Fashion looks a lot different now than it did in January.
Change has come for every corner of the industry. In the middle of a segment-wide slowdown, fashionâs leading luxury brands have overhauled their strategies and leadership ranks in a way that will have a lasting impact on the next phase of growth and creativity, with new creative directors in place at Chanel, Bottega Veneta, Givenchy, Celine and more. Luxury e-commerce, too, had a major year of upheaval, as several of the one-time retailers of tomorrow found new owners, including Farfetch and Net-a-Porter, or shuttered altogether, as was the fate for Matchesfashion.
The mass market, too, dealt with its own challenges. Department stores joined forces and faced existential threats in an increasingly challenged environment. Nike slowed down, suffering from a lack of innovation in product and marketing, culminating in the departure of CEO John Donahoe in September. At the lowest end of the pricing spectrum, competition has ramped up with the advances of Temu and TikTok Shop, while Shein continues to fight for its initial public offering in London.
Plus, in the US, Trumpâs second-coming and TikTokâs potential sale or banning are fast-approaching, leaving plenty of questions for what the industry will face in the new year.
The Business of Fashion revisits the stories that changed fashion in 2024.
1. Chanel Picks Its Next Designer
Virginie Viardâs exit from Chanel in June set off months of rampant speculation, with everyone from Simon Porte Jacquemus to Marc Jacobs at various points floated as possible successors to one of fashionâs top jobs. In December, the industry got its answer: Matthieu Blazy, the designer who set off a hot streak for Kering-owned Bottega Veneta with his focus on craftsmanship and arty cultural references. He will start at Chanel in April and show his first collection in September.
The appointment closes out a year of designer musical chairs. Carvenâs Louise Trotter will take the top spot at Bottega, while Pierpaolo Piccioli left Valentino to be replaced by Alessandro Michele. Hedi Slimane exited Celine; Michael Rider will take his place. Meanwhile, Sarah Burton joined Givenchy, Peter Copping went to Lanvin, Haider Ackermann joined Tom Ford and Julian Klausner is set to take over at Dries Van Noten. Kim Jones left Fendi, Peter Do departed Helmut Lang and John Galliano said goodbye to Maison Margiela. All three, plus Slimane and Piccioli, have yet to announce whatâs next.
2. An Election Year Ends With Big Questions for Fashion
Vice President Kamala Harrisâ entry into the presidential race over the summer sparked discussion about her own fashion choicesâ from the Chloé suits to the Converse. But for the most part, the industry was more subdued this election season.
In the lead-up to Nov. 5, fashion largely favoured neutral âget out the voteâ style messaging. (Though Condé Nastâs Anna Wintour hosted private fundraisers for Biden, then Harris, in Paris, then the Hamptons, the latter co-hosted with Tory Burch.) After a Trump victory was declared, many of the brands, designers, models, CEOs and others who were outspoken in 2016, stayed tight-lipped â whether still processing, for fear of alienating consumers or because of concerns about retribution.
Regardless, a second Trump term will have sweeping implications for the fashion industry. Trump has promised widespread tariffs, mass deportation and tax cuts. There are worries his administration could hamper progress on diversity and inclusion, womenâs, LGBTQ and immigrant rights, and efforts to curb the impacts of climate change.
3. Monumental Mergers and Misses
Big deals were made in 2024 â but the biggest of them all fell apart.
Coach-owner Tapestry and Michael Kors-parent Capriâs $8.5 billion dream of making an American luxury conglomerate capable of sitting with (or nearer) the European giants was crushed by The US Federal Trade Commission, which argued it would unfairly eliminate competition in the market for affordable handbags. Capri will have to get flagship label Michael Kors back on track alone.
Meanwhile, mall anchors Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcusâs $2.65 billion merger, announced in July, is set to reshape the American department store landscape â once it goes through. Saks owner Hudsonâs Bay Company just tapped the junk bond market to help finance the deal.
Elsewhere, The Row, one of fashionâs most hush-hush brands, made noise with its $1 billion valuation after receiving backing from high-profile investors including funds controlled by Chanel owners the Wertheimer brothers and LâOréalâs Françoise Bettencourt Meyers.
Supreme and the late Virgil Ablohâs Off-White were acquired by eyewear-maker EssilorLuxottica and Bluestar Alliance, respectively. The transactions raised concerns about what might become of the pioneering streetwear brands, which have reported uneven sales in recent years.
4. Nike Lost its Cool and Got a New CEO
In the middle of its worst drop in a decade â in both sales and âcoolâ factor â sportswear giant Nike got a much-needed executive shake-up. John Donahoe, chief executive since 2020, stepped down in September after calls for his ousting grew louder. Nike then tapped Elliott Hill, who retired from the company in 2020 after a 32-year career starting as an intern, to lead the brand.
Hill faces an uphill battle: Nike has fallen behind on innovation (all-important in the sneaker space) and will have to mend broken relationships with the retailers who it abandoned in an ill-fated pivot to DTC and customers whose attention has turned elsewhere. On Thursday, the company reported an 8 percent drop in second-quarter sales, with Hill saying the brand would quickly execute a pivot away from retro styles and back to its historic focus on sports.
5. Sheinâs IPO Saga; Temu Takes Off
Sheinâs move to list on the New York Stock Exchange received a poor reaction from US lawmakers over concerns about its business model, forcing the fast fashion giant to try its luck in London â historic $64 billion valuation in tow. (Thatâs bigger than the market capitalisations of Kering and Adidas, and would be the largest listing in London in over a decade.)
Despite initiatives meant to rally goodwill, like its incubator for young designers and pledges to put millions toward British designers and circularity efforts, the UKâs financial regulator is sitting on a number of objections to Sheinâs plans, citing poor labour and environmental practices. Still, the UK, looking to revive Londonâs struggling city, could welcome the monster listing.
At the same time, this year Shein has faced growing competition from other ascendent ultra-cheap product purveyors â most notably, Temu. Temuâs rise, accented by its âshop like a billionaireâ themed-Super Bowl ads in February, has been pervasive, though not without its own problems.
6. The Great Luxury E-Commerce Re-Commerce
In 2024, luxury e-commerceâs shakedown thrust the modelâs challenges â low margins, high operating costs, endemic discounting, undifferentiated product mixes â into the open. Matchesfashion shuttered; Farfetch was sold in a fire sale to Coupang; and finally, loss-making Yoox Net-a-Porter was scooped up by Mytheresa. The upheaval had a huge impact on independent brands in particular, and it remains to be seen about what a new, more consolidated market will mean for them.
7. Fashion Vies for a Podium Spot at the Olympics
Leave it to Paris to make the Olympics a fashion fête. This yearâs games attracted unprecedented interest from the industry, beyond the mainstay sportswear giants like Nike and Adidas.
LVMHâs premium partnership made the most headlines â and the cut for the opening ceremony. Christian Dior provided the costumes for Lady Gaga, Aya Nakamura and Celine Dionâs live, televised performances along the Seine and under the Eiffel Tower; while Louis Vuitton trunks were the centrepiece of a dance across the Pont Neuf. Independent brands like Sporty & Rich and scrub-maker Figs got in on the action, too. A number of countries opted to let up-and-coming designers or niche fashion brands create looks for their athletes. Even away from Paris, brands like Pandora and J.Crew turned the sporting fervor into marketing moments.
8. In the Midst of a Luxury Slump, a Few Houses Defy the Downturn
After slowly creeping away from the post-pandemic party, luxury has officially slipped into the depths of its hangover. Consumer fatigue is on the rise, sales, particularly among âaspirationalâ clients, have fallen âand prices keep going up. LVMH saw sales down 5 percent in the third quarter, while Gucci owner Kering reported a 16 percent drop as Gucci designer Sabato De Sarnoâs designs have still failed to meaningfully take off. In a recent interview with BoF, Kering deputy CEO Francesca Bellettini called the industryâs situation a âcrisis.â
However, there were still some bright spots. Birkin bag maker Hermés and Brunello Cucinelli are still charting growth. Prada Group, led by rocket growth at little sister brand Miu Miu, reported nine-month revenues up 18 percent year-on-year in October. Still, investors are keeping an eye on deceleration at the main, more profitable Prada line.
9. Activist Investors Circle Macyâs
This year, Macyâs Inc. struggled to shrug off pressure from activist investors eyeing the company’ real estate holdings.
The department store chain, led by new CEO Tony Spring, spent much of the first half of the year fending off a buyout bid from real-estate-focused investing firm Arkhouse Management and Brigade Capital Management. Those talks ended in July, with Macyâs board unanimously voting to terminate discussions with the two parties. But it was only a few months before hedge fund Barington Capital and real estate private equity Thor Equities emerged in December, calling for the retailer to cut costs and create an entity to monetise its real estate assets. Whether theyâll succeed where others havenât is still to be determined.
10. The Clock Is Ticking for TikTok
In April, President Joe Biden signed a law that put TikTokâs future in the US in jeopardy, forcing owner ByteDance to either sell to an American company by Jan. 19 or face a ban in the country due to national security concerns. ByteDance has put up a legal challenge, but after losing an appeal earlier this month, its fate is looking increasingly tenuous. The appâs fate isnât sealed yet, though. The US Supreme Court has agreed to hear a bid by TikTok and ByteDance to block the law forcing the sale ahead of its deadline, and President-elect Donald Trump has also signaled that he could reverse course, saying he has a âa warm spot in my heart for TikTok.â
If implemented, a TikTok ban will have far-reaching consequences for the many fashion brands who rely on the TikTok to do marketing â and, since the roll-out of its now-popular TikTok Shop â even generate sales.