Outrageous Predictions
Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026
Saxo Group
Investment Strategist
Luxury shares rebound from their lows, but the holiday quarter decides if demand truly steadies.
Full-price selling matters more than revenue growth, because margins drive long-term value.
The sector is split: the strongest brands recover first, while turnarounds stay jumpy.
Fashion stocks can feel like trends. They look dead for months, then they change overnight. After a weak stretch earlier in 2025, parts of the sector now rebound from their lows, led by European luxury names.
This matters now because the holiday season is a profit test. For some luxury houses, it can account for up to 30% of annual sales. If demand and pricing hold through this quarter, investors usually treat it as a real turn. If promotions roar back in January, the rebound often fades just as quickly.
At the prior close on 16 December 2025, the tone in luxury is noticeably brighter. The heavyweight French groups, LVMH and Kering, sit in “rebound mode” after a tough stretch, while Richemont also looks steadier as investors warm to the idea that demand is no longer sliding.
The split inside the broader fashion space shows up quickly. Some turnaround stories, like Burberry, still feel fragile and can slip on any hint of heavier discounting or slower store traffic. Meanwhile, operational winners like Inditex look more “stable compounder” than “big rebound”, because the market already expects it to execute.
Put simply, this rally is not a rising tide lifting every handbag. It is more like shoppers returning to a few trusted brands first, while the rest of the mall still argues with the mirror.
By mid-November, reporting showed Kering up about 49% over three months and LVMH up about 42%. That sort of snapback tends to happen when investors believe “less bad” becomes “steady enough”.
Luxury depends on wealthy buyers, travel and confidence. Mass-market fashion depends more on jobs, wages and the cost of living. Either way, the market usually watches three levers.
Discounting cools. When brands sell more at full price, profitability can recover quickly. That is why stocks can rally even if sales only stabilise.
Inventories get cleaner. Too much stock leads to promotions, which harms profit and can cheapen a brand’s reputation. If inventory grows faster than sales, margins often come under pressure later.
China stops being a headwind. Luxury groups have treated China as a key growth market for years. When demand there steadies, even modestly, investors often value the sector more highly because operating profit can swing faster than revenue once fixed costs are covered.
LVMH is the bellwether because it spans categories and geographies. In October 2025 it reported a return to sales growth in the third quarter, helped by improving demand in China.
Kering is more of a rebuild. On 16 December 2025, it announced the sale of a 60% stake in a prime New York property to Ardian, raising about 690 million USD in cash. It is not glamorous, but it buys time for a brand reset.
Richemont shows why “hard luxury” can behave differently from handbags and ready-to-wear. In its half-year results to 30 September 2025, it reported sales growth and stronger momentum in the second quarter.
Inditex is the operations story. It moves quickly from design to store, which can reduce leftover stock. Burberry is the reminder that brand transitions take time, and markets do not pay for hope unless execution follows.
China is the biggest swing factor. Discounting is the second. Currency moves and cost inflation are the third. The early warning signs are familiar: heavier promotions, rising inventory, and cautious guidance on margins.
Treat a rebound as a hypothesis: look for full-price selling and stable inventory over two quarters.
Separate brand power from turnarounds, and expect wider price swings in the turnaround bucket.
Watch three signals: China commentary, promotional intensity, and margin guidance.
Keep diversification and position sizing in mind, because fashion cycles rarely move in straight lines.
Fashion stocks can rebound long before the high street looks busy. That makes them exciting, and risky. The recent bounce hints that investors see a shift from “slump” to “stabilisation”, helped by steadier China demand and cleaner inventories. But fashion is still a game of pricing discipline.
If brands keep selling at full price, margins recover and balance sheets heal. If promotions return, the recovery turns into another clearance sale. For long-term investors, the sensible approach is to track demand signals and margin guidance, not runway headlines. The holiday quarter is the fitting room. It tells you whether this rally fits, or pinches.