Bloomberg Businessweek

(singke) #1
 BUSINESS Bloomberg Businessweek March 11, 2019

years Sarah Jessica Parker, Scarlett Johansson, and
other top talent stepped out in opulent Dolce &
Gabbana gowns, no A-lister dared to risk alienating
fans by donning the label. “They basically offended
an entire country,” says Leaf Greener, a stylist and
fashion consultant based in Shanghai and Paris.
“Who wants to associate with that?”
With Chinese shoppers estimated to account for
at least a third of luxury sales and two-thirds of the

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YOUTUBE

○ Dolce & Gabbana offended Chinese women. The furor on the mainland, where luxe brands rule, hasn’t abated

When the Hand That


Feeds You Bites Back


From the red carpets of Hollywood award shows
to the catwalks of Paris and Milan, where throngs
of photographers chase Instagram-worthy shots of
actors, pop stars, and style bloggers sporting the
latest look, winter is the season when Gucci, Louis
Vuitton, Versace, and other luxury brands make a
big business of being in the spotlight.
One name has been notably absent from this
year’s glamour parade: Dolce & Gabbana. The iconic
Italian brand is still struggling to overcome a back-
lash that erupted in November over a tone-deaf
marketing video and derogatory comments from
co-founder Stefano Gabbana about the Chinese.
What’s followed is a boycott on the mainland that
threatens to snuff out one of fashion’s biggest names.
Online retailers such as Alibaba’s TMall and
Richemont SA’s Yoox Net-a-Porter still haven’t
reintroduced Dolce & Gabbana on their Chinese
sites; Lane Crawford and other high-end depart-
ment stores pulled the brand’s wares from their
stores on the mainland; and the spring issues of
influential local magazines like Vogue China feature
no D&G ads or products.
The damage hasn’t been limited to China. At both
the Golden Globes and the Oscars, where in previous

to backstop small businesses in case of chaos,
according to a banker involved in the discussions.
Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs, the U.K.’s
tax, payments, and customs authority, has already
issued complicated import and export guidelines,
including a recommendation to hire agents to help
in case of a no-deal Brexit. Many companies, already
suffering from anemic growth, aren’t willing to take
on more costs. “We will cross that bridge when we
get to it,” La Torre says. “We are not going to get
ahead of ourselves and assuming extra costs unless
strictly necessary.”
Ponan is trying her best to bolster her organic-
snacks business against all the uncertainty. “We

are holding a lot more stock than what we would
normally hold,” she says. “We had to take more
space in terms of external warehousing. But of
course, with perishable products, you don’t want
to hold too much.” Companies like hers usually set
aside some funds. But that cash was meant to be
invested to increase exports, not for crises such
as Brexit. “Will goods be stopped at the borders?”
Ponan asks. “Will there be limbo? We need to know
if there will be deals in place that we can make
use of.”—Stefania Spezzati and Charlie Devereux

THE BOTTOM LINE Many of the U.K.’s 5.6 million small and midsize
enterprises aren’t ready for the delays, new documentation, and
liquidity problems that may arise when the country leaves the EU.

 The video of a
Chinese model
struggling to eat pizza
sparked outrage
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