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In a landmark move for the performance-wear sector, top sporting organizations - including British Triathlon, British Gymnastics, and ParalympicsGB - have officially ratified the Sustainable Sports Apparel Charter. Launched on the International Day of Zero Waste, March 30, 2026, the initiative directly targets the ‘structural overproduction’ inherent in high-performance sports. Data reveals, contingency ordering - stocking extra kits for athletes and staff - often increases demand by up to 30 per cent per program, much of which remains unused. The charter provides a structured, 15-commitment roadmap to transition from intention to implementation, aiming to reduce the 92 million tons of global textile waste generated annually by prioritizing circularity over traditional procurement.

Economic barriers and the shift to circular logistics

Beyond environmental metrics, the charter addresses the escalating financial pressures on families, with 87 per cent reporting apparel costs as a barrier to sports participation. By embedding sustainability into official tenders and extending product lifecycles through repair and reuse, the initiative aims to redirect surplus high-quality kits to grassroots communities. This strategy aligns with the broader ‘DTC-first’ and ‘denim lifestyle’ trends seen in the wider retail market, focusing on long-term value over fast-fashion cycles. Under the guidance of sustainability consultancy 5Thread, signatories commit to a two-year verification process, ensuring that operational changes remain low-cost yet high-impact for both professional and community-level athletics.

Strategic infrastructure for industry-wide compliance

The charter recognizes the unique branding and sponsorship pressures that have historically hindered sustainability in sportswear. To counter this, it mandates transparency in the supply chain and collaborative learning across federations. This collective approach mirrors the ‘big data’ and ERP overhauls currently being undertaken by global apparel leaders to enhance inventory precision. By synchronizing athlete requirements with real-time manufacturing capacity, the sports industry is positioning itself as a testbed for the textile sector’s 100 billion sustainability goals, proving that high-performance requirements do not have to come at the expense of ecological responsibility.

5Thread is a specialized sustainability consultancy that bridges the gap between textile innovation and sports operations. Focusing on the UK and European high-performance markets, the firm co-created the Sustainable Sports Apparel Charter to help governing bodies reduce waste through verified 24-month roadmaps. By providing expert auditing and peer networking, 5Thread helps organizations align with global net-zero targets while maintaining elite-level performance standards.

  

Levi Strauss & Co (LS & Co) has officially designated Raspberry AI as its core creative partner, a move that signals the end of the traditional, months-long sampling cycle. By deploying Raspberry’s generative design platform, the heritage brand is transitioning to a ‘sketch-to-render’ workflow that delivers photorealistic visualizations in seconds. This shift is not merely aesthetic; industry data suggests, such specialized AI tools can reduce physical sampling costs by up to 30 per cent and shave nearly three months off annual production timelines. For a brand managing complex denim washes and textures, the ability to visualize fabric drape and ‘on-body’ fit digitally allows for design approvals long before a single yard of denim is cut.

ERP modernization as a catalyst for AI scalability

The partnership is the creative centerpiece of a broader 10 billion revenue roadmap. Currently, LS & Co has completed 60 per cent of its global ERP overhaul, a foundational project described by Harmit Singh, CFO as a ‘big data unlock.’ This infrastructure modernization is essential for feeding high-fidelity inventory and supply chain data into AI models, ensuring that the creative outputs from Raspberry AI are grounded in manufacturing feasibility. By synchronizing design with real-time data, the company aims to improve sell-through rates by 12 per cent, matching its ‘denim lifestyle’ offerings - including expanding tops and women’s categories - to precise consumer demand forecasts.

QOmnichannel evolution and the 55 per cent DTC Target

This technological pivot directly supports Levi’s aggressive ‘DTC-first’ strategy, with direct-to-consumer sales expected to account for 55 per cent of total business by 2027. Beyond the design studio, the integration enables the creation of diverse, AI-generated campaign imagery, facilitating a more inclusive digital flagship experience without the logistical constraints of traditional photography. As e-commerce revenues increased by 22 per cent organically in recent quarters, the deployment of ‘super agent’ platforms and generative tools is positioned to set a new benchmark for agility. By automating technical design bottlenecks, LS & Co is empowering its workforce to focus on high-value innovation, ensuring the 153-year-old brand remains at the vanguard of the retail renaissance.

Pioneering the denim lifestyle

Levi Strauss & Co is a global apparel leader famed for inventing the blue jean in 1873. Today, it operates across 110 countries, focusing on its ‘head-to-toe’ denim lifestyle strategy. With FY2025 organic revenue growth at 7 per cent, the company is currently scaling its direct-to-consumer footprint and diversifying into premium segments like the "Blue Tab" collection to reach its 10 billion mid-term revenue target.

  

The Indian apparel export landscape is transitioning toward a recovery phase following a period of constrained growth. While shipments grew by a marginal 1.5 per cent in USD terms during the first ten months of FY2026, the sector is preparing for a more robust 8 – 11 per cent expansion in FY2027. This optimistic projection follows a significant downward recalibration of US tariffs, which were reduced to approximately 10 per cent in February 2026 after peaking at 50 per cent earlier in the fiscal year. This policy shift has enabled Indian exporters to regain price competitiveness in the North American market, where volumes had previously contracted by 6 per cent.

Strengthening European footholds and operational efficiency

The formalization of Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with the European Union and the United Kingdom serves as a structural catalyst for the industry. These pacts are anticipated to eliminate duty barriers, providing Indian manufacturers a level playing field against competitors like Bangladesh and Vietnam. Consequently, industry operating margins are forecast to improve by 200 basis points, reaching approximately 9.5 per cent in the coming fiscal year. This financial strengthening is evidenced by a projected recovery in credit metrics, with interest coverage ratios expected to rise to 4.6 times from the 3.3 times observed during the height of the tariff crisis.

Navigating geopolitical bottlenecks in West Asia

Despite internal fiscal improvements, the sector remains vigilant regarding external supply chain disruptions. Ongoing instability in West Asia has escalated logistics expenditures, with the Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC) reporting freight surcharges ranging from Rs 12 to Rs 55 per garment. The rerouting of vessels via the Cape of Good Hope has extended the cash conversion cycle by 15–25 days, complicating working capital management. Furthermore, the volatility in energy markets has disrupted the supply of critical synthetic inputs like polyester, emphasizing the necessity for exporters to diversify maritime routes and enhance inventory resilience to sustain the projected growth momentum.

The Indian textile and apparel industry is a cornerstone of the national economy, contributing 2 per cent to the GDP and supporting over 45 million livelihoods. Dominating in Ready-Made Garments (RMG) and cotton textiles, the sector is shifting toward Man-Made Fibres (MMF) and technical textiles to capture higher global value. Through the PM MITRA initiative, the government is developing mega integrated parks to achieve a $100 billion export target by 2030, leveraging recent FTAs to pivot from traditional commodity exports toward high-fashion, compliant manufacturing.

  

New Luxury under pressure as stagflation and geopolitics redefine the winners circle

 

The 2025 earnings for Europe’s listed luxury majors have delivered a verdict that has far more implications than the prevailing industry slowdown narrative suggests. Beneath the headline anxiety lies a sharper truth: the global luxury sector is not declining uniformly, it is fragmenting. Growth is no longer evenly distributed across legacy powerhouses. Instead, it is concentrating among a smaller cohort of brands that have mastered scarcity, storytelling, and category precision.

An aggregation of organic sales growth across the top nine European luxury groups collectively accounting for over half of the global personal luxury market reveals a sector increasingly defined by divergence. While the full-year growth of 2 per cent suggests moderation, the increase to 4 per cent in the fourth quarter introduces the more complex aspect of late-cycle resilience now facing fresh macroeconomic threats.

A late-year boost masks fragile momentum

The sector’s fourth-quarter performance offered a temporary revival. After a subdued first nine months, Q4 growth more than doubled, aligning the industry once again with global GDP expansion trends. This rebound, however, appears less like a sustained recovery and more like a cyclical uptick vulnerable to disruption. The table captures the performance dispersion across major luxury groups.

Table: Big luxury groups/brands Q4 performance

Group/Segment

Q4 Organic growth

FY organic growth

2025 sales (€ mn)

Brunello Cucinelli (est.)

12%

11%

1,408

Richemont (FY restated)

11%

7%

22,190

Hermès

10%

9%

16,002

Moncler Group

7%

3%

3,132

L’Oréal Group

6%

4%

44,052

Prada Group

5%

8%

5,718

Zegna Group

5%

1%

1,917

LVMH Group

1%

-1%

80,807

Kering

-3%

-10%

14,675

50+% of Personal Luxury Market

4%

2%

189,901

Luxury Fashion Aggregate

1%

-1%

80,622

A closer reading of the table reveals the asymmetry shaping the sector. While mid-sized and specialized players such as Brunello Cucinelli and Hermès are posting double-digit or near double-digit growth, conglomerates like LVMH and Kering are either stagnating or falling. The aggregate figures obscure a critical fault line: the industry’s largest players are no longer its primary growth engines.

Fashion’s drag on the luxury engine

The most significant pressure point emerges within fashion and leather goods, the historical backbone of the luxury business model. The ‘Luxury Fashion Aggregate’ declined by 1 per cent over the full year, confirming that the sector’s most visible category is also its weakest link. For LVMH, scale has become both strength and constraint. Its Fashion & Leather Goods division, with revenues approaching €38 billion, recorded a 5 per cent full-year decline and a negative fourth quarter. The sheer size of this segment means that even marginal slowdowns exert a disproportionate drag on overall industry performance.

The situation is more acute at Kering, where a 10 per cent full-year drop signals not just cyclical softness but deeper brand-level disruptions. The data suggests that the challenges here are less about macroeconomic conditions and more about creative direction, product relevance, and execution within core labels. This difference challenges the widely held assumption that macro instability alone is responsible for luxury’s deceleration. Instead, it points to a structural recalibration within fashion itself where brand heat, not heritage, is becoming the decisive variable.

The rise of precision luxury

If fashion is faltering, other segments are quietly reinforcing the sector’s foundation. Hard luxury, particularly watches and jewelry has emerged as a stabilizing force. Richemont, with its strong portfolio of jewellery maisons, delivered 11 per cent growth in the fourth quarter and 7 per cent for the year, underscoring sustained global appetite for high-value, low-frequency purchases. At the very top end of the market, ultra-luxury brands continue to operate in a different economic reality. Hermès and Brunello Cucinelli exemplify a model built on controlled supply, elevated craftsmanship, and unwavering pricing power. Their performance suggests that true exclusivity remains largely insulated from broader consumption cycles.

Meanwhile, groups like Prada and Moncler represent a different pathway to resilience. Their growth: 8 per cent and 3 per cent respectively, has been driven by cultural relevance and a renewed focus on brand storytelling. These companies have demonstrated an ability to adapt to shifting consumer expectations without diluting identity. The data, therefore, dismantles the simplistic narrative that quiet luxury alone is driving success. Instead, it reveals multiple winning strategies from hyper-exclusivity to cultural agility coexisting within a fragmented competitive landscape.

New layer of risk, the stagflation threat

Just as the industry began to regain footing, a new set of macroeconomic risks has emerged. Geopolitical instability in the Middle East, combined with persistent inflationary pressures driven by energy markets, is introducing the possibility of stagflation a scenario characterized by low growth and high costs. This development is particularly concerning because it disrupts one of luxury’s historical advantages: its relative immunity to economic downturns. Unlike previous cycles, where demand contraction was largely regional, the current environment threatens global consumer confidence simultaneously.

The Middle East, long viewed as a dependable reservoir of high-net-worth consumption, is no longer a guaranteed growth engine. At the same time, ongoing volatility in China and unpredictable spending patterns in the United States are compounding uncertainty.

From scale to selectivity

The defining takeaway from 2025 is not decline but differentiation. The luxury sector is undergoing a process of selective consolidation in which growth is increasingly concentrated among brands that combine operational discipline with strategic clarity.

The -1 per cent full-year performance of LVMH despite its unmatched scale serves as a powerful signal that size alone no longer guarantees resilience. Instead, success is being redefined by a brand’s ability to maintain desirability, control distribution, and align with evolving consumer values.

What emerges is a sector that is thinner, sharper, and far less forgiving. The era of broad-based luxury expansion is giving way to a more exacting phase where only the most disciplined players will sustain growth.

  

The rapid migration of digitally native fashion labels into high-street retail reached a new milestone this week as US-based Gen Z powerhouse Edikted opened its first European flagship at 52-55 Carnaby Street. Spanning 4,800 sq ft, the London debut marks a critical phase in the brand’s global scaling strategy following an explosive 65 per cent revenue growth in 2025. By securing a location in Soho's trend-led epicenter, Edikted is positioning its physical touchpoints directly opposite major competitors like Sephora and Tala, targeting a UK market where 24 per cent of fashion shoppers still prioritize in-person experiences despite the dominance of e-commerce.

The expansion comes as the global specialty retail sector navigates a projected 15-20 per cent growth rate through late 2026. Industry analysts suggest that Edikted’s move is a direct response to the ‘brand-first’ loyalty of British consumers, who increasingly seek tactile engagement with the "ultra-fast" styles popularized on social media. ‘Carnaby Street provides the perfect ecosystem to translate our digital virality into a tangible retail experience,’ states Mina Fam, Head of Retail at Edikted. To maintain margins amid rising logistics costs and a 3 per cent inflation rate, the brand is leveraging its proprietary ‘try and repeat’ production model, which utilizes real-time data to manufacture small-batch "micro-collections" based on consumer demand, effectively reducing the excess inventory risks that currently plague the traditional apparel supply chain.

Founded in 2020 and headquartered in Los Angeles, Edikted is a private, Gen Z-focused fashion label specializing in streetwear and runway-inspired womenswear. Targeting key markets in the US and UK, the brand aims for a Rs 1,200 crore ($150M\ million+) revenue milestone by late 2026 through aggressive physical retail expansion and tech-driven, small-batch manufacturing.

  

The American retail landscape has demonstrated notable resilience in Q1, FY26, with total revenue rising 2 per cent during the first ten weeks of the year. Data from Circana confirms, despite persistent inflationary pressures and a 3 per cent decline in unit demand for general merchandise, consumers are aggressively prioritizing ‘lifestyle passions’ over traditional core needs. This shift is particularly evident in the apparel sector, where a massive structural change is underway: 23 per cent of US households are now using GLP-1 weight-loss medications, triggering an unprecedented cycle of wardrobe replenishment that is insulating fashion brands from broader economic volatility.

Capitalizing on the ‘New Size’ economy and personal expression

As millions of consumers undergo physical transformations, the demand for mid-to-small-size apparel has surged, while sales for larger-format silhouettes have softened. This ‘size migration’ is creating a unique growth pocket for retailers capable of managing rapid inventory shifts. Consumers are reassessing what fits and flatters their evolving identity, notes Kristen Classi-Zummo, apparel industry adviser at Circana. Beyond basic resizing, shoppers are investing heavily in fashion accessories and prestige beauty, categories that grew in dollar gains through mid-March. This trend suggests that even when value perception in core apparel is lacking, "feel-good" purchases remain a non-negotiable part of the 2026 consumer budget.

Navigating bifurcation through tech-driven personalization

The retail recovery remains bifurcated, with high-income households driving the majority of growth while middle-income tiers focus on high-utility ‘need’ items. To capture this splintered market, leading brands are deploying agentic AI shopping assistants to provide hyper-personalized recommendations, a move projected to increase average order values by 26 per cent this year. The challenge for 2026 lies in balancing these technological investments against rising logistics costs and potential tariff-driven price hikes. Retailers that successfully weave "newness" and emotional resonance into their value proposition are finding that the American consumer, though cautious, is far from retreating.

Circana is a global leader in retail data and predictive analytics, providing deep market insights across 20+ industries including fashion, beauty, and CPG. Headquartered in Chicago, the firm aims to scale its AI-native Liquid Data platform to hit Rs 1,200 crore+ ($150 million+) in tech-service revenue by late 2026, building on six decades of consumer behavior expertise.

  

The Indian textile and garment industry is preparing for a high-level strategic alignment as the Clothing Manufacturers Association of India (CMAI) and the SU.RE (Sustainable Resolution) initiative convene the Eco-Stitch Sustainability Conclave in Mumbai on April 3, 2026. This summit arrives at a critical juncture for the domestic sector, which currently contributes approximately 2 per cent to India’s GDP but faces intensifying pressure to comply with the EU’s Strategy for Sustainable and Circular Textiles. With the global ethical fashion market projected to reach $10.28 billion by late 2026, the conclave aims to provide a definitive roadmap for medium-scale manufacturers to integrate traceable, low-impact production methods without compromising commercial viability.

Navigating the digital product passport and global trade mandates

The primary focus of the deliberations involves the upcoming 2026 Digital Product Passport (DPP) requirements, which demand total transparency from fiber origin to retail shelf. As India targets $100 billion in textile exports by 2030, domestic titans are reassessing the cost-benefit ratio of green technology. Current data indicates that while sustainable raw materials can carry a 15 per cent price premium, they effectively reduce long-term operational risks associated with carbon border taxes. Sustainability is transitioning from a CSR initiative to a fundamental trade prerequisite, stated a CMAI representative. The event will showcase technical case studies on closed-loop chemical management, a move vital for maintaining the 4 per cent CAGR expected in the Indian apparel export segment through the next fiscal year.

Scaling circularity amidst fragmented supply chain challenges

Despite the enthusiasm for ‘green’ manufacturing, the industry must overcome a 25 per cent infrastructure gap in textile recycling facilities to achieve true circularity. The conclave will address state-backed interest subsidies for eco-upgrades, designed to help small and medium enterprises (SMEs) transition toward solar-powered spinning and water-efficient dyeing. By fostering a unified ecosystem between raw material suppliers and global retailers, the Eco-Stitch initiative seeks to insulate Indian exports from global energy volatility. As 52 per cent of urban Indian consumers now actively seek out eco-labeled apparel, the opportunity lies in scaling these sustainable practices to meet both domestic demand and stringent international compliance standards.

Driving ethical manufacturing

The Clothing Manufacturers Association of India (CMAI) is the nation’s premier apparel trade body, representing over 20,000 members. Through its SU.RE initiative, it leads the transition toward circularity in the domestic market, aiming to standardize ESG reporting for Indian brands to secure a Rs 1,200 crore revenue edge by 2027.

  

The Bangladesh Ready-Made Garment (RMG) sector has reached a new sustainability milestone in March 2026, with the total number of LEED-certified green factories rising to 280. Highlighting this momentum, Chattogram-based Meher Garments has secured the prestigious LEED v4.1 Platinum certification, achieving an exceptional score of 89 points. This accomplishment places the facility among the elite tier of global industrial buildings, as Bangladesh now accounts for 52 of the world’s top 100 highest-scoring LEED-certified factories. This green transition is no longer a choice but a commercial necessity as the nation navigates its 2026 LDC graduation, which will likely expose exports to higher tariffs in the EU and UK markets.

By optimizing its existing infrastructure under the rigorous Operations and Maintenance (O&M) framework, Meher Garments has demonstrated that legacy facilities can meet the highest modern environmental standards. The facility achieved top marks in energy efficiency and water conservation, addressing two of the most significant cost drivers in the textile supply chain. LEED Platinum status is a testament to the company’s long-term vision of integrating sustainability into every operational layer, noted a spokesperson for the firm. As global retailers increasingly consolidate their sourcing with ‘high-road’ partners to comply with the EU's Digital Product Passport mandates, such certifications provide a critical safeguard against order rationalization. This structural shift toward eco-certified production is expected to help Bangladesh maintain its 15 per cent export growth rate despite a 3 percent projected increase in raw material and energy costs this fiscal year.

Meher Garments is a leading apparel manufacturer based in Chattogram, specializing in high-quality knitted and woven garments for the US and European retail markets. The company is currently scaling its technical textile production to meet 2027 revenue targets while leveraging its new Platinum status to secure long-term partnerships with top-tier global fashion brands.

  

Vietnam’s textile and apparel sector has set an ambitious export turnover target of $50 billion for 2026, a strategic leap from the $46 billion recorded in 2025. Announced by the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (VITAS), this objective is underpinned by a massive restructuring of domestic supply chains and the aggressive utilization of new-generation Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) like the CPTPP and EVFTA. Central to this momentum is the upcoming SaigonTex – SaigonFabric 2026 expo, scheduled for April 8-11 in Ho Chi Minh City. The event is expected to host over 1,000 enterprises from 22 nations, serving as a critical hub for high-tech integration.

Transitioning from contract assembly to high-value ODM

The industry is pivoting from simple cut-make-trim (CMT) services towards higher-value Original Design Manufacturing (ODM). This shift is essential to mitigate rising logistics costs -which increased by up to 50 per cent in early 2026 due to Red Sea disruptions- and to meet the EU’s strict Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM). 2026 is the year where 'greening' and 'digitalization' stop being guidelines and become survival mandates, notes a senior VITAS official. A primary focus at this year’s trade summits is the ‘Made in Vietnam’ Hub, which connects global buyers with local suppliers capable of meeting international traceability standards.

Technology-driven resilience amid global headwinds

Investment in automation is accelerating to counter labor shortages and increasing wage pressures. Case studies from leading firms like Viet Tien highlight a move toward vertically integrated manufacturing, allowing for more agile ‘low-minimum order quantity’ (MOQ) models. These innovations, alongside AI-powered quality control systems, are designed to protect margins as the industry navigates a 15–16 per cent projected growth rate. By securing a 20.6 per cent share of the US apparel import market, Vietnam is successfully positioning itself as the primary alternative for brands diversifying away from traditional sourcing hubs.

The Vietnamese textile industry is the world’s third-largest garment exporter, focusing on the US, EU, and Japanese markets. Moving toward a circular economy model, the sector aims for a 10 per cent GDP contribution by late 2026 through increased localization of raw materials and state-backed interest subsidies for green technology upgrades.

  

The South Gujarat textile corridor is executing a decisive shift in operational strategy as weaving units move to formalize significant production curbs across the regional powerloom sector. Following a landmark survey by the Federation of Gujarat Weavers Welfare Association (FOGWWA), where 85 per cent of respondents favored immediate intervention, industry leaders have ratified a transition to 12-hour single-shift operations. This collective move seeks to rectify a severe supply-demand disparity that has eroded profit margins throughout the current fiscal year. Industry data indicates that a 50 per cent rise in yarn prices - driven by rising crude oil costs near $100 per barrel - combined with stagnant domestic consumption, has rendered full-capacity manufacturing financially unviable.

Navigating geopolitical headwinds and labor retention challenges

The current downturn is exacerbated by regional instability in West Asia, which has disrupted export maritime routes and tightened energy supplies. Operating under current conditions is economically unsustainable; the association needs to prioritize market equilibrium over sheer volume, notes Ashok Jirawala, President, FOGWWA. Beyond pricing, the sector faces a critical labor shortage as nearly 30 per cent of the migrant workforce has returned to native states, spurred by a local cooking gas crisis and reduced wage opportunities. While the Gujarat Government has increased the textile outlay by 38 per cent to Rs 2,755 crore for FY27, the immediate focus remains on lean manufacturing to clear a 6-crore-meter daily production glut and stabilize fabric realizations for the upcoming trade cycles.

As India’s primary synthetic fabric hub, this cluster operates over 2.5 million powerlooms specializing in polyester and man-made fibers. Historically centered on mass-market domestic supply, the sector is now transitioning toward high-speed rapier technology and value-added exports. Current performance is focused on stabilizing supply chains to sustain a projected 11.38 per cent long-term CAGR through 2034.

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