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Chanel secures strategic future for iconic shirtmaker Charvet
Chanel has officially acquired the storied Parisian shirtmaker Charvet, marking a significant consolidation within the French luxury sector. Announced on July 2, 2026, the deal brings the 188-year-old maison under the Chanel umbrella, effectively ending nearly two centuries of independent family ownership by the Colban family. While financial terms remain undisclosed, analysts estimate the value of the acquisition - which includes Charvet’s headquarters on Place Vendôme and its sole production workshop in Saint-Gaultier - at approximately €100 million. This transaction serves as a deliberate move by Chanel to internalize rare manufacturing expertise and secure its foothold in the growing high-end menswear and gender-agnostic apparel market.
Integrating artisanal excellence
The acquisition follows a successful creative dialogue between Chanel’s artistic director, Matthieu Blazy, and the Charvet atelier. Blazy’s integration of Charvet’s signature shirting into his Spring/Summer 2026 debut collection acted as a catalyst for the deal, demonstrating a seamless alignment in aesthetic discipline and technical rigor. Rather than folding Charvet into its existing network of ‘Métiers d’Art’ specialized ateliers, Chanel intends to operate the company as a standalone business. This approach is designed to maintain Charvet’s exclusivity and independence, allowing the maison to continue its bespoke services while benefiting from Chanel’s institutional support to preserve its unique manufacturing traditions and specialized craft.
Addressing evolving luxury consumption
For Chanel, the investment reflects a shift toward catering to a broader, gender-inclusive consumer base. Bruno Pavlovsky, President, Chanel-Fashion Division, notes, the house sees an increasing appetite for high-craft menswear and gender-agnostic tailoring. By maintaining Charvet’s identity as a premier house for men while simultaneously fostering its growing women’s bespoke business, Chanel is effectively diversifying its portfolio beyond its traditional female-centric core. As the global luxury market recalibrates after recent industry-wide downturns, this acquisition positions Chanel to capitalize on a renewed consumer preference for quiet luxury - prioritizing the longevity, artisanal precision, and understated sophistication that both houses exemplify.
Founded in 1838, Charvet is the world's oldest specialist shirtmaker, renowned for bespoke shirts, ties, and silk accessories. Headquartered on Place Vendôme in Paris, it serves a global clientele through its exclusive boutique. It focuses on hand-finished tailoring and traditional manufacturing, recently diversifying into high-end casual wear and footwear.
Global price parity stalls gains from India's cotton duty waiver
According to Indian textile mills, the government's temporary suspension of the 11 per cent cotton import duty, effective until October 30, 2026, provides minimal financial relief. While the waiver was designed to moderate raw material costs and enhance the global competitiveness of Indian apparel manufacturers, current market data from the Cotton Association of India (CAI) indicates, domestic and international cotton prices have reached a near-parity.
Market dynamics and procurement shifts
For the week ending June 26, 2026, the domestic ICS 105 benchmark averaged 79.50 US cents per pound, while the international Cotlook A Index stood at 80.00 US cents per pound. This razor-thin margin of 0.50 cents - approximately Rs 400 per candy - is effectively neutralized by the additional costs of freight, port handling, insurance, and inland logistics associated with foreign sourcing. Consequently, textile manufacturers are shifting their focus away from chasing marginal price advantages. Leading spinning units and yarn producers are now prioritizing fiber quality, long-term supply reliability, and precise delivery schedules to ensure consistent production cycles for international apparel brands, rather than attempting to source cheaper imported raw material.
Sector outlook and resilience
The industry’s strategic redirection highlights a focus on operational stability in a volatile global trade environment. Although the government’s policy move sought to bridge the cost gap between Indian manufacturers and competitors in countries like Vietnam and Bangladesh - who have long benefited from duty-free cotton access - market realities have curbed the anticipated impact. Despite this, the textile value chain continues to invest in industrial clusters to mitigate logistics constraints and meet the high-frequency delivery demands of global retailers. As the sector moves into the latter half of the year, mills are increasingly reliant on internal efficiencies and specialized fiber procurement to sustain export performance amidst ongoing shifts in global supply chains.
Acting as the primary national trade body for the cotton value chain, the Cotton Association of India publishes critical data on crop pressing, domestic consumption, and import-export estimates. The organization facilitates fiber quality standardization and arbitration, serving as a vital authority for growers, traders, and textile mills nationwide.
Indian hits milestone apparel exports to EU in FY25-26
Indian apparel exports to the European Union reached a record-breaking US$4.66 billion in FY25–26, reflecting a significant expansion in the country's footprint within the premium European retail market. This achievement represents a steady 8 per cent increase over the previous fiscal period, driven largely by the Indian textile industry's intensified focus on high-value, sustainable, and compliant manufacturing. As European brands actively diversify their sourcing portfolios to mitigate reliance on traditional manufacturing hubs, India has positioned itself as a primary strategic partner capable of meeting stringent environmental and social governance standards.
Driving value through ESG compliance
The sector's growth is attributed to the adoption of advanced, traceable manufacturing processes that align with the EU's Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR). Apparel exporters are increasingly investing in Digital Product Passport infrastructure, a move that has enhanced buyer confidence and facilitated deeper integration into the value chains of major European fashion conglomerates. AEPC leadership noted that the sustained shift toward premium product segments - such as high-performance technical textiles and organic cotton garments - has enabled Indian exporters to capture better margins, effectively moving beyond the volume-based competition that historically defined the sector.
Overcoming logistics and trade volatility
Despite the record figures, the industry continues to navigate significant obstacles, particularly rising freight surcharges and liquidity constraints resulting from regional instability in West Asia. While export performance remains strong, manufacturers are scaling their investment in local regional clusters and integrated parks to shorten lead times and enhance operational flexibility. By focusing on high-frequency, smaller-batch production runs, Indian exporters are meeting the speed-to-market demands of European retailers, ensuring that the country remains a resilient node in the global trade network through H2, FY26.
A critical pillar of the national economy
India’s apparel export industry is a critical pillar of the national economy, specializing in diverse categories ranging from cotton-based fashion to technical textiles. With major markets in the US, EU, and UK, the sector focuses on scaling sustainable production, fostering industrial cluster development, and enhancing global trade compliance.
US Polo Assn leverages 250th American anniversary for global media expansion
The official sports brand of the United States Polo Association (USPA), US Polo Assn is marking the United States’ 250th anniversary by accelerating its global brand visibility through a strategic media partnership with ESPN. As the nation commemorates this historic milestone in 2026, the brand is debuting a 30-minute broadcast special titled ‘Breakaway: Polo in America.’ This initiative aims to deepen the connection between consumers and the sport's heritage, utilizing a curated ‘red, white, and blue’ collection to marry iconic American aesthetics with high-performance sportswear. Bridging Heritage and Modern Consumption
The collaboration represents a calculated effort to transition the brand’s identity from a traditional apparel label to a global lifestyle entity rooted in authentic sports tradition. By aligning its narrative with the national milestone, the brand is executing a multi-market activation strategy across North America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. J. Michael Prince, President and CEO, USPA Global, emphasizes, the campaign serves to honor the enduring values of resilience and tradition while appealing to a new generation of sports-conscious consumers. This integration of broadcast storytelling with retail experience is designed to ensure the brand remains culturally relevant as it continues to scale its presence in over 190 countries
Capitalizing on multi-channel engagement
Beyond the ESPN broadcast, the brand is strengthening its market position through significant tournament sponsorships and premium retail experiences. The strategy centers on creating a cohesive narrative across digital platforms and physical store environments, effectively converting sports enthusiasts into brand loyalists. With the sport of polo gaining traction among broader audiences, the company is betting that its fusion of legacy and performance-driven design will provide the necessary competitive differentiation to sustain its recent growth. By embedding itself into the 250th-anniversary discourse, US Polo Assn is positioning its apparel portfolio as a timeless embodiment of the American spirit, driving both long-term brand equity and immediate commercial engagement.
Driving global annual retail sales
US Polo Assn. is the official brand of the United States Polo Association (USPA), founded in 1890. Created in 1981, the brand offers men’s, women’s, and children’s apparel, as well as footwear and accessories. It operates through over 190 countries, leveraging licensing partnerships to drive multi-billion-dollar global annual retail sales.
Source Fashion London expands reach with largest edition till date
Europe’s premier destination for responsible apparel sourcing, Source Fashion has expanded its platform by opening its largest-ever edition this week at Excel London. Running from July 7 to 9, 2026, the event hosts over 4,000 verified buyers and decision-makers. As the fashion industry faces a complex ‘polycrisis’ environment - characterized by fluctuating logistics costs, regulatory tightening, and shifting consumer expectations - the showcase serves as a critical bridge between international garment manufacturers and brands seeking transparent, audit-ready supply chain partners.
Bridging the compliance gap
The event has evolved into a strategic hub for navigating the upcoming implementation of the EU’s Digital Product Passport and Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) mandates. Unlike traditional trade shows, Source Fashion requires all exhibitors to undergo rigorous audits from recognized bodies like Sedex, ensuring that participating manufacturers meet international ethical and safety standards. This verification is essential for brands currently under pressure to substantiate their sustainability claims while simultaneously optimizing their production costs. Industry experts at the show are emphasizing that compliance is no longer a peripheral consideration but a core commercial driver that influences margin protection and risk mitigation in a volatile global market.
Integrating tech and circularity
Innovation remains at the forefront of this year’s agenda, with a dedicated focus on how automation and circularity can redefine retail profitability. A key point of discussion among attendees is the potential of AI to automate the more tedious aspects of the buying process, thereby allowing sourcing directors to focus on strategic supplier collaboration rather than administrative oversight. Furthermore, the "Fashion Deconstructed" workshops are providing hands-on training in textile manipulation and sustainable construction, helping designers bridge the gap between creative ambition and manufacturing reality. By connecting high-performance technology with verified manufacturing nodes, Source Fashion is positioning itself as an essential partner for companies attempting to overhaul their legacy supply chain models in favor of more resilient, data-backed alternatives.
Promoting responsible production
Source Fashion is the UK’s premier global fashion sourcing trade show, organized by the Hyve Group. It connects brands, designers, and retailers with audited manufacturers and textile suppliers from over 25 countries. The platform focuses on responsible, transparent production, encompassing the entire value chain from raw materials to finished garments.
Italian textile machinery manufacturers intensify R&D towards sustainable production
Despite prevailing geopolitical instability and a contraction in traditional investment cycles, Italian textile machinery manufacturers are securing their leadership by intensifying R&D toward sustainable production and advanced automation. According to recent data from ACIMIT, the Association of Italian Textile Machinery Manufacturers, the sector is navigating a complex 2026 fiscal landscape with a strategic focus on energy-efficient technologies. While total order intake registered a 5 per cent Y-o-Y decline in Q1, FY26, the domestic market recorded a robust 21 per cent growth, signaling an early domestic recovery even as international markets remain cautious.
Prioritizing efficiency to combat rising costs
The current industrial mandate among Italian machinery producers is to mitigate the production cost pressures faced by textile mills globally. Marco Salvadè, President, ACIMIT notes, the ecological transition has moved beyond an optional feature, becoming the primary distinguishing factor for ‘Made in Italy’ technology. Manufacturers are increasingly integrating artificial intelligence and IoT-enabled sensors into their machinery, allowing for real-time monitoring and drastically reduced resource consumption. These innovations, particularly in finishing and dyeing equipment - which accounted for 33 per cent of overseas sales - are designed to directly improve the bottom line for global textile producers by lowering utility expenditure and waste
Positioning for the ITMA 2027 milestone
Looking beyond short-term market volatility, the industry is aligning its strategic roadmap with ITMA 2027 in Hanover. The association is currently leveraging intensive internationalization programs in collaboration with the Italian Trade Agency to maintain market visibility in over 130 countries. By fostering stronger ties between machinery manufacturers and research institutions, Italian firms are working to address the critical talent gap, ensuring that the next generation of digital-first textile technology is supported by highly skilled human capital. This cohesion across the value chain remains the most decisive factor in maintaining Italian engineering’s competitive edge against emerging low-cost manufacturing alternatives
Founded in 1945, ACIMIT is the non-profit association representing the Italian textile machinery industry. It brings together approximately 200 manufacturers, accounting for 85 per cent of the national sector's turnover. With an annual production value of roughly €2.1 billion, the industry exports 86 per cent of its output globally, focusing on high-precision spinning, weaving, knitting, and finishing technologies.
States lead charge in leading textile event with localized industrial ecosystems
As Bharat Tex 2026 convenes in New Delhi, the assembly is defined by a strategic shift in state-led industrial engagement. Rather than operating in silos, Indian states are leveraging the event to present localized industrial ecosystems - such as Tiruppur’s knitwear dominance and Ichalkaranji’s weaving expertise - as globally competitive, plug-and-play manufacturing hubs. This move is designed to entice international capital, particularly as global retailers demand high-speed, traceable, and compliant production chains to satisfy rigorous EU and North American ESG standards.
Infrastructure as a competitive moat
The integration of the PM-MITRA (Mega Integrated Textile Regions and Apparel) parks serves as the cornerstone of this industrial overhaul. By concentrating the entire value chain - from spinning to garmenting - within singular, high-efficiency zones, India is systematically dismantling the logistics bottlenecks and multi-stage handling costs that have historically hampered its export margins. The objective is to provide a seamless industrial environment that aligns with the speed-to-market requirements of high-frequency global retail cycles, notes an industry consultant overseeing regional project rollouts. With nearly Rs 70,000 crore in investment interest already captured across these parks, the strategy focuses on providing verified sustainability documentation—essential for meeting the new Digital Product Passport requirements mandated by the EU’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation.
Harmonizing compliance with scale
Beyond mere infrastructure, the collaboration between states and the central government aims to standardize regulatory frameworks. By offering centralized facilities for effluent treatment and green energy integration, the current industrial model effectively lowers the barrier to entry for MSMEs struggling with the complexities of global compliance. As the industry faces heightened scrutiny over chemical usage and supply chain transparency, these state-backed hubs are positioning themselves not just as manufacturing centers, but as transparent, verified nodes in the global apparel trade, ensuring India remains a preferred partner for brands navigating the volatile tariff and regulatory climate of 2026.
A prime facilitator for textile trade
The BTTF is a collaborative consortium of textile export promotion councils and industry associations. It functions as the primary facilitator for India’s textile trade, organizing large-scale exhibitions and policy dialogues. Its core mission is to unify the fragmented domestic value chain, drive investment in circular manufacturing, and secure India’s market share in high-value global apparel trade.
UK fashion sourcing shifts south as Bangladesh overtakes China

The UK’s apparel sourcing has seen a realignment in recent years, as retailers increasingly diversify production away from traditional East Asian manufacturing bases toward South Asia and selected nearshore markets. The shift reflects geopolitical uncertainty, supply chain disruptions, cost pressures and evolving trade policies that are reshaping procurement strategies across the British high street.
Despite persistent logistical challenges caused by Red Sea shipping disruptions British apparel imports continued to grow during the first quarter of 2026. Data from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) and the Office for National Statistics (ONS) reveal, total clothing imports reached $4.89 billion during the period, up 3.8 per cent from $4.71 billion in the corresponding quarter of 2025. The increase suggests that underlying consumer demand remains resilient even as retailers contend with longer transit times and elevated freight costs.
The most notable development was the emergence of Bangladesh as the UK’s largest apparel supplier by value, overtaking China for the first time in the period under review. The transition highlights a broader shift in sourcing priorities as retailers seek greater supply chain resilience and improved margin management.
Bangladesh leads supplier realignment
Bangladesh delivered the largest absolute gain among major sourcing destinations, with exports to the UK rising by $75.8 million to $1.11 billion, a growth of 7.3 per cent year on year. This enabled the country to surpass China, whose exports fell by $73.7 million to $1.09 billion, a decline of 6.3 per cent.
The contrasting data of the two sourcing giants underline changing procurement priorities. While China continues to offer scale and manufacturing sophistication, many British retailers are reducing dependence on single-country sourcing models amid geopolitical uncertainty, rising operating costs and ongoing logistical challenges. India and Vietnam emerged as major beneficiaries of this diversification trend. Indian apparel shipments increased 13.4 per cent to $362.8 million, while Vietnam recorded growth of 14.1 per cent, reaching $280.8 million. Both countries have strengthened their positions through investments in manufacturing capabilities, compliance standards and product specialization.
Turkey and Pakistan, meanwhile, faced competitive pressures. Turkey’s exports declined 3.0 per cent to $333.6 million as inflation and energy costs eroded cost competitiveness. Pakistan also saw a 3.6 per cent decline, reflecting growing competition from neighboring sourcing hubs.
Table 1: Major UK apparel sourcing hubs
|
Sourcing country |
Q1 2025 value ($ mn) |
Q1 2026 Value ($ mn) |
Absolute Change ($ mn) |
Year-on-year growth (%) |
Market share |
|
Bangladesh |
1,038.30 |
1,114.10 |
+75.8 |
+7.3% |
Expanding |
|
China |
1,166.90 |
1,093.20 |
-73.7 |
-6.30% |
Contracting |
|
India |
319.9 |
362.8 |
+42.9 |
+13.4% |
Expanding |
|
Turkey |
343.9 |
333.6 |
-10.3 |
-3.00% |
Contracting |
|
Vietnam |
246.1 |
280.8 |
+34.7 |
+14.1% |
Expanding |
|
Cambodia |
258.4 |
261.4 |
+3.0 |
+1.2% |
Stable |
|
Pakistan |
253.9 |
244.8 |
-9.1 |
-3.60% |
Contracting |
|
Italy |
214.5 |
233.3 |
+18.8 |
+8.8% |
Premium Growth |
|
Sri Lanka |
138.8 |
147 |
+8.2 |
+5.9% |
Niche Expansion |
|
Ireland |
50.4 |
118.4 |
+68.0 |
+134.7% |
Nearshore Surge |
|
Portugal |
80.1 |
89.6 |
+9.5 |
+12.0% |
Quick-Response |
|
Egypt |
26.1 |
41.5 |
+15.4 |
+58.8% |
Emerging Hub |
|
Thailand |
26.3 |
36 |
+9.7 |
+36.9% |
Niche Expansion |
The data also points to growing interest in alternative sourcing corridors. Ireland recorded a remarkable 134.7 per cent increase, supported by cross-border replenishment strategies and demand for rapid inventory turnaround. Egypt and Thailand likewise posted strong gains as retailers explored diversified production networks capable of supporting specific product categories.
Product categories drive procurement decisions
Changes in sourcing patterns are closely linked to shifts in product demand and manufacturing specialization. British retailers increased spending on women’s fashion and casualwear categories while reducing exposure to more seasonal and inventory-sensitive segments such as outerwear. Women’s suits and dresses emerged as the strongest-performing category, with imports rising 13.8 per cent to $808.1 million. Bangladesh and India captured a significant share of this growth through their strengths in woven garments, embellishment work and large-scale production.
Casual knitwear and T-shirts also expanded, benefiting Bangladesh’s vertically integrated textile ecosystem. At the same time, technical apparel and outerwear categories fell as retailers reduced forward commitments and focused on inventory optimization.
Table 2: Product category trends in UK apparel imports
|
Commodity category & HS code |
Sourcing hubs |
Q1 2025 ($ mn) |
Q1 2026 ($ mn) |
Shift ($ mn) |
Position dynamic & drivers |
|
Women’s Suits & Dresses(HS 6204) |
Bangladesh, India, China |
710.1 |
808.1 |
+98.0 (+13.8%) |
Bangladesh & India expand. Sourcing redirected away from China's mid-tier factories into Dhaka’s woven facilities and India's embellishment hubs. |
|
Casual Knits & T-Shirts(HS 6109) |
Bangladesh, Pakistan |
545.2 |
585 |
+39.8 (+7.3%) |
Bangladesh consolidates lead. Dhaka absorbed volume contracts from Pakistan and Turkey via integrated spinning cost efficiencies. |
|
Women’s Blouses & Shirts(HS 6206) |
India, Italy, Portugal |
139.4 |
162.4 |
+23.0 (+16.5%) |
India & Nearshorers advance. Quick-turn fashion orders split between India's premium design houses and European nearshore corridors. |
|
Brassieres & Corsetry(HS 6212) |
Vietnam, Sri Lanka, China |
99.1 |
120.3 |
+21.2 (+21.4%) |
Vietnam & Sri Lanka displace China. High-precision automated bonding lines draw technical lingerie contracts away from Chinese ports. |
|
Jerseys & Pullovers(HS 6110) |
Turkey, China, Bangladesh |
588.9 |
578.3 |
-10.6 (-1.8%) |
Turkey & China contract. Retailers thinned forward knitwear commitments to protect working capital against weather risk. |
|
Men’s Overcoats & Jackets(HS 6201) |
China, Turkey |
152.2 |
142 |
-10.2 (-6.7%) |
China drops rank. Severe pullbacks on high-ticket, weather-dependent outerwear to clear existing backlogs. |
|
Nonwoven Technical Apparel(HS 6210) |
China, Southeast Asia |
114.8 |
84.6 |
-30.2 (-26.3%) |
Global contraction. Severe drop due to complete normalization of medical/industrial protective equipment back stocks. |
|
Babies' Garments(HS 6111) |
India, Cambodia, China |
109.3 |
103.4 |
-5.9 (-5.4%) |
China drops; India holds steady. Shift away from mixed fabric items to high-compliance pure cotton infant ranges. |
Particularly noteworthy was the strong performance of lingerie and intimate apparel, where Vietnam and Sri Lanka gained market share through advanced technical manufacturing capabilities. Imports in this category rose 21.4 per cent year on year, reflecting growing retailer demand for specialized production expertise.
Trade policy a competitive lever
The sourcing move toward South Asia is expected to grow further following the implementation of the India-UK Free Trade Agreement on July 15, 2026. The agreement will remove duties of between 8 and 12 per cent on Indian textile and apparel exports, significantly improving India’s competitiveness in the British market. Industry leaders view the development as a transformative moment for sourcing strategies. By eliminating a longstanding tariff disadvantage, the agreement places Indian suppliers on a more equal footing with duty-free competitors and could substantially increase the country’s market share over the coming years.
For British retailers, the agreement offers an opportunity to build more balanced sourcing portfolios that combine Bangladesh’s scale, India’s product diversity and design capabilities, and selected nearshore suppliers’ speed-to-market advantages.
Diversification moves from strategy to necessity
The sourcing adjustments undertaken by major retailers show how rapidly procurement priorities are evolving. Companies are adopting multi-country sourcing frameworks to mitigate risks associated with logistics disruptions, geopolitical tensions and fluctuating costs. The experience of retailers such as Marks & Spencer reveals the benefits of this approach. By shifting portions of production from China to Bangladesh and India, the retailer reportedly reduced lead times and strengthened supply chain flexibility while preserving margins despite higher freight expenses.
As the UK apparel market, valued at approximately $18 billion annually, enters the second half of 2026, sourcing decisions are becoming less about finding the lowest-cost producer and more about building resilient, diversified supply networks. South Asia’s growing dominance, combined with emerging nearshore alternatives and supportive trade agreements, suggests that the restructuring of British fashion sourcing is only beginning.
Why European consumers are spending more but buying less fashion

For much of the last two decades, the European fashion industry operated under the assumption that rising consumer wealth would naturally translate into higher apparel demand. Instead, the opposite has unfolded. Consumer spending across Europe’s largest economies has grown since 2005, yet fashion’s share of household expenditure has steadily declined.
Research compiled by World Data Lab and analyzed by FashionSIGHTS points to a deeper transformation inside mature consumer economies. The issue confronting apparel retailers is no longer temporary inflation pressure or cyclical weakness. European consumers still have purchasing power, but increasingly they are choosing to direct it elsewhere. The result is a growing relevance crisis for an industry historically dependent on constant wardrobe renewal, rapid trend cycles, and rising unit volumes.
Spending growth, fashion decline
Across Germany, Spain, and the UK, consumer expenditure has grown aggressively over the last 20 years. Trillions of euros have entered these economies through wage growth, asset expansion, and broader consumption recovery. Yet apparel has consistently lost wallet share during the same period.
Table: Changing consumer spending across major European countires
|
Market |
Consumer spending (2005) |
Consumer spending (2025) |
Net increase |
Long-term market dynamics |
|
Germany |
€1,290 bn |
€2,180 bn |
+€890 bn |
Broad-based market expansion; severe compression of apparel share of wallet. |
|
Spain |
€539 bn |
€911 billion |
+€372 bn |
Robust post-crisis recovery; spending redirected entirely away from material accumulation. |
|
UK |
€1,320 bn |
€2,110 bn |
+€790 bn |
Sustained long-term demand curve; structural shift toward digital and experiential ecosystems. |
This difference exposes a challenge for the apparel sector. Consumers are not spending less overall; they are simply assigning lower importance to clothing purchases. For decades, fashion benefited from a consumption culture tied to identity creation, social signalling, and fast-cycle trend participation. That equation is now weakening. In mature European markets, wardrobes are already saturated, reducing the incentive for repeated discretionary purchases.
The industry’s traditional growth model, driven by faster collections, higher volumes, and perpetual discounting is misaligned with changing consumer priorities.
Aging consumers, slower fashion cycles
Demographic change is increasing the problem. Europe’s population is aging rapidly, thereby altering consumption patterns. Between 2005 and 2025, Spain’s median age climbed from roughly 40 to 47 years, Germany’s increased by approximately 4.5 years, and the UK’s rose by about two years. Meanwhile, the proportion of citizens aged 65 and above grew steadily across all three markets.
This demographic shift carries major implications for apparel demand because older consumers purchase fashion differently from younger generations. Younger consumers have led high-frequency apparel spending through career-building, active social lives, and identity experimentation. Older demographics typically prioritize comfort, practicality, and wardrobe stability. As consumers age, the biological and lifestyle need for constant wardrobe updates declines sharply.
The implications are structural rather than cyclical. Mature consumers prefer durable garments, timeless silhouettes, and utility-focused purchases over fast-moving seasonal trends. This weakens the foundation of the traditional fashion calendar, which relied heavily on rapid product turnover and youth-driven aspiration. For brands built around trend growth and volume expansion, Europe’s aging population represents a long-term demand headwind that is unlikely to reverse.
New priorities of consumer spending
At the same time, discretionary income is shifting toward sectors perceived to deliver stronger emotional or functional returns. Once consumers reach wardrobe saturation, the incremental value of purchasing additional apparel declines; the 20th T-shirt or fifth winter coat carries limited utility compared to spending on travel, wellness, or digital experiences. This behavioral reallocation is reshaping the broader retail economy.
Experiential spending has emerged as one of the largest beneficiaries of this shift. Travel, hospitality, live events, and cultural experiences are now viewed as stronger expressions of identity and status than physical ownership. Post-pandemic consumer psychology has boosted this transition, with many households prioritizing experiences over accumulation.
The beauty and wellness sector has also become a major destination for discretionary spending. What was once viewed as a cyclical ‘lipstick effect’ has evolved into a sustained wellness economy centered on longevity, self-optimization, preventive health, and premium skincare. Consumers are investing more heavily in personal wellbeing than in fashion-driven external presentation.
Technology spending has similarly grown its share of household budgets. Smartphones, wearables, gaming ecosystems, and digital infrastructure now occupy a central role in modern lifestyle consumption, particularly in hybrid work and entertainment environments. For apparel retailers, the challenge is no longer limited to competition within fashion itself. The industry is now competing against entire lifestyle ecosystems for relevance.
Winners and losers
The difference between apparel segments highlights how consumer expectations have changed over time. Mass-market retailers dependent on basics-driven assortments and constant promotional activity have seen growing pressure on both margins and volume growth. Consumers increasingly view commoditized apparel as interchangeable and easily replaceable, eroding pricing power across the sector. At the same time, a smaller group of brands has managed to maintain stronger wallet share by repositioning apparel as either functional gear or cultural capital.
Technical outerwear, performance-driven apparel, and specialized utility products continue to attract demand because consumers perceive them as essential rather than disposable. Similarly, culturally differentiated brands capable of creating emotional resonance or exclusivity retain pricing leverage even in slower markets. This suggests the future of fashion growth in mature economies will depend less on quantity and more on perceived indispensability.
Reinventing fashion’s value proposition
The broader message emerging from Europe’s retail market is clear: fashion can no longer rely on historical consumer habits to drive growth. For many consumers, clothing has shifted from aspirational acquisition to maintenance spending. In markets where wardrobes are already full and demographic aging is accelerating, simply producing more inventory is unlikely to restore momentum.
The challenge ahead for fashion brands is rebuilding emotional and cultural relevance in a world saturated with product. That will require a decisive move away from the commodity trap that has dominated much of mass-market apparel over the last decade. Competing primarily through discounts, rapid inventory churn, and endless assortment expansion has weakened differentiation while conditioning consumers to perceive clothing as low-value and replaceable.
Future growth will depend on creating products that consumers view as meaningful investments rather than impulse purchases. Brands capable of delivering authenticity, functional utility, cultural connection, or emotional engagement are likely to outperform those still relying on volume-driven retail economics.
Europe’s evolving consumer market suggests the fashion industry is no longer dealing just with a temporary slowdown. It is confronting a deeper reset, one that may permanently redefine how apparel competes for consumer attention, spending, and relevance.
Primark expands North America presence with new retail formats in Houston, Indianapolis
Primark is aggressively scaling its presence in the United States, targeting key retail corridors in Houston and Indianapolis to capture the expanding appetite for value-driven fashion. By establishing a physical footprint in these high-traffic urban centers, the retailer aims to challenge incumbent mass-market players through a model that combines fast-fashion agility with competitive pricing. Retail analysts observe that these specific site selections represent a calculated effort to deepen market penetration beyond the Eastern Seaboard, leveraging regional logistics hubs to optimize inventory turnover and satisfy robust consumer demand in the heartland.
Capitalizing on value-driven consumer sentiment
The expansion occurs against a backdrop of tightening household discretionary budgets, where consumers are increasingly prioritizing ‘affordable luxury.’ Unlike traditional big-box retailers, Primark’s experiential model - focused on high-volume, trend-responsive apparel - serves as a primary growth lever. By securing premium space in prominent retail developments, the company is effectively utilizing high-visibility physical storefronts to build long-term customer loyalty. This tactical push ensures that Primark remains a dominant force in the value retail sector, particularly as the company refines its supply chain to mitigate inflationary pressures while maintaining its hallmark price points across its diverse product assortments.
Driving global revenue with US expansion
Primark is an international clothing retailer offering fashion, homeware, and beauty products at value prices. Operating across Europe and the US, it focuses on high-volume apparel. The company plans rapid US growth to drive global revenue. Founded in 1969 in Dublin, it maintains a strategy of low-cost, high-frequency stock updates.










