Chinese firms are buying well known brands in the hope of upgrading their own image. Buying famous foreign brands is seen as helping them build up their own brands, and proper management and deployment of sales channels may help them gain more popularity with domestic consumers.
Chinese textile giant Shandong Ruyi has announced plans to buy Bally. Shandong is also a joint owner of The Carloway Mill in Scotland, one of the few remaining makers of Harris Tweed. Fosun is said to have already clinched a deal to buy Lanvin, after having nabbed a majority stake in the Italian tailor Caruso in November. It’s doing due diligence on the lingerie label La Perla.
Chinese e-commerce players are also moving quickly into western markets. Secoo, China’s largest luxury e-commerce platform, is looking for opportunities to expand in Europe, while VIP has become an official London Fashion Week sponsor and plans to work with London-based brands throughout the year to help them enter the Chinese market.
But there are concerns about whether a brand like Bally might be devalued after being acquired by a Chinese firm. The management model and the deployment of sales channels will matter if Bally wants to win further recognition in the domestic market in the future.

- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
China’s inward turn, domestic demand is rewriting the export model
China is undergoing one of its most consequential economic recalibrations in decades, driven by geopolitical instability, rising Western protectionism, and... Read more
Egypt bets on a $2 bn green textile city to become Europe’s next sourcing hub
Egypt is making a decisive play to become one of the world's most important apparel manufacturing destinations after securing a... Read more
EU textile imports hit $295.66 bn as price wars mask manufacturing stress
The European Union’s textile and apparel imports grew to $295.66 billion in 2025, a 9.4 per cent year-on-year increase from... Read more
Landmark India-UK trade pact to supercharge textile export margins
The long-awaited India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) is officially scheduled to commence on July 15, 2026. This breakthrough... Read more
Is it the end of aspirational luxury? Asia’s consumers demand more than logos
While the global personal luxury goods market remains broadly stable at around €358 billion, the apparent resilience masks a deeper... Read more
Vietnam wins, India slips as US apparel sourcing undergoes massive reset
A trade realignment is transforming the global apparel market, yet India’s manufacturing has stalled at the starting line. Newly released... Read more
US clothing prices rise faster than inflation, reshaping fashion retail strategy
After nearly two years of heavy discounting, inventory liquidation, and margin decline, apparel prices in the US are now rising... Read more
From gym to boardroom performance fabrics are redefining apparel demand
The global apparel industry has entered a new phase of evolution as the distinction between sportswear and everyday fashion continues... Read more
Digital Dominance Redefined: Zara moves past H&M in $100 bn fast fashion bat…
The global fast-fashion sector has reached a inflection point in 2026 where the battleground is no longer only store shelves... Read more
Spykar accelerates offline expansion: plans 100 new stores across India
A titan of the Indian denim-first fashion scene, Spykar has officially unveiled an aggressive retail growth strategy. As consumer demand... Read more












