FW

FW
  

Following a landmark fiscal performance in 2025, Adidas has signaled a sustained upward trajectory, reporting record revenues of €24.8 billion. This 13 per cent currency-neutral growth is underpinned by a rare double-digit growth pattern across every geographic market and sales channel. In an era where many apparel retailers are navigating inconsistent consumer demand, Adidas has successfully balanced its direct-to-consumer (DTC) and wholesale operations. The firm’s gross margin has increased to 51.6 per cent, a 0.8 percentage point improvement, primarily driven by a high-margin product mix and lower logistics overheads. The Fourth Quarter of 2025 further solidified this trend, with net sales reaching €6.1 billion, reinforcing the brand's dominance in both lifestyle and performance categories.

Optimizing shareholder value and operational efficiency

The Herzogenaurach-based sportswear giant is translating its 54 per cent jump in operating profit - now totaling €2,056 million - into significant investor returns. By proposing a 40 per cent dividend hike to €2.80 per share and a massive €1.5 billion cash return program, the company is demonstrating peak confidence in its medium-term liquidity. Net income from continuing operations has expanded by nearly 70 per cent, allowing Adidas to outpace industry peers in capital reinvestment. Moving into 2026, management is prioritizing inventory lean-management and high-velocity product launches in the North American and Greater China sectors. This operational discipline, coupled with an 8.3 per cent operating margin, positions Adidas to withstand inflationary pressures while continuing to scale its global retail footprint.

Sportswear and performance retail strategy

Adidas is a global leader in athletic footwear and apparel, catering to professional athletes and the ‘athleisure’ lifestyle market. Aiming for consistent double-digit growth through 2026, the company focuses on DTC expansion and high-profile collaborations. Founded in 1949, it currently manages a record €24.8 billion revenue portfolio.

  

The announcement of Asahi Kasei Advance’s inaugural participation at Techtextil 2026 marks a strategic move to penetrate the European technical textile market with a concentrated portfolio of 14 specialized brands. Scheduled for April 21–24 in Frankfurt, the company’s showcase in Hall 12.1 focuses on a sophisticated convergence of nonwovens and flame-retardant technologies. By isolating four core proprietary materials for this debut, the Tokyo-based firm is positioning its high-performance fibers as essential components for the aerospace, automotive, and protective apparel sectors. Industry analysts suggest this move is a response to the growing global demand for multi-functional textiles that offer both extreme durability and environmental compliance.

Expanding global footprint through advanced fiber solutions

The decision to showcase at Frankfurt reflects a broader sector impact where Asian textile leaders are aggressively seeking to set new benchmarks in the "zero-defect" manufacturing space. Beyond simple fabric production, Asahi Kasei Advance is showcasing integrated solutions that address the rigorous safety standards of the European Union. A realistic assessment indicates that by highlighting flame-retardancy alongside lightweight nonwovens, the company aims to secure long-term supply contracts with Tier-1 industrial manufacturers. This exhibition serves as a critical litmus test for the company’s ability to compete with established Western chemical-textile giants, leveraging its history of polymer precision to offer high-margin alternatives in a market increasingly focused on resource-efficient technical gear.

Leading innovation in functional textiles

Asahi Kasei Advance, a key division of the Asahi Kasei Group, specializes in high-performance fibers, functional fabrics, and nonwoven materials for global industrial markets. The firm is currently executing a 2026 growth strategy focused on European expansion. Historically rooted in polymer expertise, it maintains a strong financial outlook driven by premium material exports.

EU PET spunbond imports under scrutiny, misclassification sparks regulatory and financial risk

  

EU PET spunbond imports under scrutiny misclassification sparks regulatory and financial risk

 

The European nonwovens and technical textiles sector is facing an unprecedented compliance crisis as a rise of customs misclassification threatens to destabilize supply chains across the continent. EDANA, the international trade association representing the nonwovens industry, has issued stark warnings: a significant volume of Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) spunbond is entering the EU under outdated or incorrect customs codes, creating exposure to retroactive duties, administrative fines, and even potential criminal penalties for apparel and textile importers.

A discrepancy signals systemic misclassification

Market intelligence indicates that imports of PET spunbond and related staple fiber products from third countries reached between 15,000 and 30,000 metric tonnes annually in 2024 and 2025. Yet, official customs records, which rely on mandatory Combined Nomenclature (CN) codes, report volumes far below these figures. Jacques Prigneaux of EDANA described the situation as a ‘clear mismatch’, noting that many importers continue to use legacy codes out of habit, overlooking the updated CN codes implemented in 2024.

The table below highlights the discrepancy between observed market volumes and reported customs volumes.

 

Product Category

Mandatory CN code

Observed market volume (MT)

Reported volume status

PET Spunbond

5603 14 20

15,000 – 30,000

Significantly Lower

Staple Fiber

5603 94 20

15,000 – 30,000

Significantly Lower

This difference underscores a systemic issue in the trade compliance framework. While importers may perceive minor CN code errors as administrative oversights, EDANA emphasizes that in the current regulatory climate, these mismatches are treated as high-risk compliance failures with serious financial and legal implications.

Enforcement pressures intensify amid anti-dumping issues

The timing of this misclassification trend is particularly precarious. In December 2025, the European Commission mandated registration for imports of certain PET spunbond from China, a regulatory precursor to an ongoing anti-dumping investigation. Any products imported under incorrect codes could now be retroactively subject to anti-dumping duties once the probe concludes.

Authorities are focusing on high-performance nonwovens with specific technical specifications: non-woven needle-punched polyester sheets weighing more than 70 g/m², thickness between 0.5 mm and 1.8 mm, and containing binders with less than 30 per cent glass fibers by weight. Importers misclassifying these goods to avoid the TARIC code 5603 1390 70 or related categories are increasingly viewed as deliberately circumventing trade defense measures, escalating both the risk and the consequences.

Habitual compliance failures expose importers

EDANA has highlighted a recurring pattern in which companies rely on outdated customs codes as a matter of habit. In these cases, internal databases are not updated, and customs agents are not informed of the 2024 code revisions. The result is a vulnerability that leaves importers exposed to fines and retroactive duties once authorities identify the discrepancies.

The association has formally requested that the European Commission and national customs authorities increase physical import inspections, a shift from passive oversight to active enforcement. For many businesses, the era of assuming that routine paperwork is sufficient is over. Failure to align internal compliance systems with regulatory updates now carries tangible financial and legal risks.

Strategic imperatives for textile distributors

Experts urge apparel manufacturers and technical textile distributors to conduct immediate audits of their customs databases. This is especially critical for imports under preferential trade agreements or duty-free regimes, where customs scrutiny is heightened. Delegating compliance solely to external agents is no longer a viable risk management strategy. Instead, companies are advised to integrate internal oversight, ensure personnel are trained on regulatory updates, and implement systems capable of tracking CN code changes in real time.

EDANA’s role and industry outlook

Since its founding in 1971, EDANA has acted as the strategic hub for the nonwovens industry, supporting over 260 members with technical guidance, regulatory advocacy, and market intelligence. The association plays a critical role in balancing the growth of high-performance PET spunbond demand with the need for a fair and sustainable market.

As the EU’s regulatory environment tightens and anti-dumping investigations continue, EDANA’s 2026 focus remains on leveling the playing field against low-cost imports, ensuring compliance, and safeguarding both industry profitability and market integrity. For importers, the message is unequivocal: in the era of active enforcement, compliance cannot be left to habit, it must be embedded in the operational DNA of every business.

From atelier to algorithm, Gucci is redefining premium marketing

  

From atelier to algorithm Gucci is redefining premium marketing

 

As Milan welcomes the Primavera 2026 fashion calendar, the spotlight is fixed not just on the runway but on Gucci, which has ignited a heated debate over the future of luxury marketing. The Italian heritage house, passing a transition under new Creative Director Demna Gvasalia, launched a promotional campaign entirely generated through artificial intelligence. While the brand positioned the initiative as a bold, tech-forward reset, reactions from high-spending clientele have been sharply divided, revealing the delicate balance between innovation and tradition in the luxury ecosystem.

Synthetic glamour and the risk to craft credibility

The visuals at the heart of the controversy are unmistakably stylized: an older model draped in vintage fur, neon-infused backdrops reminiscent of video game worlds, and surreal compositions that signal a clear departure from conventional fashion photography. Each image carried a disclaimer acknowledging its AI origin, but for many, the novelty did little to soften skepticism.

Luxury consumers, historically drawn to the narrative of human craftsmanship, view the move as a challenge to the very mythos of the sector. Priscilla Chan, senior lecturer at Manchester Metropolitan University’s Fashion Institute, explains: “Luxury is built on the myth of the ‘human hand’ when a heritage label replaces that ecosystem with algorithms the symbolic value of the product risks being commodified. The challenge for Gucci is whether this is perceived as innovation or a cost-cutting measure masquerading as ‘edgy’ marketing.” Social media reaction mirrored this tension. Terms like uncanny valley and AI slop proliferated across platforms, reflecting a broader uncertainty among the affluent buyers who define the brand’s market.

The 70 per cent production efficiency proposition

Beyond aesthetics and symbolism, the campaign is informed by a clear commercial rationale. Internal industry data suggests that AI-generated imagery can reduce production costs by up to 70 per cent for e-commerce campaigns and approximately 50 per cent for traditional marketing initiatives. For Gucci, recovering from a 22 per cent revenue downturn in 2025, the allure of efficiency is significant but not without measurable risk. Recent consumer sentiment reports indicate that over 60 per cent of luxury buyers consider AI-exclusive creative output as less valuable than human-generated work.

Table: Comparative campaign logistics (estimated)

Metric

Traditional photoshoot

Generative AI campaign

Lead Time

4–8 Weeks

48–72 Hours

Direct Costs

$250k – $1M+

$5k – $50k

Human Talent

20–50+ Personnel

2–5 Personnel

Consumer Sentiment

High Trust / Aspiration

Polarized / Skeptical

The table underscores the trade-off. AI campaigns shorten lead times and reduce costs, but they come with reputational volatility. For Gucci, efficiency gains may be overshadowed by the challenge of maintaining trust among its core clientele. Demna’s digital provocation

This tension coincides with an important moment for Kering, Gucci’s parent company. Following a difficult 2025 fiscal year, during which Gucci’s revenue fell to €6 billion, the group is betting on Demna’s unconventional vision to restore momentum. Analysts interpret the AI campaign as a calculated provocation, a technique familiar from Demna’s tenure at Balenciaga aimed at dominating the digital conversation ahead of his first Milan runway presentation this Friday.

Gucci’s choice of a vibrant, video-game-adjacent aesthetic is particularly targeted at digital-native consumers. By referencing Grand Theft Auto-like visual motifs, the brand seeks to capitalize on the projected $300 billion global fashion tech market in 2026, signaling an effort to blend physical luxury with digital culture. Yet the uncanny quality of the visuals highlights AI’s current limitations: while algorithms can emulate objects and settings, they often struggle to reproduce the nuanced emotional resonance and tactile depth that define premium photography.

Redefining the luxury atelier

Gucci is not alone in exploring AI’s potential. Peers including Valentino and Hugo Boss have leveraged AI to enhance traditional photoshoots or create supplementary digital content. However, Gucci’s decision to lead with a fully synthetic campaign for a major Milan launch marks a pronounced departure from conventional strategy. The industry is closely watching whether this approach alienates established luxury consumers or successfully engages a younger demographic attuned to the intersection of fashion and digital experience.

Recovery through reinvention

Despite a 19 per cent decline in comparable sales, Gucci remains the crown jewel of Kering’s portfolio, specializing in high-margin leather goods and ready-to-wear. Founded in 1921, the brand continues to prioritize desirability over wholesale volume. The current strategy is a multi-pronged turnaround plan: margin recovery, creative modernization, and digital engagement aimed at reclaiming Gucci’s position as the preeminent global fashion authority by 2027.

In the end, Gucci’s AI initiative exemplifies the high-stakes balancing act in luxury: the promise of efficiency and digital relevance versus the enduring value of craftsmanship and heritage. Whether the campaign is remembered as visionary or controversial will depend on the market’s willingness to reconcile these competing forces an experiment that may define the next era of high fashion.

Lululemon ShowZero launch signals high-performance shift in premium activewear

  

On March 3, 2026, Lululemon officially debuted its ShowZero technology, a proprietary yarn innovation designed to eliminate the visual impact of heavy perspiration. Unlike traditional wicking fabrics that merely move moisture, ShowZero utilizes a specialized yarn structure that manipulates light interaction, preventing the absorption of light when wet. This ensures that even during high-intensity sessions, the fabric remains visually dry. Developed through a multi-year collaboration with tennis professional Frances Tiafoe, the technology addresses a critical "confidence gap" in the premium segment - athletes who require maximum technical performance without the aesthetic drawback of visible sweat marks.

Strategic market diversification and financial outlook

This launch serves as a cornerstone of Lululemon’s ‘Power of Three ×2’ strategy, aiming to double its men's revenue and quadruple international sales by FY26-end. While the brand faced a 2 per cent revenue dip in its saturated North American market earlier this year, international demand remains a primary growth engine. The company is currently executing its most ambitious expansion to date, entering six new markets including India, Austria, and Poland. With Q4, FY25 revenues expected to hit the high end of its $3.58 billion guidance, the integration of ShowZero into high-growth categories like tennis and golf provides a high-margin differentiator against rising competition in the lifestyle space.

Global performance apparel leader

Lululemon Athletica is a Vancouver-based technical apparel company specializing in yoga, running, and training gear. Operating in over 30 countries, the brand is currently expanding into India and Europe via franchise models. Lululemon aims for $12.5 billion in annual revenue by late 2026, supported by a 58 per cent gross margin.

Tariff refund directive spurs strategic capital reallocation across US textile sector

  

The US textile and apparel industry is preparing for a significant liquidity injection following the March 4, 2026, directive from the Court of International Trade (CIT) ordering US Customs and Border Protection to refund duties collected under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).

This ruling concludes a period of intense financial strain for importers who had absorbed these costs amidst fluctuating global trade policies. Industry analysts estimate that the ‘quick and automatic’ return of these funds will stabilize balance sheets for mid-tier retailers who have seen margins compressed by nearly 150 basis points over the last fiscal year. By eliminating this specific tariff burden, the court has effectively lowered the cost basis for upcoming autumn/winter 2026 collections, providing immediate relief to a sector previously hampered by high overheads.

Unlocking stalled supply chain investments

The broader implications of this decision extend beyond immediate cash flow improvements to long-term operational scaling. Julia Hughes, President, USFIA noted, the removal of this economic uncertainty is expected to trigger a wave of new investments in sustainable fiber sourcing and digital supply chain infrastructure. With over $1.2 billion in cumulative industry capital previously locked in escrow or duty payments, brands are now reallocating resources toward near-shoring initiatives in Central America to hedge against future trade volatility. This judicial clarity arrives at a pivotal moment as the industry transitions toward stricter ESG reporting requirements, allowing firms to fund expensive compliance technologies without compromising consumer price points.

Advocating for global apparel trade

The US Fashion Industry Association (USFIA) represents leading brands and retailers dedicated to eliminating global trade barriers. Focused on high-volume importers and wholesalers, USFIA facilitates market access through policy advocacy and regulatory guidance. Formed to simplify complex international sourcing, the association currently manages a 2026 roadmap centered on lowering operational costs for the American fashion ecosystem.

Kontoor Brands leverages premium outdoor growth to redefine retail footprint

  

The recent fiscal performance of Kontoor Brands signals a definitive transition from a denim-centric manufacturer to a diversified apparel powerhouse. By merging the rugged heritage of Wrangler and Lee with Helly Hansen’s professional-grade technical fabrics, the group has tapped into a lucrative intersection of fashion and utility. This ‘gorpcore’ trend -where consumers wear high-performance outdoor gear in urban retail settings - has effectively shielded Kontoor from the stagnation seen in the broader mid-tier denim market. Analysts note that while the apparel sector is grappling with erratic consumer spending, Kontoor’s strategic pivot toward weather-resistant and breathable lifestyle collections has allowed it to command premium price points, contributing significantly to its recent $1.02 billion quarterly revenue milestone.

Mitigating trade headwinds through near-shoring

The primary challenge for Kontoor remains the $100 million in gross tariff pressures projected for 2026, a result of shifting global trade policies. To protect the group's expanded 46.8 per cent gross margin, management is aggressively restructuring its logistics through ‘Project Jeanius.’

This initiative focuses on near-shoring production to duty-advantaged regions in Central America and Mexico, reducing lead times for retail replenishment. Retail partners are reporting that this supply chain agility is a critical differentiator, allowing Kontoor to react to seasonal weather shifts faster than competitors. As the company prepares for its Oslo-based summit later this year, the market is closely watching how these supply chain efficiencies will support the ambitious $3.45 billion revenue target, potentially setting a new benchmark for operational resilience in the global apparel trade.

A multi-category apparel powerhouse

A 2019 spinoff from VF Corporation, Kontoor Brands manages a global portfolio including Wrangler, Lee, and Helly Hansen. Focusing on denim, workwear, and technical outdoor apparel, the group is expanding its footprint in high-margin European and Asian markets. With a 2026 revenue target of $3.45 billion, Kontoor remains focused on operational efficiency and debt reduction.

British engineering innovations to redefine technical textile efficiency at Frankfurt summit

  

Scheduled for April 2026, the upcoming Techtextil and Texprocess exhibitions in Frankfurt will serve as a global stage for eight premier members of the British Textile Machinery Association (BTMA) to unveil breakthroughs in advanced material processing.

A primary highlight is the industrialization of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) production. Fibre Extrusion Technologies (FET) has successfully developed a small-scale gel spinning system utilizing supercritical CO2 for solvent extraction. This patented batch process allows medical and aerospace manufacturers to produce bespoke fiber sizes without the capital-intensive requirements of traditional large-scale infrastructure, effectively lowering the entry barrier for high-performance polymer applications.

Digital quality assurance and resource optimization

Parallel to polymer innovation, the focus on ‘zero-defect’ manufacturing is driving a rise in automated inspection and precision monitoring. Shelton Vision is set to debut its WebSpector system, which utilizes patent-pending image processing to detect faults in complex patterns, even when fabrics undergo real-time distortion. Supporting this pursuit of reliability, Airbond’s 3D-printed pneumatic splicers now handle yarns up to 16,000 tex, significantly reducing material waste in carbon fiber and wind power sectors. Furthermore, James Heal’s redesigned Martindale Motion tester represents a leap in laboratory productivity, allowing independent nine-station testing that maximizes overnight throughput. These collective advancements illustrate a strategic shift toward data-backed, resource-efficient manufacturing, ensuring that the technical textile value chain remains resilient amidst rising global energy and material costs.

Engineering global textile infrastructure

The British Textile Machinery Association (BTMA) represents leading UK manufacturers specializing in fiber extrusion, yarn handling, and fabric testing. Serving aerospace, medical, and automotive markets, the association facilitates global trade and technical standardization. With a focus on 2026 growth, BTMA members provide high-precision components to enhance international manufacturing reliability and sustainability.

Arnault Family secures absolute majority in LVMH

  

The Arnault family has officially crossed the threshold to absolute majority ownership of LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, effectively terminating long-standing governance ambiguity. According to French regulatory filings (AMF) released in late February 2026, the family’s equity stake rose to 50.01 per cent, while their command over voting rights expanded to 65.94 per cent. This move, executed through holding vehicles Financière Agache and Christian Dior SE, involved the acquisition of approximately 1.1 million shares during a period of relative market softening. By securing this ‘absolute majority,’ the Arnault family has created a defensive perimeter around the €280 billion conglomerate, shielding it from potential activist investor pressure as the luxury sector navigates a structural shift in consumer spending.

Operational resilience and the 2026 fiscal outlook

This consolidation follows a fiscal 2025 performance that reflected a cooling global economy,

with reported revenue settling at €80.8 billion -a 5 per cent decline Y-o-Y. While the core Fashion and Leather Goods division saw organic sales soften by 5 per cent, the group maintained a formidable 35 per cent operating margin within that segment. Financial analysts view the Arnault family’s ‘buy the dip’ strategy as a massive vote of internal confidence. Despite a 13 per cent drop in net profit to €10.9 billion, LVMH’s operating free cash flow actually climbed 8 per cent to €11.3 billion. This liquidity has enabled the group to prioritize ‘hard luxury’ expansion and creative renewal, including the recent high-profile appointments of Jonathan Anderson at Dior and Sarah Burton at Givenchy, aimed at re-energizing brand desirability for a more cautious aspirational class.

LVMH is the world’s preeminent luxury conglomerate, managing 75 prestigious Maisons across fashion, jewelry, and selective retailing. With 2025 revenue of €80.8 billion, the group is currently scaling its ‘high-jewelry’ footprint through Tiffany & Co. and Bulgari. Founded in 1987, LVMH leverages a decentralized management model to maintain the heritage and exclusivity of iconic brands like Louis Vuitton and Moët Hennessy.

Surtee Group inaugurates new Burberry Store in Cape Town

  

The Surtee Group has inaugurated a new Burberry flagship in the expanded luxury wing of Cape Town’s V&A Waterfront, marking a critical milestone in South Africa’s high-end retail landscape. This opening serves as the centerpiece for a R200 million precinct development that has tripled the available floor space for global Maisons to 4,000 sq m. The launch follows a record-breaking 2025 for the Waterfront, which generated over R11 billion in total retail sales and welcomed 25 million visitors. By consolidating its presence alongside peers like Gucci and Louis Vuitton, Burberry is capitalizing on a surge in luxury trading density, reinforcing Cape Town’s trajectory as the primary gateway for designer apparel on the continent.

‘Burberry Forward’ and the focus on outerwear authority

The new flagship reflects the global ‘Burberry Forward’ strategy, an operational reset aimed at re-centering the brand on British craftsmanship and outerwear authority. In Q3 FY26, the brand reported a 3 per cent increase in comparable retail sales, driven by double-digit growth in its hero categories of scarves and trench coats. The Cape Town boutique features a ‘Timeless British Luxury’ design concept, utilizing modular interiors to appeal to a younger, digitally native audience - a segment that saw double-digit growth for the brand last year. This physical expansion is designed to improve retail productivity by prioritizing high-performance locations over declining wholesale volumes.

Digital integration and unified commerce resilience

To navigate a volatile currency environment and rising consumer expectations, Surtee Group has deployed an AI-native unified commerce stack across its 94-boutique network. Partnering with the retail tech platform Fynd, the group has implemented real-time inventory visibility and ‘ship-from-store’ capabilities. This infrastructure is vital as South Africa’s e-commerce market is projected to exceed R130 billion in 2026. The technical integration allows the group to bridge the gap between opulent in-store ‘clienteling’ and digital fulfillment, ensuring the V&A flagship remains a highly productive hub within the continent's most sophisticated luxury ecosystem.

The Surtee Group is a leading luxury retail partner in Africa, managing a diverse portfolio of 94 mono-brand and multi-brand boutiques, including Versace, Giorgio Armani, and Burberry. The group is currently executing an AI-driven digital transformation to support its expansive physical footprint across South Africa’s primary urban hubs. With a decades-long heritage, it remains a key driver of the continent's sophisticated designer goods market, maintaining strong year-on-year growth despite macroeconomic headwinds.


Warning: require_once(/home/fashion3/public_html/plugins/system/jsntplframework/jsntplframework.defines.php): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/fashion3/public_html/templates/jsn_megazine_pro/html/pagination.php on line 19