Operating income for the US retail industry is expected to grow between four and five per cent for the year ahead. Sales are expected to grow in the three to four per cent range. Pressures from foreign exchange and excess inventory will ease, with operating profit up five to seven per cent after a very weak 2016. Sales growth will accelerate six to eight per cent, supported by direct-to-consumer selling and international growth.
Larger apparel sellers will continue to emphasize top-line organic growth through direct-to-consumer channels, buoyed in part by the significant international expansion opportunities for many brands. Though input costs are rising, they remain manageable. Apparel and footwear sellers, on the other hand, will be squeezed as consumers continue to spend more on healthcare, rent, home-related products, electronics and cars, while weak traffic trends and competitive pressure will continue to impact operating performance of department stores.
Discounters/warehouses will see operating income decline two to three per cent, and Walmart, which accounts for 75 per cent of this subsector, will continue to see weak performance as wage hikes and investment for future growth squeeze its profits. Meanwhile, operating profit will grow less than one per cent in the office supply subsector in the year ahead.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
Britain’s Forgotten Growth Engine: Why policy gaps are undermining fashion and t…
Britain’s fashion and textile industry, often framed through the lens of creativity and design, is emerging as a case study... Read more
Beyond price rallies structural reform can strengthen India’s cotton economy
India’s cotton economy is entering a decisive phase, where firmer prices and tighter arrivals in the 2026-27 season have given... Read more
Polyester volatility redraws India’s textile industry competitive map across Asi…
India’s synthetic textile industry has entered a phase of cost instability as polyester staple fibre (PSF) prices rise across domestic... Read more
The £7 Billion Question: Who pays for fashion’s ‘free rental’ habit?
The global fashion industry is facing an uncomfortable paradox: its most valuable customers may also be its most destructive. A... Read more
India, China Bangladesh face fresh headwinds as global apparel markets rebalance
Global apparel trade is entering a more uneven recovery phase, with demand growth persisting but losing uniform momentum across major... Read more
Global cotton enters a deficit year in 2026 as supply drop meets logistics risk
The global cotton economy has entered a fragile and sensitive phase. Early projections for the 2026-27 season suggest that world... Read more
India’s textile trade gets a Pacific push as New Zealand FTA removes tariff barr…
India and New Zealand have inked a ‘once-in-a-generation’ Free Trade Agreement (FTA), one that will have a profound impact on... Read more
Lululemon’s world-first nylon circularity push signals a new apparel arms race
The global apparel industry’s circularity narrative is entering a more technically demanding phase. Polyester recycling once the flagship of sustainable... Read more
Beyond the DTC Rush: Levi’s hybrid channel strategy sets a new retail benchmark
The global apparel sector is entering a phase where channel strategy is no longer a tactical lever but a core... Read more
The New Rules of Resale: EPR turning secondhand into fashion’s strategic growth …
The global fashion industry is facing a decisive regulatory and commercial reset. What began as a sustainability narrative around reuse... Read more












