29 April 2025
Malte Karstan writes on LinkedIn: Gucci‘s 25% Sales Drop: A Wake-Up Call for Luxury Fashion — and a Crisis Point for Kering.
In Q1 2025, Gucci‘s sales plummeted by 25%, dragging parent company Kering‘s overall revenue down by 14% to €3.88 billion — well below market expectations of a 9.7% decline.
This sharp drop isn’t just a blip — it’s a reflection of mounting pressures inside the company and across the global luxury landscape.
What’s going wrong?
Internal Challenges:
1. Creative Instability:
Gucci has been in flux creatively, with frequent changes in leadership. The latest — Demna’s appointment as Artistic Director in early 2025 — is a bold move, but one that adds to brand inconsistency. Creative transitions, no matter how visionary, often disrupt momentum and consumer connection.
2. Strategic Missteps:
Kering recently shuttered 25 Gucci stores as part of an effort to recalibrate. While this may be aimed at sharpening brand focus, it also risks shrinking accessibility and global reach — especially dangerous in a climate where visibility is everything.
External Market Pressures:
1. Global Economic Slowdown:
Key markets — China, Western Europe, and North America — all reported double-digit sales drops. The luxury consumer is more cautious, and broad economic uncertainty is hitting even high-end spending habits.
2. Trade Tensions:
New tariffs and recession fears, particularly following recent announcements from the U.S. administration, are shaking consumer confidence — creating ripple effects in sectors that once felt recession-proof.
Market Context:
While Kering stumbles, competitors like Hermès are thriving — with a 7% revenue increase in the same period. The difference? Steady creative direction, crystal-clear brand identity, and unrelenting cultural relevance.
Takeaways:
Looking Ahead:
Gucci’s future hinges on a delicate balance: honoring its rich design heritage while making itself culturally vital again. All eyes will be on Demna’s creative vision to see whether it can spark a renaissance — or if the brand continues to drift.
Kering’s broader recovery will require more than store closures and leadership reshuffles. It needs clarity, consistency, and courage — the fundamentals of any comeback story.
We bring leather, material and fashion businesses together: an opportunity to meet and greet face to face. We bring them from all parts of the world so that they can find fresh partners, discover new customers or suppliers and keep ahead of industry developments.
We organise a number of trade exhibitions which focus on fashion and lifestyle: sectors that are constantly in flux, so visitors and exhibitors alike need to be constantly aware both of the changes around them and those forecast for coming seasons.