Luxury Brands Face Decline as Consumer Trust Erodes and Market Shrinks

TL;DR Summary
The luxury goods market is experiencing a slowdown, with 50 million consumers ceasing to buy high-end brands like Dior and Burberry due to broken promises and high prices without corresponding value. Only a third of luxury brands are expected to see growth this year, prompting calls for reinvention to meet Gen Z expectations. The decline is partly attributed to economic factors, including inflation and reduced spending in China, a key market. However, sectors like travel and fine dining are seeing modest growth, with a potential recovery anticipated by late 2025.
Topics:top-news#brand-strategy#business#china-market#consumer-behavior#economic-slowdown#luxury-brands
- 50 million people have stopped buying luxury brands like Dior and Burberry after 'broken promises' to customers Fortune
- Personal luxury goods market to shrink for first time since the 2008 financial crash, research finds CNBC
- Global luxury sales to fall 2% in 2024, among weakest years on record, Bain says Reuters
- The global luxury goods market is forecast to shrink in 2025. Trump's tariffs could make it worse The Associated Press
- Generation Z increasingly couldn't care less about luxury brands TheStreet
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