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The Week Ahead: Chanel Begins to Chart a Post-Lagerfeld Future

This week, everyone will be talking about Chanel's resort show in Paris, how Adidas plans to extend the Yeezy craze and the latest denim spinoff. Read our BoF Professional Cheat Sheet.
Chanel Autumn/Winter 2019 | Source: INDIGITAL.TV
By
  • Brian Baskin
BoF PROFESSIONAL

Hello BoF Professionals, welcome to our latest members-only briefing: The Week Ahead. Think of it as your "cheat sheet" to what everyone will be talking about on Monday.

THE CHEAT SHEET

At Chanel, it's Virginie Viard's Show

Virginie Viard and Vittoria Ceretti during Chanel's Haute Couture Spring/Summer 2019 show in Paris | Source: Getty Images Virginie Viard and Vittoria Ceretti during Chanel's Haute Couture Spring/Summer 2019 show in Paris | Source: Getty Images

Virginie Viard and Vittoria Ceretti during Chanel's haute couture Spring/Summer 2019 show in Paris | Source: Getty Images

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  • Chanel's resort show, its second collection since Karl Lagerfeld's death, on May 3 at the Grand Palais in Paris
  • Chanel sales rose 11 percent to $9.6 billion in 2017, with profits of $2.7 billion
  • Dior shows in Marrakech on April 29, Prada in New York on May 2
Resort season is usually a time for luxury brands to have a little fun and make a lot of money rather than deliver a serious statement about the future. But that's unavoidable in the case of Chanel. In a sense, Friday's show marks creative director Virginie Viard's debut. Karl Lagerfeld died just two weeks before the Autumn/Winter 2019 show in March, and it was considered his final collection. He'll surely be on attendees' minds at the Grand Palais, whether or not Chanel works a formal tribute into the show. Designer transitions are almost always fraught, particularly when a creative is as thoroughly associated with a brand as Lagerfeld was with Chanel.

The Bottom Line: It's far too early to know whether Viard will end up serving as a placeholder while Chanel searches for a star to replace Lagerfeld, or will emerge as a world-class designer in her own right (or chart a middle course, remaining creative director without straying far from her predecessor's legacy).

Denim Spinoff Looks to Make Faded Jeans Brands Cool Again

Wrangler is attempting to revitalise its image with influencer campaigns | Source: Instagram/@wrangler Wrangler is attempting to revitalise its image with influencer campaigns | Source: Instagram/@wrangler

Wrangler is attempting to revitalise its image with influencer campaigns | Source: Instagram/@wrangler

  • VF Corp. to spin off Lee and Wrangler jeans as Kontoor Brands in May
  • Kontoor will be the number two US jeans brand by sales; number one brand Levi's went public in March, Gap plans to spin off number three Old Navy this year
  • Kontoor expects sales to fall in the mid-single digits this year, but to show modest growth after that
When VF Corp. spins off its jeans brands, it will mark the second of four denim-heavy public share listings expected this year. Unlike high-flying Levi’s, Old Navy and Madewell, Kontoor’s Lee and Wrangler are struggling, with sales set to decline for a sixth year. That’s not to say they’re dead in the water. In an investor presentation Friday, Kontoor outlined plans to revitalise the brands with influencer campaigns, sustainable manufacturing and new products, including a crack at the thriving premium denim market in the US (Lee and Wrangler already have some success at this in Europe). The company has some powerful tools to work with, including a global reach — Lee is big in China and India — and a vertically integrated supply chain. But to succeed, Kontoor will need alternative sales channels to Walmart and other wholesalers, which make up over 80 percent of revenue but increasingly prefer to push in-house labels.

The Bottom Line: Lee claims to be the first to sell jeans featuring a zipper. Kontoor will require similar innovation to thrive in an environment that hasn't been friendly to wholesale-dependent brands.

Adidas Lags Nike in the Resale Market. Does it Matter?

Beyonce is launching a collaboration with Adidas | Source: Instagram/@beyonce Beyonce is launching a collaboration with Adidas | Source: Instagram/@beyonce

Beyonce is launching a collaboration with Adidas | Source: Instagram/@beyonce

  • Adidas releases first-quarter results on May 3
  • Adidas sales are booming in China but have moderated in the US and Europe
  • Nike and Air Jordans dominate resale charts; Yeezy has slipped as Adidas increases production
Adidas excels at coming up with a Plan B. The recent slowdown in sales of classic styles like the Stan Smith might send a different company into crisis mode to revive its fading tentpoles; instead, Adidas doubled down on a modern classic, its Yeezy line with Kanye West, and potentially created a new one with the Beyonce partnership announced earlier this month. First-quarter results are likely to show the gambit continuing to pay off (fourth-quarter Yeezy sales soared by 500 percent, according to NPD). But the increased production runs have severely damaged resale values. Why should that matter to Adidas, which has no stake in sneaker sales on StockX, Goat and other marketplaces? While there's no direct profit involved, frenzied bidding on used shoes burnishes a brand's image, and data points about which colourways and collaborations sell best can help determine what styles to introduce next, and in what quantities. In a note earlier this month, Cowen predicted the ability to manage supply and demand via the resale world will reshape the industry. 

The Bottom Line: Resale may not drive direct sales for sneaker brands, but it's increasingly where their customers are. Nike's utter dominance of this market should worry its rivals.

COMMENT OF THE WEEK

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Used clothing ready for recycling | Source: Shutterstock Used clothing ready for recycling | Source: Shutterstock

Used clothing ready for recycling | Source: Shutterstock

"The only thing that can reduce waste is to buy less and increase how long we wear clothes." —@fun_kle, commenting on "Can Recycling Fix Fashion's Landfill Problem?"

SUNDAY READING

Professional Exclusives You May Have Missed: 

The Week Ahead wants to hear from you! Send tips, suggestions, complaints and compliments to brian.baskin@businessoffashion.com

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