, has long looked for a way to become partners with luxury names, which had in the past largely rebuffed its advances. Last week, Amazon opened its mobileonly Luxury Stores with one brand: Oscar de la Renta. It said that more labels would be announced in the weeks to come.

Farfetch, the digital marketplac­e that allows upmarket vendors to sell their goods online, reported last month that it had seen a 60% surge in traffic for the second quarter compared with the same period last year — and 500,000 new customers.

“Ecommerce represente­d just 12% of luxury sales in 2019. Since then, there has obviously been a complete paradigm shift,” said Farfetch CEO José Neves. Luxury used to be heavily associated with an instore experience, he added. But for many consumers in 2020, convenienc­e and safety are now front of mind, prompting many brands to fasttrack their digital strategies. “For those who aren’t able to do that, it is going to be a struggle,” Neves said.

As the industry starts to offer up new looks, TikTok is hosting its own online fashion month for a potential audience of roughly 800 million users, with shows by Saint Laurent and JW Anderson. Expect to see smaller collection­s with more timeless pieces that can have extended shelf lives if necessary. Demand for evening wear and suits has plummeted now that no one has a reason to dress up, though many brands say they expect people to start buying highpriced items that aren’t sweatpants, despite a severe recession and ongoing layoffs.

With no fixed timeline for a COVID19 vaccine, it will be hard to predict what customers will want six months from now. But for luxury fashion, the shows must go on.

 ?? Photos by Jeenah Moon / New York Times ?? Designer Jason Wu (left) at a rehearsal for his New York Fashion Week show in Manhattan on Sept. 13. Below: A makeup artist wears a mask and a face shield while helping a model prepare for the show.
Photos by Jeenah Moon / New York Times Designer Jason Wu (left) at a rehearsal for his New York Fashion Week show in Manhattan on Sept. 13. Below: A makeup artist wears a mask and a face shield while helping a model prepare for the show.
 ??  ??
 ?? Landon Nordeman / New York Times ?? The Marc Jacobs fashion show took over the stage in New York in February. Shows this month look entirely different, with fewer models and audience members.
Landon Nordeman / New York Times The Marc Jacobs fashion show took over the stage in New York in February. Shows this month look entirely different, with fewer models and audience members.
 ?? Jeenah Moon / New York Times ?? Masks, plexiglass shields and social distancing are in evidence as models and makeup artists prepare for Jason Wu’s New York Fashion Week show this month in Manhattan.
Jeenah Moon / New York Times Masks, plexiglass shields and social distancing are in evidence as models and makeup artists prepare for Jason Wu’s New York Fashion Week show this month in Manhattan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States