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.
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