Fashion's Reckoning: Luxury Pivots, Secondhand Surge, and Industry Reset

Fashion's Reckoning: Luxury Pivots, Secondhand Surge, and Industry Reset

The global fashion industry over the past 48 hours is showing clear evidence of strategic shifts, mounting financial pressures, and innovative responses among brands and leaders. The luxury segment is redefining its business model. Once dominated by aspirational buyers, the industry is now prioritizing high net worth clients who, while a small fraction of the market, generate nearly a quarter of global luxury spending. This pivot stems from economic headwinds. Around 35 percent of aspirational shoppers have reduced or eliminated their luxury purchases, steering spending toward savings, wellness, and especially the secondhand market. Their share of the consumer base has dropped from 70 percent to about 60 percent, and their contribution to luxury revenues has sharply declined. Brands are responding by moving toward exclusivity and personalized service, refining their client base and doubling down on heritage craftsmanship and technology.

Recent data from the world’s largest luxury group, LVMH, reports a 12 percent drop in fashion and leather goods sales for quarter two. Net profits are down 22 percent in the first half of 2025. This contraction is echoed by other industry research, with the consulting firm Bain and Company describing turbulence as the “new baseline” for the sector. Fast fashion faces its own reckoning. Companies like Forever 21 are struggling, replaced by secondhand and resale platforms. Environmental accountability is intensifying, with Italy fining Shein for greenwashing and major media highlighting the costs of textile waste.

Major deals suggest strategic realignment. Penn State University has ended a 33-year partnership with Nike to sign a 10-year, 300 million dollar agreement with Adidas, following a broader trend of institutions switching allegiances, fueled by new brand ambassador incentives and athlete-focused marketing. In luxury activewear, Swiss innovator On has allied with Afrobeats star Burna Boy to blend sport, music, and culture, demonstrating the growing importance of cross-industry partnerships.

Consumer behavior is shifting toward durability, value, and authentic brand experiences, while supply chains remain under stress from global instability and sustainability concerns. The death of Giorgio Armani also marks a turning point for heritage brands, highlighting the balance between legacy and adaptation.

Compared to earlier in the year, the past week has solidified industry turbulence with notable declines in luxury sales, the rise of secondhand shopping, and brands focusing on fewer but wealthier customers. The fashion industry, facing its most significant reset in years, is betting on resilience, innovation, and exclusivity to weather ongoing disruption.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

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