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In a significant move to consolidate its market position, ThredUp has launched ‘Direct Listing,’ an open-beta peer-to-peer (P2P) selling experience integrated directly into its existing platform.

This initiative marks a departure from its traditional managed-marketplace model, where the company historically processed all inventory. By allowing sellers to list individual high-value items directly, ThredUp is effectively bridging the gap between convenience and seller control, creating a comprehensive ecosystem for secondhand apparel.

AI-driven efficiency at the core

The new functionality leverages proprietary artificial intelligence to lower barriers for individual sellers. Built-in tools now automate studio-quality background removal, populate product descriptions, and generate smart pricing recommendations within minutes. By removing the manual labor typically required for individual listings, ThredUp aims to attract a more diverse seller base. Early testing data validates this demand, showing an average selling price of $60—over double that of the company's traditional managed listings- with nearly 18 per cent of items fetching prices above $100. By eliminating seller fees, ThredUp is positioning itself as a formidable competitor to established P2P marketplaces like eBay and Poshmark.

Capturing the full closet economy

This transition comes as the global secondhand market enters a phase of intense competition, with projected values reaching $393 billion by 2030. For ThredUp, Direct Listing is a strategic lever to increase wallet share. According to James Reinhart, CEO the goal is to become a ‘one-stop shop’ for resale needs, whether a user chooses to send in a bulk "Clean Out" bag or personally curate a listing for a premium garment. While the platform continues to invest heavily in automated distribution centers, this hybrid model offers a scalable path to drive higher margins and improve buyer inventory variety without incurring the overhead associated with processing every individual item.

Specialist in mass-market and premium secondhand fashion

ThredUp is one of the largest online resale platforms for apparel, shoes, and accessories. Based in Oakland, California, it specializes in mass-market and premium secondhand fashion. The company is currently scaling its hybrid marketplace model and Resale-as-a-Service (RaaS) solutions. After a period of investment-heavy growth, ThredUp is prioritizing operational efficiency and profitability, having processed over 200 million items since its inception in 2011.

Spykar image

 

A titan of the Indian denim-first fashion scene, Spykar has officially unveiled an aggressive retail growth strategy. As consumer demand for experiential shopping reaches new heights, the brand is doubling down on its physical presence, announcing plans to launch 100 new stores across India over the next two years.

This strategic push aims to boost the brand’s footprint in high-traffic retail corridors, ultimately bringing the total store count to over 380 locations. The expansion arrives on the heels of several high-profile openings, including new storefronts in Ghaziabad, Vizag, Simdega, and Darbhanga.

Capturing the Tier II and Tier III growth

The driving force behind this expansion is a profound shift in India’s retail landscape. While digital commerce continues to evolve, Spykar has identified an undeniable appetite for brick-and-mortar experiences in emerging urban clusters. Tier II and Tier III cities, in particular, have transformed into critical growth engines for the fashion sector.

With rising disposable incomes and a heightened awareness of global fashion trends, consumers in these regions are increasingly seeking the tactile, premium experience that only a flagship store can provide. Spykar’s move into premium malls and high-street locations - such as its recent success in Hyderabad’s Lakeshore Mall, Vizag’s Inorbit Mall, and Ghaziabad’s Ansa Mall—signals a clear intent to meet this demand head-on.

The ‘Experience-First’ retail philosophy

Addressing the motivation behind the brand’s physical resurgence, Sanjay Vakharia, Co-Founder and CEO, Spykar Lifestyle, notes, in 2026, the brand witnessed a significant rise in offline expansion across various retail sub-sectors, states Vakharia. Despite the pervasive access to digital shopping mediums, the visceral look and feel of products, coupled with the authentic experience of in-store shopping, remains highly desirable. Our growth plans reflect Spykar’s continued commitment to bringing a more immersive and elevated shopping experience to consumers across India.

A modern aesthetic for a new generation

The new retail outlets serve as a canvas for Spykar’s evolving design language. Abandoning the traditional ‘racks and stacks’ approach, the brand has adopted a modern, sophisticated aesthetic. The stores are meticulously designed to move beyond simple transactions, aiming instead to deliver a complete, lifestyle-driven journey.

The layout and visual merchandising are strategically curated to guide shoppers through Spykar’s signature denim collections and its broader range of fashion-forward apparel. By creating a premium environment that emphasizes comfort, individuality, and effortless style, the brand is positioning itself as the premier choice for India’s dynamic, style-conscious youth.

As Spykar continues its rapid scale-up, it remains rooted in its core philosophy: merging high-quality craftsmanship with the ever-changing pulse of modern fashion. With 100 new stores on the horizon, the brand is set to solidify its status as a cornerstone of the Indian fashion retail experience.

The Inventory Illusion Rethinking the Zara benchmark in a volatile retail era

 

For over a decade, the global fashion industry has treated the Zara playbook as the gold standard of inventory efficiency. The narrative has been simple: faster inventory cycles translate into sharper margins and stronger cash flows. With parent company Inditex often cited as turning inventory over more than 10 times annually, the benchmark became shorthand for operational excellence.

Yet, as the industry moves deeper into 2026, that equation is being challenged. A combination of geopolitical instability, supply chain fragmentation and the rising cost of stockouts are forcing retailers to reassess whether speed alone is a reliable proxy for performance. Increasingly, analysts argue that inventory turnover, in isolation, obscures more than it reveals.

A distorted metric

The challenge begins with the data itself. Inditex does not disclose turnover metrics at a brand level, meaning that the widely referenced Zara turnover is, in reality, a blended figure across a diverse portfolio that includes Bershka, Stradivarius and Massimo Dutti. Each operates on distinct merchandising cycles and price architectures, making direct comparisons with mono-brand competitors inherently flawed.

This opacity becomes even more pronounced when strategic decisions are factored in. In early 2025, Inditex increased its inventory value to €3.32 billion, a deliberate move to build safety stock amid ongoing logistics disruptions. Such a shift, while temporarily lowering turnover ratios, actually signals operational prudence rather than inefficiency. The implication is clear: turnover is as much a reflection of strategy as it is of execution.

Efficiency in context

A closer look at comparative metrics across major global retailers, highlight the difference between speed, inventory holding and profits.

Table:  Comparative inventory efficiency (FY2024–FY2025)

Retail group

Reported inventory turnover (annual)

Days sales in inventory (DSI)

Gross margin (%)

Inditex (Zara Group)

10.4x

35 Days

57.80

H&M Group

2.8x

130 Days

51.20

Gap Inc.

4.3x

85 Days

38.90

Lululemon

3.6x

101 Days

58.30

The table underscores a shift in interpretation. While Inditex leads on turnover, its real advantage lies in margin strength, not merely speed. Meanwhile, H&M Group operates with higher days of inventory, a reflection of its globally dispersed sourcing model. Gap Inc. sits in the middle, balancing moderate turnover with controlled inventory exposure, while Lululemon demonstrates that premium positioning can sustain high margins even at lower velocity. What emerges is: inventory turnover cannot be divorced from business model, sourcing geography and pricing power.

Difference is supply chain

The difference in performance is rooted in supply chain design. Inditex’s near-shoring strategy, with production concentrated in Spain, Portugal and Morocco, enables lead times as short as three weeks. This proximity allows the company to operate with lower inventory buffers and respond rapidly to demand signals.

In contrast, companies like H&M and Gap rely heavily on extended sourcing networks across Asia. While this model offers cost efficiencies, it also necessitates higher inventory holdings to compensate for longer transit times and increased exposure to geopolitical disruptions. In this context, a higher Days Sales in Inventory is not necessarily a weakness, but a structural requirement. Thus, inventory metrics become less about operational superiority and more about strategic alignment with sourcing realities.

When speed becomes a liability

The industry’s longstanding obsession with hyper-velocity is now facing diminishing returns. High turnover models depend on near-perfect logistics execution. Even minor disruptions whether maritime delays or port congestion can cascade into stockouts, directly impacting sales. As a result, a growing number of analysts now view an annual turnover range of 4x to 6x as a more sustainable equilibrium for diversified apparel players. This range allows retailers to maintain sufficient buffers without locking excessive capital into unsold stock.

The conversation is also shifting toward decision intelligence, where advanced analytics and AI-driven systems determine optimal inventory placement across channels. The focus is no longer just on how fast inventory moves, but on how intelligently it is deployed.

The portfolio approach to inventory

Few companies showcase this shift better than Gap Inc. Rather than chasing higher turnover, the retailer has focused on rationalising its inventory mix across brands such as Old Navy and Banana Republic. In 2024, the company reduced total inventory by 15 per cent year-on-year, not by increasing sales cycles, but by eliminating low-performing SKUs and concentrating on core, replenishable products. This approach highlights an evolution in inventory management. Efficiency is increasingly defined by precision what not to stock rather than sheer velocity.

Margins as the ultimate metric

If inventory turnover once served as the industry’s headline metric, gross margin has now taken its place as the definitive indicator of retail health. Inditex’s ability to maintain a margin of 57.8 per cent stems not just from rapid stock movement, but from its capacity to sell at full price, minimising markdown exposure.

This focus on full-price sell-through is reshaping strategies across the sector. Retailers are investing in omni-channel inventory systems, digital twins and real-time tracking to reduce the significant carrying costs associated with unsold goods, which can account for up to a quarter of inventory value. In this emerging framework, turnover is relegated to a supporting role, a vital operational metric, but one that must be interpreted alongside margin performance and supply chain resilience.

Redefining the benchmark

The enduring influence of the Zara model is undeniable, but its interpretation is evolving. What was once seen as a universal benchmark is now understood as a product of specific structural advantages, vertical integration, geographic proximity and brand positioning. As the fashion industry faces a more volatile and fragmented global scenario, the focus is shifting from speed to stability, from turnover to total system efficiency. Inventory, once viewed primarily as a cost centre, is increasingly being recognised as a strategic asset. In 2026, the real benchmark is no longer how fast a retailer can move its stock, but how effectively it can balance velocity with resilience, precision and margin integrity.

Retail Without Retail How Walmarts depot network is turning space into logistics power

 

Walmart is fundamentally rewriting the commercial real estate and retail logistics playbook with the rise of its ‘Walmart Depots’ a hybrid middle-mile infrastructure layer designed to bridge the widening gap between large-scale regional distribution centers and hyper-local storefront delivery demand. As the company surpasses a $1 trillion market capitalization in 2026, this evolution signals a decisive shift: Walmart is no longer just a retailer, but a logistics-as-a-service operator embedded deep into the physical economy.

Unlike traditional retail outlets or even conventional warehouses, Walmart Depots are high-density, tech-enabled micro-fulfillment nodes. They are engineered to reduce the distance between digital demand signals and physical product movement. By converting underutilized retail real estate into high-velocity distribution points, Walmart is targeting the most expensive and operationally complex segment of retail the last mile.

Vacancy arbitrage in pharmacy real estate

One major catalyst for this strategy is the decline in the US pharmacy retail sector. With major chains such as CVS and Walgreens rationalizing store portfolios and Rite Aid undergoing restructuring, thousands of 10,000 to 15,000-sq ft properties have entered the market across high-traffic urban and suburban corridors.

These formerly prime retail boxes, once viewed as distressed assets, are now being repositioned as micro-fulfillment infrastructure. Walmart’s strategy is to selectively absorb these locations and convert them into Depots stocked with high-velocity SKUs, particularly in apparel, home essentials, and fast-moving consumer goods where speed-to-market directly determines margin performance.

This real estate repurposing enables shortening of delivery timelines. A significant share of Walmart’s urban customer base can now be served in under three hours, contributing to a broader operational milestone: by fiscal year 2026, nearly 95 per cent of US households are within a three-hour delivery radius. What was once a scale problem has been reframed as a proximity solution.

Table: Walmart supply chain acceleration metrics

Metric

Performance FY 2025

Projection FY 2026

Global E-commerce Sales

$122.6 bn

Plus $150 bn

E-commerce Revenue Share

18%

Plus 20%

3-Hour Delivery Reach

80% of US Households

95% of US Households

Home Delivery Unit Cost

-12% Y-o-Y

-20% (Cumulative 2-yr)

These gains reflect Walmart’s aggressive shift toward infrastructure-led retail economics, where logistics efficiency directly determines revenue scalability.

The economics of automation and density

At the core of the depot strategy lies a disciplined focus on unit economics and automation-driven throughput. Approximately 60 per cent of Walmart’s US stores are already replenished by automated distribution systems, while the company continues to accelerate capital expenditure toward robotics and supply chain modernization.

Walmart is currently retrofitting 23 of its 42 regional distribution hubs with advanced automation systems, revealing that the transformation is not incremental but systemic. Supply chain investments are expected to peak over the next two years, reflecting a short-term capital intensification phase aimed at long-term cost compression. This allows Walmart to reassign functional roles across its network. Supercenters are increasingly shifting toward experiential and high-margin retail, while depots absorb the operational burden of high-frequency replenishment. The result is a bifurcated retail system: visible consumption in stores and invisible velocity in logistics.

As Walmart’s EVP and CFO John David Rainey says, technology-driven productivity is central to expanding the company’s omnichannel model at lower marginal cost. The depot layer is effectively the mechanism through which this cost advantage is realized.

Apparel as a high-velocity test case

Nowhere is this transformation more visible than in Walmart’s apparel and private-label strategy. The integration of RFID (Radio-Frequency Identification) across the supply chain has enabled near real-time inventory visibility, dramatically improving forecasting precision and stock allocation.

Previously, apparel cycles were constrained by slow replenishment systems and broad, regional inventory assumptions. Today, Walmart can dynamically reposition inventory based on localized demand signals, often within hours. When fashion trends emerge in specific metropolitan clusters, inventory is rapidly reallocated from regional hubs to nearby Depots, enabling same-cycle responsiveness. This has resulted in a 15 per cent% reduction in apparel markdowns, driven primarily by improved inventory positioning and reduced overstocking. In effect, Walmart is replacing seasonal forecasting with continuous demand sensing.

From cost centers to revenue engines

The depot network is also evolving into a platform for external monetization. Through Walmart GoLocal, the company’s white-label delivery service, these micro-fulfillment hubs are increasingly used to serve third-party retailers. This transforms internal logistics infrastructure into an external service layer, generating incremental revenue from capacity that would otherwise remain underutilized. This marks a shift in retail economics: logistics assets are no longer purely cost centers but hybrid revenue-generating infrastructure platforms.

In fact, the broader retail sector is now facing a divergence. Companies must either integrate into Walmart’s emerging logistics ecosystem or risk being structurally disadvantaged by its scale and speed advantages.

The competitive frontier is no longer defined by store count or brand strength alone, but by proximity-to-demand and velocity-to-fulfillment. Walmart’s strategy effectively compresses geography, turning physical distance into an engineered variable rather than a constraint. With automation now handling roughly half of its e-commerce fulfillment volume, Walmart is positioning itself as a direct challenger to digital-native platforms by matching algorithmic efficiency with physical infrastructure depth.

Omnichannel at industrial scale

Walmart’s transformation reflects a broader evolution from discount retail pioneer to omnichannel infrastructure leader. Serving approximately 280 million customers weekly across 10,900 global locations, the company now operates in the middle of retail, logistics, and technology.

The depot model is the connective tissue in this system, enabling Walmart to unify online and offline commerce into a single operational framework. By maximizing volume per sq ft, regardless of whether demand originates in-store or digitally the company is effectively redefining what retail real estate is meant to do. In this new paradigm, competitive advantage is no longer about owning the most stores, but about owning the shortest and smartest path to the customer.

 

 

As the global textile industry grapples with rapid socio-cultural shifts, the upcoming Texworld Apparel Sourcing Paris exhibition is set to debut ‘Autopsy,’ a trend framework that moves beyond traditional seasonal narratives. Scheduled for August 31 to September 2, 2026, at the Paris-Le Bourget Exhibition Center, this edition abandons the conventional four-theme structure in favor of twelve distinct creative signals. Under the artistic direction of Louis Gérin and Grégory Lamaud, the initiative functions as a diagnostic tool, examining how digital saturation, environmental fragility, and a hunger for authenticity are physically manifesting in fabric choices and garment silhouettes.

Navigating the Tension Between Uniformity and Organic Growth

The curated signals highlight a sharp divide in contemporary design philosophy. Concepts such as ‘Normskin’ address the algorithmic standardization of modern identities, favoring modular textures and neutral palettes that reflect a global movement toward aesthetic conformity. Conversely, themes like ‘Florabiote’ and ‘Chlorolirium’ champion a radical return to nature, utilizing mossy velvets, floral jacquards, and biological structures to counter systemic exhaustion. This shift signifies a strategic move for apparel manufacturers to balance the commercial demand for mass-produced uniformity with the growing niche market for organic, high-tactility materials that offer an emotional connection to the wearer.

The evolution of materiality and human presence

The ‘Autopsy’ framework further challenges the industry to reconsider the role of the body in a hyperconnected era. Signals like ‘Decarnation’ and ‘Aquamorphosis’ explore the intersection of technology and biology, suggesting that future textiles will need to act as ‘second skins’ - fluid, polymorphic, and sensitive to environmental changes. As designers prepare for the 2027-2028 season, the focus is clearly moving toward materials that embody memory and permanence, using carbon residues, marbled textures, and eroded surfaces to ground digital-age fashion in a more tangible, human reality. This transition offers a distinct opportunity for mills and suppliers to invest in innovative finishing techniques that emulate weathered, artisanal, and sustainable aesthetics.

Trend forecasting at Texworld Apparel Sourcing Paris

Texworld Apparel Sourcing Paris is a premier trade exhibition organized by Messe Frankfurt France. It serves as a global hub for textile and apparel professionals, offering seasonal trend forecasting alongside sourcing opportunities. The event provides a collaborative space for the industry to align on color palettes, material innovations, and design directions for upcoming cycles.

 

Uttar Pradesh is aggressively scaling its industrial footprint in the apparel sector, with the state cabinet recently clearing the transfer of over 326 acres of land for five major Textile and Apparel Parks. Strategically located in Varanasi, Amroha, Bareilly, Sant Kabir Nagar, and Bijnor, these zones are designed to function as comprehensive ecosystems, integrating the entire value chain from fiber processing to finished garment assembly. By deploying a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model, the government aims to de-risk private investment while ensuring the rapid deployment of essential infrastructure, including dedicated power substations and logistics connectivity.

Strategic infrastructure for industrial agility

Operating under the Sant Kabir Textile and Apparel Park Scheme, the initiative marks a shift toward modernizing the state's traditional weaving clusters into export-ready manufacturing hubs. Development is already underway at the Ramna Textile Park in Varanasi, where road connectivity tenders have been finalized and transmission infrastructure blueprints are being executed. For the remaining four sites, the state is currently preparing PPP-based tender documents to select master developers, emphasizing technical textile manufacturing and ready-made garment production. The government’s proactive approach to environmental clearances—including forest and groundwater usage permits - signals an intent to reduce project gestation periods significantly.

Enhancing value chain competitiveness

This expansion is part of a broader mandate to move Uttar Pradesh beyond traditional handloom dominance toward high-value apparel exports. By co-locating spinning, dyeing, and stitching facilities, these parks aim to mitigate the supply chain inefficiencies that have historically hindered regional manufacturers. Industry experts suggest that the integration of Northern India Textile Research Association (NITRA) feasibility studies will ensure these zones are tailored to current global demand, specifically targeting segments that require quick-turnaround capabilities. As the state moves toward finalizing the selection of developers, the focus remains on transforming the region into a cornerstone of India’s push to capture a larger share of the global synthetic and technical textile markets.

Sant Kabir Textile & Apparel Park Scheme

This government-led industrial initiative facilitates integrated textile hubs across Uttar Pradesh, focusing on the end-to-end production of ready-made garments and technical textiles. Key regions include Varanasi and Sant Kabir Nagar, targeting both domestic wholesale and international export markets. The scheme is designed to drive large-scale job creation and private capital investment through a robust PPP framework.

 

The United Kingdom’s retail sector experienced a significant acceleration in May 2026, with total sales rising 3.7 per cent Y-o-Y. According to the latest British Retail Consortium (BRC) and KPMG monitor, this performance comfortably outpaced the 12-month average growth of 2.0 per cent. The primary catalyst for this upward momentum was an unseasonably warm spell that prompted a swift consumer shift toward summer-oriented categories. Clothing and footwear, in particular, returned to growth for the first time since the post-holiday period in January, as shoppers prioritized seasonal essentials like sandals, sunglasses, and lighter apparel.

Digital channels lead consumption shifts

A defining feature of May's retail landscape was the marked migration toward online platforms. As record temperatures deterred traditional high-street footfall, online non-food sales increased by 10.6 per cent compared to the same period last year. This dynamic pushed the online penetration rate for non-food items to 38 per cent, well above the 37.7 per cent 12-month average. Retailers with robust omnichannel capabilities successfully captured this demand, effectively mitigating the 0.4 per cent decline observed in physical store-based non-food sales. The data underscores a resilient digital infrastructure, with consumers increasingly leveraging e-commerce not only for convenience but as a strategic response to environmental factors.

Fragile momentum amid persistent cost pressures

Despite the May performance, industry analysts maintain a cautious outlook for the remainder of the summer. While the heatwave provided a welcome stimulus, underlying consumer confidence remains delicate due to persistent budgetary constraints. Retail executives are closely monitoring the impact of upcoming energy price cap revisions and broader geopolitical tensions, which threaten to re-ignite inflationary pressures on food and non-food goods alike. Industry leaders, including Helen Dickinson, CEO, BRC, have emphasized, while the recent sunshine bolstered trade, sustaining this momentum will require careful management of operational costs and continued pressure on the government to address the tax burdens currently weighing on both retailers and household spending power.

World’s most mature market

The UK retail sector is one of the world's most mature and digitally integrated markets, characterized by a mix of high-street giants, specialized boutiques, and large-scale out-of-town retail parks. Major categories include food and grocery, apparel, and lifestyle electronics. The industry is currently defined by aggressive omnichannel adoption, a focus on cost-efficient supply chain management, and significant investments in AI-driven personalization to maintain customer loyalty amid ongoing macroeconomic volatility.

 

Japanese fastening giant YKK Corporation has formalized plans to establish a third manufacturing facility in India, signaling a major endorsement of the country’s role as a primary global textile and apparel production center. The project, centered at ‘Origins by Mahindra’ in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, involves a capital infusion of approximately US$ 150 million. Designed to integrate YKK’s proprietary fastening technologies, the expansive 149,936-sq-m site is slated for completion by February 2028. This move effectively creates a balanced, high-efficiency production network that complements the company’s existing two factories in Haryana, northern India, ensuring enhanced responsiveness to the growing requirements of both domestic and export-oriented garment manufacturers.

Scaling infrastructure for regional demand

The Chennai expansion serves as a strategic response to the shifting landscape of international supply chains. As global brands continue to diversify their sourcing maps, the southern Indian hub provides YKK with vital logistical proximity to major textile clusters and ports. This infrastructure alignment is critical for maintaining delivery timelines in a sector that increasingly prioritizes agility and regional supply chain stability. By expanding its local footprint, the company aims to move beyond simple product supply, instead functioning as a localized partner capable of meeting specific design and technical standards required by modern garment exporters.

Anchoring Long-Term Economic Integration

Beyond the immediate manufacturing capacity, YKK’s investment underscores a commitment to regional integration. The facility is expected to catalyze local job creation and community development, reflecting a broader trend where multinational suppliers are becoming deeply rooted in their host markets. With this facility, YKK is positioning itself to capitalize on the sustained momentum in Indian manufacturing, providing the fastening solutions necessary for the country to scale its output in performance wear, technical textiles, and fast-fashion segments alike. This investment effectively secures YKK's readiness to support India’s long-term trajectory as a central pillar of the global apparel value chain.

A subsidiary of Japan’s YKK Corporation, YKK India specializes in the production and distribution of high-quality fastening products, including metallic and non-metallic zippers. With operations spanning South Asia and the Middle East, the company focuses on supporting large-scale apparel manufacturers through advanced manufacturing and localized supply-chain agility.

Established in India in 1995, the subsidiary has consistently scaled its footprint, maintaining a robust production network that serves as a cornerstone for international fashion brands sourcing within the region.

 

As the global sportswear sector experiences a period of intensified competition, Chinese athletic giant Li-Ning is aggressively scaling its international presence. Moving beyond its historical stronghold in domestic markets, the firm is revitalizing its global retail strategy by emphasizing premium technical apparel and high-performance footwear. This expansion effort is anchored in a deliberate approach to athlete-led brand positioning, focusing on building long-term credibility through partnerships with high-profile professional athletes rather than relying on transient marketing collaborations.

Strategic shift in global retail architecture

Li-Ning’s current expansion phase prioritizes a sophisticated ‘phygital’ retail experience, integrating high-end brand houses in key international fashion capitals with localized digital storefronts. By upgrading its supply chain to accommodate rapid-turnaround cycles for limited-edition technical collections, the company is positioning itself to capture a larger share of the professional sports and lifestyle apparel segments. Industry analysts point to this shift as a transition from a product-export model to a brand-centric operation, where the focus remains on the proprietary ‘Li-Ning’ design language and performance-enhancing material science.

Sustaining growth in competitive ,arkets

Despite macroeconomic fluctuations, Li-Ning has reported robust financial health, supported by a growing consumer base in South and Southeast Asia. The company’s ability to navigate complex global logistics while maintaining margins on premium performance lines has provided the necessary liquidity for its 2026 store rollout plans. By investing in regional flagship locations that emphasize product storytelling and community engagement, Li-Ning is successfully diversifying its market footprint, effectively insulating itself from the volatility typical of emerging retail landscapes. As the brand continues to refine its global narrative, its ability to integrate cultural relevance with high-performance utility will be the critical differentiator in ccy sustaining its upward trajectory.

An urban fashion specialist 

Li-Ning is a leading Chinese athletic apparel and footwear company, established in 1990 by the eponymous Olympic gymnast. The brand specializes in high-performance sports equipment, urban fashion, and professional basketball gear. Headquartered in Beijing, it focuses on rapid global retail expansion and premium technical innovation across international markets.

 

Spanish fashion powerhouse Mango has formalized a significant capital commitment of €66 million aimed at expanding its physical retail presence across France. Announced at the Choose France Summit in Versailles, the strategic investment covers the 2026–2028 period and underscores the company’s intent to reinforce its position in its largest international market. The plan mandates the opening of 45 new points of sale, maintaining an aggressive rollout of 15 stores annually. This expansion is designed to bolster local employment, with each new site expected to generate approximately 15 jobs, further cementing the brand's integration into regional French economies.

Broadening reach through regional penetration

A core element of this growth strategy involves moving beyond major metropolitan hubs like Paris and Lyon to capture smaller and medium-sized cities. Mango will enter 10 new locations, a decision that aligns with the company’s existing distribution model, where over 80% of its current French network is already situated outside the largest urban centers. By prioritizing these regional markets, the retailer is successfully balancing its high-visibility flagship presence with widespread localized accessibility. This approach not only facilitates a stronger consumer connection but also supports the brand’s omnichannel architecture, which seeks to merge physical storefronts with digital and phygital solutions to provide a seamless customer journey.

Scaling operations amid market maturity

Having operated in France for over three decades, Mango views this investment as a vital progression rather than a market entry. Since 2022, the company has added over 12,500 square meters of retail space, demonstrating a consistent upward trajectory. The current phase focuses on both the establishment of new boutiques and the ongoing optimization of existing real estate to maintain competitive standards. As the brand deepens its penetration across all French regions, this €66 million infusion serves as a barometer for its broader European growth strategy, which is currently running in parallel with expansions in markets such as Italy and the United Kingdom.

Offering urban-contemporary styles

Mango is a prominent international fashion group that designs, manufactures, and markets apparel and accessories for women, men, and children. Operating in over 170 cities in France, the company focuses on urban-contemporary styles and omnichannel retail. Historically, Mango entered the French market in 1994, steadily evolving from a boutique operation to a major retail force with over 250 points of sale today. The company continues to prioritize premium brand elevation and digital integration to drive sustainable growth.

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