Why Luxury Still Can’t Find Its Way Out of the Slump
4/22/202637 min
Luxury entered 2026 with hopes that new creative directors and signs of stabilisation would finally help the sector turn a corner. Instead, the latest round of earnings has raised bigger questions about what growth now looks like for the industry. While brands including Dior, Gucci and Chanel are generating renewed interest, that excitement has not yet translated into a meaningful sales rebound.
From the slowing Chinese market to geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, luxury conglomerates are facing a complex web of challenges that creative hype alone cannot solve.
On the episode, BoF luxury editors Mimosa Spencer and Robert Williams explain why China remains such a critical missing piece, why Louis Vuitton is under closer scrutiny than usual, and why jewellery continues to outperform the rest of luxury.
Key Insights:
- One of the clearest messages from this earnings season is that new designers can lift mood and momentum internally, but that alone is not enough to restart the industry. Williams says the latest results confirmed that the impact of all these creative resets is “pretty limited, especially in isolation”. As he puts it, “the result of that is more like treading water or stabilising versus actually reigniting growth.” Spencer adds that the disappointment was sharper because there had been so much excitement around these debuts that “a lot of investors were expecting some earlier results.”
- Both Spencer and Williams point to China as the market hanging over the entire sector. Even where sentiment improved at the end of last year, investors were still looking for signs that Chinese demand might return in a meaningful way. Spencer says the bigger issue now is not just timing but structure: “The question is whether the kind of growth we saw in the past will actually come back.” She adds: “It seems like it takes a lot more work for a luxury brand to actually get good results in China.”
- LVMH still wants the market to see Dior as the manageable turnaround story, but Williams suggests the real anxiety now sits around Louis Vuitton. The brand has held up better than many peers, but investors are increasingly asking where its next phase of growth will come from. Williams points out that the bigger concern is not short-term performance, but what comes next. “No one can really see where the growth is going to come from,” he says. “Is this still a growth industry? What will the industry look like and how will it operate if it's not growing anymore?” If the industry’s strongest player cannot clearly define its next phase of growth, it raises deeper questions about the trajectory of luxury as a whole.
- Despite the broader slowdown across luxury, Spencer argues that jewellery’s outperformance is not just about demand for hard luxury, but about how consumers now judge value. Handbag prices have climbed so sharply that jewellery, by comparison, can feel like a more rational indulgence. “Jewellery prices haven’t gone up in the same way that handbag prices have gone up,” she says. At the same time, jewellery still carries a perception of durability and investment value, whether or not that always holds in practice.
- Luxury brands may be making more progress with their established high-spending clients than with the broader aspirational base they once relied on for volume. Williams notes that some houses are succeeding in pulling core customers back into stores, even if that is not yet translating into a wider recovery. At Chanel, for example, he points to renewed momentum among “well-to-do women with big executive jobs in their late 30s, 40s, and 50s,” while Louis Vuitton’s monogram anniversary campaign has helped refocus attention on its most iconic products.
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Transcript preview
First 90 secondsBrian Baskin· Host0:00
[upbeat music] Hello, and welcome to The Debrief from The Business of Fashion, where each week we delve into our most popular BOF professional stories with the correspondents who created them. I'm executive editor Brian Baskin.
Sheena Butler-Young· Host0:18
And I'm senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young. Most of the major luxury groups have reported their first quarter results, and the numbers are not pretty. LVMH reported lower sales in its fashion group, which includes Louis Vuitton and Dior, and Kering hasn't made as much progress turning around Gucci as hoped. Even Hermes, which never seemed all that affected by the luxury slowdown, saw its stock have its worst day ever after reporting slower sales growth than expected.
Brian Baskin· Host0:44
This was supposed to be the moment when big luxury got its act together, and instead the industry seems more adrift than ever. What is going on? Today, we're joined by BOF correspondents Mimosa Spencer and Robert Williams to talk about why luxury is finding it so hard to shake its slump.
Robert Williams· Guest1:01
Hi, Brian. Hi, Sheena.
Mimosa Spencer· Guest1:02
Thanks for having us.
Brian Baskin· Host1:04
Thanks for being here. Robert, let's start with you. Luxury brands have been reporting weak sales and then a lot of the problems they talked about, you know, earlier this month for quite a while now. I mean, why did this set of results in particular seem to be such a surprise to everyone?
Robert Williams· Guest1:18
I think there were some surprises in the results, mainly that the impact from the conflict in the Middle East was more muted than anticipated. You know, it was quite significant.