60 Business TheEconomistFebruary19th 2022
Theclothesbusiness
The middle-market corset
A
merican consumers are feeling
flush. On February 15th the Commerce
Department reported that the country’s
shoppers spent 3.8% more in January than
they had in December, unfazed by spiking
inflation and covidrelated uncertainty.
That was the fastest monthly rise in nearly
a year. Some of this splurge is going on new
rags. Elsewhere, too, garmentsellers are
booming. In Britain fashion was the only
segment to see online sales grow last
month, year on year, according to Capgem
ini, a consultancy. As catwalks and cock
tail parties decamp from New York, which
has just hosted its Fashion Week, to Lon
don, where another one is kicking off, the
mood in the clothes business is as bright as
the pastelcoloured dresses that are all the
rage this season.
Highend labels like Christian Dior
(owned by lvmh, a luxury colossus) or
Gucci (part of Kering, a fellow French
group) are relatively immune to economic
turmoil. People who can afford their frocks
may take a knock in a recession but seldom
end up shirtless. The same cannot be said
of less luxurious fashion houses. But they,
too, have had a good run of late.
Ralph Lauren, a relatively upmarket
American brand, opened 40 new shops in
the third quarter last year alone, including
a flagship store in Milan, as well as shops
in Atlanta, Chicago, Detroit and Miami, of
ten on those cities’ swankiest shopping
streets. Its boss, Patrice Louvet, thinks con
sumers will keep replenishing their ward
robesandsayshisfirm“isbackontheof
fence”.Inthemassmarket,salesatHennes
&Mauritz(h&m), a fastfashiongiant,are
back to prepandemic levelsandprofit
abilityisbetterthanithasbeeninyears.
HelenaHelmersson,whotookoverasits
chiefexecutiveinJanuary2020,justbefore
covid19hitEurope,hasproclaimedthat
shewantstodoubletheSwedishgroup’s
salesby 2030 andreachanoperatingmar
ginofabove10%withinthreeyears,up
fromlessthan2%in 2020 and7.7%in2021.
MsHelmerssonandMrLouvetreflect
anoptimismintheindustryasitemerges
fromthedisruptionscausedbythepan
demic. Butthey should go easyon the
champagne during upcoming Fashion
Weeks.Clothescompanies,in particular
thosecateringmoretothemasses,facean
assortmentofchallenges.Someofthese,
such as digitisation and sustainability,
predatecovid19.Thepandemichasonly
heaped on more, from supplychain
bottlenecksandskyhighshippingcoststo
workershortages.Ontopofthat,theca
pricesoftheworld’smostpopulousauto
cracymeanthatone false stepcan cost
firms a fortune. h&m sales in China
slumpedlastyearafterthecompanyex
pressed concerns about allegations of
forcedlabourintheXinjiangregion.
Fashionretailers’successlastyearwas
drivenbyunusualcircumstancesthatwill
notlast.Pentupdemandtriggereda wave
of“revengebuying”whenshopsreopened
atlast,inparticularfor“occasionwear”
(jargonforpriceystuff ).Shoppers’pockets
werelinedwithinfusionsofgovernment
cash.Andthepandemicwasthefinalnail
inthecoffinforsomeweakerfirms,reduc
ingcompetitioninthecrowdedmarket;
Topshop,LauraAshleyandtmLewinwent
underinBritain,andAnnTaylor,Brooks
BrothersandJ. CrewdidinAmerica.
Nowthatconsumersarenolongerre
ceivingchequesfromthegovernment,and
have anyway already spruced up their
wardrobes,theymaybecomemoreparsi
monious. Unlike luxury brands’ well
heeledcustomers,whomighthardlyno
ticethata handbagthatcost$5,000in 2019
nowgoesfor$8,000(asbecametrueinNo
vemberofChanel’sClassicFlap),thoseof
massmarketbrands may balkathigher
pricetags.Necessaryinvestmentsindigiti
sationandsustainability—MsHelmersson
haslaunchedavegancollectionandin
vestedinSellpy,a digitalplatformtotrade
secondhand clothes—will eat into the
fastfashionhouses’profitability.
Youngermodels
As for competition, some passé brands
maybe gonebut afewfreshfaceslook
muchmorethreateningtothemassmar
ketgiants’marketshare.Companieslike
Shein,a Chinesesuperdiscounter, Brit
ain’s Asos or Germany’s Zalando have
greater digital nous thanmostly offline
h&m andInditex, itsSpanish archrival
andownerofbrandsincludingZara.They
arealsofindingwaystoappealtoyoung
fashionistas.Allthismaybewhyanalysts
forecasta moremodestincreaseinh&m
salesthanMsHelmerssondoes,ofaround
50%by2030,andlesscushymargins.Its
shareprice,likethatofInditex,isbelow
whereit wasbeforethepandemic.
Initsannualreportonthestateofthe
clothingbusiness,McKinsey,a consultan
cy,predictsthatdiscountandluxuryfash
ion willcontinuetowow investorsthis
year.Themiddlemarketretailersmayen
joyanotherseasonortwoofrevengebuy
ing.Afterthat,theirprospectsarelooking
morethreadbare.n
B ERLIN
After expanding in 2021, fast fashion maybesqueezedagain
The fashion weak and strong
Revenues, % change on a year earlier
$ terms
Source:Bloomberg *Estimate for H2 2021
80
60
40
20
0
-20
-40
201 20 21
H2H1H2H1H2H1
Ralph Lauren
H&M
Inditex*
LV M H
Kering