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Luxury sector faces more gloom as Bain cuts sales forecast

Published 3 weeks ago2 minute read

Bain & Co. has significantly downgraded its forecast for worldwide luxury goods sales, now anticipating a 2 per cent to 5 per cent decline this year. This revision reflects growing economic pressures, price fatigue among consumers, and a desire for more innovative products. The luxury sector is grappling with a downturn, influenced by China's property challenges and cautious spending in the U.S.

Highlights

<p>Representative image</p>
Representative image

Sales of luxury goods worldwide are likely to fall between 2 per cent and 5 per cent this year, consultancy Bain & Co forecast on Wednesday, sharply downgrading its previous estimate for 0-4 per cent growth and signalling further gloom for the sector after 2024's 1 per cent drop.

Ahead of its closely-watched spring report, Bain said the luxury market was experiencing "more complex turbulence across multiple axes".

It cited economic pressures and price fatigue over the first three months of the year, and noted shoppers were waiting for new, more creative products from brands.

Bain's previous forecast for flat sales to 4% growth was issued in November. Top labels including Gucci, Chanel and Dior have appointed new designers as the sector faces its worst downturn in years, with a property crisis weighing on the Chinese market and U.S. shoppers pulling back amid economic uncertainty.

The new forecast comes as the industry braces for further economic turbulence following a global flare-up in trade tensions.

While the large majority of luxury shoppers polled by the consultancy, 75 per cent, said tariffs would not likely cause them to make fewer luxury purchases in the future, around half of those who had already pulled back over the past year said it was due to price increases in the sector. Many luxury brands capitalised on the post-pandemic surge in sales to make their biggest ever price increases in recent years, analysts say. Executives of designer fashion brands had hoped at the start of the year for a U.S.-led turnaround, after improvements over the end-of-year holiday season, but by mid-February signs of weakening demand in the U.S. began to emerge.

  • Published On May 15, 2025 at 03:00 PM IST

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