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Dubai luxury retail sector in crisis amid escalating regional conflict
A cornerstone of the United Arab Emirates' economy, Dubai’s luxury retail sector is grappling with a significant downturn as escalating regional conflict stifles international tourism. Foot traffic at the iconic Dubai Mall - which typically attracts over 100 million visitors annually = plummeted by 45 per cent in March 2026. This sharp decline in physical attendance has translated into a 60 per cent revenue contraction for major department stores like Bloomingdale’s and Harvey Nichols compared to the previous year. The absence of key spending groups from Russia, China, and India has created a void that domestic consumption alone cannot fill, leaving high-overhead boutiques in a precarious financial position.
Logistical bottlenecks and supply chain strain
The crisis has extended beyond consumer sentiment to disrupt the physical flow of high-end goods. Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has forced luxury houses to reroute cargo through Omani and Saudi Arabian ports, adding upwards of 10 days to delivery schedules. According to logistics reports, these detours have introduced significant surcharges, with some exporters paying over €30,000 in additional fees to reach the UAE market. These supply chain inefficiencies are particularly damaging as they coincide with the peak Ramadan and Eid shopping windows, where inventory precision is critical for capturing seasonal demand.
Investor caution and market valuation shifts
The prolonged instability has triggered a sharp reaction in global equity markets, with the STOXX Europe Luxury 10 index shedding approximately 9 per cent in value. Major conglomerates including LVMH, Richemont, and Kering - all of whom maintain a heavy presence in the Gulf - have seen shares decline as investors weigh the impact of shuttered storefronts and suspended travel. Analysts at Bernstein note, the Middle East accounted for nearly 10 per cent of global luxury purchasing power entering 2026. With 14 per cent of global air transit through Dubai and Doha currently disrupted, the industry faces a sustained commercial crisis that threatens the region’s status as a high-growth ‘super-connector’ for the fashion world.
Middle East luxury market
Dubai is the dominant regional hub for the $8.98 billion UAE luxury goods market, with apparel and jewelry accounting for nearly 40 of sales. Despite the current 25 per cent decline in tourist arrivals due to conflict, the sector targets a 5.7 per cent CAGR through 2031. Historically a resilient sanctuary for global wealth, the market is now accelerating its shift toward digital personalization and ‘Second Life’ luxury resale to mitigate physical retail volatility.
Techtextil 2026 to scale smart manufacturing and circularity
As the global technical textiles market approaches a projected valuation of $252.8 billion this year, the co-located Techtextil and Texprocess trade fairs are set to open on April 21, hosting over 1,700 exhibitors. This edition marks a decisive shift from speculative innovation to scalable, industrial-grade applications, particularly in ‘Physical AI’ and regulatory-compliant circularity.
Industrializing high-performance apparel
The Performance Apparel Textiles segment in Hall 9.0 has doubled in scale since the previous cycle, reflecting a 6 per cent CAGR in the sector. Manufacturers are no longer prioritizing mere aesthetic functionality; the focus has shifted to advanced thermoregulation and military-grade protective wear. The industry is moving past the pilot phase of smart textiles, noted a lead analyst from the EU Textiles Ecosystem Platform. We are now seeing the integration of sensor-embedded fibers into standard production lines, driven by a 40 per cent rise in demand for high-performance workwear, he added.
Digital passports and autonomous production
A primary headwind for the 2026 season is the looming enforcement of the EU Digital Product Passport (DPP). Exhibitors are responding with integrated blockchain tracking and automated sorting technologies. Texprocess is highlighting ‘Physical AI’ systems that utilize real-time feedback loops to reduce fabric offcut waste by up to 25 per cent. These autonomous systems allow brands to execute smaller, responsive production runs, effectively mitigating the financial risks of overstock - a critical evolution as the industry aligns with new European sustainability mandates.
Messe Frankfurt: Managing global textile events
As the world’s largest trade fair organizer for the textile sector, Messe Frankfurt manages a global portfolio of over 50 international events. Its flagship Frankfurt fairs serve as the primary nexus for the $250 billion+ technical textiles market. The organization focuses on facilitating cross-industry technology transfers between the automotive, medical, and apparel sectors. With a 2026 outlook centered on ‘Nature Performance’ and automated processing, Messe Frankfurt continues to lead the industry’s transition toward digitalized, low-carbon manufacturing ecosystems.
Decathlon hits $19.4 billion revenue amid strategic shift to circular models
Decathlon Group has reported a resilient fiscal 2025, with net sales increasing by 4 per cent to reach €16.8 billion ($19.4 billion). Despite global supply chain complexities, the sporting goods giant saw net income grow by 16 per cent to €910 million, fueled by a high-efficiency integrated model that bridges design, production, and retail. This robust performance comes as the brand marks its 50th anniversary, signaling a transition from traditional high-volume retail to a value-driven marketplace.
Technical disruption and the future factory
Central to this growth is a heavy investment in digital transformation and ‘Future Factory’ concepts. Decathlon is increasingly leveraging Artificial Intelligence for inventory management and retail optimization to address the industry’s demand for precision. A key milestone in 2025 was the introduction of Digital Product Passports - QR codes on equipment that provide transparency on sourcing and repairability - aligning the company with emerging global ESG standards and climate-regulated international markets.
Circular economy as a revenue driver
The company’s ‘Green Factories’ initiative and circular business models are no longer peripheral; they are core financial drivers. Sales of eco-designed products now account for 53.9 per cent of total revenue. In India, a critical growth hub, the brand is tripling its circular turnover through repair services and ‘Second Life’ resale hubs. While Decathlon India faced a marginal net loss of Rs 65 crore in FY25 due to aggressive infrastructure scaling, it remains on track to hit a $1 billion sales milestone by 2030 through localized sourcing and tech-led retail.
Decathlon designs, manufactures, and retails technical equipment and apparel across 80 countries. Focusing on 70+ sports categories, the brand is expanding its footprint into Tier II and III cities in emerging markets. With a 2030 goal to triple circular revenue, Decathlon maintains a strong financial outlook driven by digital-first retail and a $3 billion Indian sourcing commitment.
The End of Geographic Masking: Shein and peers reclaim Made in China as a strategic asset

The era of the corporate ghost is ending. For years, the world’s most aggressive retail disruptors operated under ambiguity, relocating headquarters and sanitizing websites to downplay their origins. This defensive manoeuvre, known as China shedding, was designed to bypass Western geopolitical friction and regulatory heat. However, in 2026 the strategy has hit a wall of diminishing returns. From Shein’s stalled London IPO to the relentless congressional scrutiny of TikTok, it has become clear that changing a mailing address to Singapore or Dublin does not change a supply chain’s DNA.
In its place, a more assertive and transparent phenomenon is taking hold that is China maxxing. Rather than hiding, major players are beginning to lean into their Chinese heritage as a badge of operational superiority and a direct link to the world's most sophisticated manufacturing ecosystem. This is not just a PR shift; it is a commercial necessity driven by a new generation of Western consumers who prioritize price and vibe over geopolitical origin.
The end of geographic masking
The definitive signal of this transition came during a recent high-profile gathering in Guangdong. Xu Yangtian, the elusive founder of Shein Group, made a rare public appearance to explicitly credit Chinese local governance and the regional supply network for the company’s meteoric rise. For a firm that spent years positioning itself as a Singapore-based entity, this homecoming was a massive shift.
The rationale for this openness is increasingly data-backed. Despite the 2025 rollback of the US de minimis exemption, which removed duty-free status for packages under $800, Shein’s financial engine has proven remarkably resilient. According to recent market intelligence, Shein’s net income for 2025 is projected to at $2.6 billion, nearly double of its previous year’s performance. This growth occurred even as the company raised prices to offset new tariffs, suggesting that its Made in China value proposition is strong enough to absorb significant trade costs.
Table: Comparative market valuation & Performance: 2025 Projections
|
Company |
Estimated revenue 2025 |
Primary logistics hub |
Market dominance factor |
|
Shein |
$60 bn |
Guangdong, China |
50% US Fast-Fashion Share |
|
Inditex (Zara) |
$39 bn |
Arteixo, Spain |
High-Street Retail King |
|
H&M Group |
$24 bn |
Stockholm, Sweden |
Circular Fashion Pioneer |
|
Temu (PDD) |
$54 bn |
Guangzhou/Global |
Lowest Acquisition Cost |
The table illustrates Shein’s dominance in both revenue growth and supply chain sophistication. Its integration score of 9.8 out of 10 reflects the company’s ability to synchronize Chinese manufacturing prowess with global e-commerce distribution, a key differentiator that competitors with less vertically integrated networks struggle to match. Even rivals posting double-digit revenue growth cannot replicate the operational leverage embedded in Shein’s Chinese supply chain.
Commercial imperative behind China Maxxing
What was once a defensive strategy is now a market opportunity. Western consumers increasingly respond to brands that can deliver speed, affordability, and cultural resonance, traits that Chinese supply chains excel at offering. The Made in China label, far from being a liability, is repositioned as a quality signal of efficiency, scale, and innovation. Analysts suggest this transparency may also pre-empt regulatory risk. By openly acknowledging operational origins, companies like Shein can better manage international scrutiny, align compliance processes, and frame global expansion around capability rather than geography.
As global retail evolves, the era of geographic masking is giving way to an era of strategic embrace. China maxxing is more than a branding exercise; it is a deliberate, data-driven repositioning that leverages operational depth, supply chain mastery, and consumer perception. In doing so, Chinese-rooted retailers are redefining competitive advantage not by hiding their origins, but by making them central to their commercial identity. The lesson for global retail: in the age of transparency and fast-moving consumer demand, supply chain authenticity can be a stronger asset than geographic ambiguity.
Founded in 2008 in Nanjing and now headquartered in Singapore, Shein is the global leader in ultra-fast fashion, commanding nearly 50 per cent of the US fast-fashion market. Specializing in high-volume low-cost apparel and lifestyle products, Shein is expanding into a marketplace model and localized manufacturing in Brazil and Turkey. With 2025 revenue projected at $60 billion and a pending Hong Kong IPO, Shein continues to outpace traditional rivals through real-time data integration and a small-batch supply chain model.
Malbon Golf signals strategic shift towards China’s expanding performance-lifestyle market
The opening of Malbon Golf’s first flagship store in Shanghai marks a definitive entry into the world’s most competitive retail theater, specifically targeting China’s rising interest in ‘golf-core.’ While traditional luxury brands face cooling demand in the region, the crossover segment between technical sportswear and high-street fashion - valued at approximately $14 billion—continues to attract high-net-worth Gen Z consumers. Malbon’s presence in China is not merely a retail expansion but a move to capture the ‘quiet luxury’ aesthetic that has transitioned from the fairway to urban centers. Market data suggests, premium sports-lifestyle brands in Tier-1 Chinese cities are maintaining a 15 per cent growth trajectory, outperforming standard fast-fashion aggregates. This flagship serves as a physical anchor for the brand’s digital ecosystem, providing a tactile experience for its high-performance technical fabrics and unconventional silhouettes.
Navigating regional supply chains and consumer preferences
The success of this mainland expansion hinges on Malbon’s ability to synchronize its global design language with local preferences for localized fit and rapid seasonal turnarounds. Retail analysts indicate, the primary challenge for Western lifestyle labels in China remains the 25 per cent higher operational cost associated with premium mall real estate and localized logistics. However, the opportunity lies in the ‘Bharat-to-Beijing’ parallel, where younger consumers are decoupling golf from its elite heritage and embracing it as a versatile lifestyle category. The Chinese consumer is no longer just buying a brand; they are buying into a specific sub-culture that bridges the gap between performance and prestige, noted a regional trade consultant. By leveraging domestic social commerce platforms like Xiaohongshu, Malbon aims to drive double-digit conversion rates, positioning its Shanghai flagship as a regional hub for its planned multi-city rollout across East Asia.
Pioneer of contemporary golf culture
Malbon Golf operates as a premier lifestyle label bridging the gap between traditional golf apparel and modern street fashion. Based in the United States, it specializes in technical sportswear, footwear, and limited-edition collaborations. The brand’s growth plan focuses on aggressive international retail scaling and digital-first storytelling to redefine the 21st-century golfer's wardrobe.
Sulzer-Spinnova alliance accelerates commercial scaling of sustainable wood-based fibers
The partnership between Swiss engineering giant Sulzer and Finnish textile innovator Spinnova marks a critical transition from pilot-phase experimentation to large-scale industrial viability for wood-based fibers. Sulzer’s entry into the Spinnova ecosystem is specifically designed to refine the mechanical delivery systems required for high-volume fiber production. By leveraging Sulzer’s century-long expertise in fluid dynamics and separation technology, the consortium aims to stabilize the consistency of the Spinnova fiber, which is produced without the use of harmful dissolving chemicals. This technical collaboration is vital as the global textile industry faces a projected 15 per cent supply gap in sustainable cellulosic fibers by 2030.
Operational efficiency and circularity mandates
Data from recent industrial trials suggest, Sulzer’s precision manufacturing can reduce energy consumption during the extrusion process by nearly 12 per cent, addressing a primary cost barrier for alternative fibers. The integration of Sulzer’s pump and agitation technology ensures the homogeneity of the fiber suspension, which is the cornerstone of achieving yarn tenacity equivalent to cotton, states a lead engineer involved in the development project. For apparel manufacturers, this partnership offers a tangible route toward meeting the European Union’s Digital Product Passport requirements. As global brands move away from traditional synthetics, the ability to produce zero-waste fibers at a commercial price point represents a significant market opportunity for Tier-1 spinning mills.
Strategic industrial footprint
Sulzer specializes in fluid engineering and chemical processing technologies across global energy and industrial markets. Based in Switzerland, it provides high-efficiency pumping and mixing solutions essential for textile chemical recovery. The company’s growth strategy focuses on decarbonization technologies, supported by a strong 2025 financial performance and a legacy of engineering excellence dating back to 1834.
ABB and Syre forge engineering alliance to scale circular polyester output
The partnership between ABB and Syre represents a significant technical leap toward industrializing the textile-to-textile recycling value chain. By integrating ABB’s digital automation and electrification expertise with Syre’s molecular depolymerization technology, the duo aims to establish a network of high-capacity regeneration hubs. This initiative arrives as the global textile industry faces a critical 2026 deadline for the EU’s Digital Product Passport (DPP), which mandates greater transparency in fiber sourcing. The primary goal is to produce high-grade circular polyester (cPET) that maintains the same performance characteristics as virgin, fossil-based fiber, effectively closing the loop on synthetic textile production.
Automation as a catalyst for molecular regeneration
A central hurdle in scaling textile recycling has been the high operational expenditure associated with chemical processing. Through this collaboration, ABB will deploy advanced manufacturing execution systems (MES) and sensor technologies to optimize Syre’s chemical recycling plants. Internal projections suggest, integrated automation can improve energy efficiency by up to 15 per cent while ensuring consistent output purity. Standardizing the digital architecture across our global facilities is essential for delivering circularity at the speed the market demands, notes a senior engineering lead at Syre. A recent case study in Northern Europe demonstrated that automated monitoring of feedstock variability helped maintain a 98 per cent yield of high-purity rBHET, proving the viability of large-scale, cost-effective regeneration.
Establishing a transatlantic infrastructure for sustainable fibers
The roadmap for the ABB-Syre alliance focuses on establishing ‘mega-hubs’ in strategic regions, starting with a flagship facility in the United States. This geographical focus leverages the growing demand for sustainable materials in the North American market, where synthetic fiber consumption remains high. With a target to reduce carbon emissions by over 50 per cent compared to traditional polyester manufacturing, the venture addresses the supply-demand mismatch in the recycled material sector. Currently, less than 1 per cent of textiles are recycled into new garments; however, Syre’s ambition to scale to millions of tons annually - backed by ABB’s industrial infrastructure - provides a scalable blueprint for apparel manufacturers seeking to insulate their supply chains from fossil-fuel volatility and impending environmental taxation.
Industrial technology and circular materials
ABB is a global leader in electrification and automation, specializing in optimizing manufacturing processes. An impact venture backed by H&M Group and Vargas, Syre focuses on molecular polyester recycling. Their joint 2026 growth strategy targets the global expansion of circular fiber hubs to replace virgin petroleum-based inputs in the textile sector.
Indian apparel sector gains short-term relief as RoDTEP scheme secures extension
The Indian government has signaled its continued commitment to the nation’s trade resilience by extending the Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products (RoDTEP) scheme through September 2026. Announced amid a volatile global economic climate, this six-month reprieve aims to shield the export community from the immediate impact of non-refundable taxes and duties. While the Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC) and broader industry stakeholders have formally expressed their gratitude to the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Commerce for this intervention, the move is being characterized as a vital bridge rather than a final solution for a sector grappling with high input costs and logistical bottlenecks.
Safeguarding competitiveness amidst global trade headwinds
The extension arrives at a critical juncture for Indian exporters who are currently navigating a landscape defined by fluctuating demand and rising operational expenses. By offsetting the burden of local taxes that are not otherwise channeled through rebate mechanisms, the RoDTEP scheme functions as a stabilizer for the price competitiveness of Indian goods in international markets. Industry leaders, including Dr A Sakthivel, Chairman, AEPC, noted, this policy continuity is essential for maintaining export momentum. However, the council has already begun engaging with high-level government officials -including the Finance and Textiles Secretaries -to advocate for a transition toward a more permanent fiscal framework.
The Strategic push for a five-year policy horizon
Despite the immediate benefits of the extension, the exporting community is intensifying its call for a long-term commitment, specifically requesting a five-year fixed duration for the scheme. The industry argues,the current cycle of short-term renewals creates a climate of unpredictability that hinders large-scale capital investment and capacity expansion. A multi-year roadmap would allow apparel manufacturers to better forecast margins and commit to the long-term trade agreements necessary to strengthen India’s market share. For a sector eyeing aggressive growth targets, the AEPC maintains that policy stability is the primary lever required to transform temporary relief into sustained global trade dominance.
Reconomy, ReHubs partnership anchors Europe’s closed-loop textile infrastructure
The European textile recycling landscape has reached a critical inflection point as a global leader in circular economy solutions, Reconomy has formally joined the ReHubs initiative. This strategic alignment is designed to address the region's massive ‘sorting gap,’ where currently less than 1 per cent of textile waste is recycled back into high-quality fiber. By integrating Reconomy’s sophisticated logistics and data-tracking capabilities with ReHubs’ industrial-scale processing ambitions, the partnership aims to create a standardized feedstock pipeline for chemical and mechanical recyclers. This move is particularly timely as the European Union’s Waste Framework Directive nears its 2026 enforcement milestone, requiring member states to establish comprehensive separate collection systems for all textile waste.
Synchronizing logistics with molecular regeneration needs
A primary bottleneck in the circular transition has been the lack of consistent, high-purity textile volumes required for advanced chemical recycling. The collaboration focuses on ‘Hubs-to-Hubs’ connectivity, utilizing Reconomy’s digital platforms to manage the complex reverse logistics from retail take-back programs to centralized processing centers.
Industry data suggests, a 15 per cent increase in sorting accuracy can reduce the operational expenditure of regeneration facilities by nearly 20 per cent. The scale of ReHubs requires an intelligent bridge between waste collection and industrial fiber production, notes Elena Moretti, a circular economy lead. A recent pilot in the Benelux region demonstrated, digitized tracking of blended fiber compositions improved the yield of recycled polyester (rPET) by 12 per cent, highlighting the necessity of data-integrated waste management.
Scaling for the 2030 sustainable apparel mandate
As the industry faces the upcoming July 1, 2026, registration deadline for global Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) programs, the Reconomy-ReHubs alliance provides a scalable blueprint for compliance. The broader objective is to reach a processing capacity of 2.5 million tons by 2030, a goal that requires over €7 billion in cumulative infrastructure investment. For apparel brands, this infrastructure represents an essential safeguard against looming fiber shortages and price volatility in the sustainable materials market. By securing a reliable domestic supply of regenerated fibers, European manufacturers can mitigate the impact of freight inflation and geopolitical disruptions, ensuring the long-term viability of high-performance, eco-compliant textile production.
Circular solutions and waste management
Reconomy is a premier technology-led provider of circular economy services, specializing in waste management, sustainability consulting, and resource optimization across international markets. Founded in 1994, the company focuses on helping brands achieve zero-waste goals through data-driven logistics and innovative recycling partnerships, targeting aggressive growth in the European textile and electronics recovery sectors.
Reju funding infusion signals industrial-scale transition for circular polyester
Reju has secured €135 million in funding from the Dutch government’s NIKI program, marking a transformative milestone for the commercialization of textile-to-textile regeneration. The capital is earmarked for the development of ‘Regeneration Hub One’ at the Chemelot Industrial Park in the Netherlands, a facility designed to divert post-consumer textile waste from landfills and incineration at an unprecedented scale. This investment follows Reju's January 2026 site selection in Rochester, New York, effectively establishing a transatlantic infrastructure for circular fibers. By utilizing advanced molecular depolymerization technology, the hub aims to process the equivalent of 300 million garments annually, translating into a production capacity of approximately 50,000 tons of regenerated BHET (rBHET) for repolymerization into high-quality polyester.
Bridging the carbon gap in synthetic fiber production
The technical significance of Reju’s output lies in its environmental performance; the resulting ‘Reju Polyester’ delivers a 50 per cent lower carbon footprint compared to virgin, fossil-based alternatives. This award represents a critical vote of confidence in our ability to deliver circular raw materials at scale, states Patrik Frisk, CEO, Reju. The 2026 market dynamics - characterized by a projected $7.36 billion global textile recycling valuation - are increasingly favoring such chemical recycling methods over traditional mechanical processes. While mechanical recycling currently holds a 73 per cent market share due to lower costs, chemical regeneration offers superior fiber integrity, allowing polyester to be recycled multiple times without quality degradation.
Traceability and the Digital Product Passport frontier
As the European Union moves toward mandatory separate textile waste collection and the implementation of Digital Product Passports (DPP), Reju is positioning its hubs as essential nodes for fully traceable supply chains. The integration at Chemelot provides access to a mature industrial ecosystem, enabling the brand to streamline logistics and energy efficiency. However, the sector still faces a significant supply-demand gap; even with these new capacities, analysts estimate that total global output will meet less than 10 per cent of the 11-million-ton potential for textile-to-textile recycling over the next decade. For global apparel brands, Reju’s scaling represents a vital opportunity to secure nearshore, sustainable fiber supplies amidst escalating geopolitical and regulatory pressures.
Industrial regeneration strategy
Reju is a materials science leader specializing in molecular polyester regeneration. Owned by Technip Energies and utilizing IBM Research technology, the company operates across European and North American markets. Reju aims to establish a global network of circular hubs, targeting high double-digit capacity growth through 2030 to replace virgin fossil-based inputs.











