MILAN (AP) – Global sales of personal luxury goods are “slowing down but not collapsing,” according to a Bain & Co. consultancy study released Thursday. Personal luxury goods sales that eroded to 364 billion euros ($419 billion) in 2024 are projected to slide by another 2% to 5% this year.
Tariff threats, wars will slow but not collapse global luxury sales in 2025, new study shows
MILAN (AP) – Global sales of personal luxury goods are “slowing down but not collapsing,” according to a Bain & Co. consultancy study released Thursday.
Personal luxury goods sales that eroded to 364 billion euros ($419 billion) in 2024 are projected to slide by another 2% to 5% this year, the study said, citing threats of U.S. tariffs and geopolitical tensions triggering economic slowdowns.
“Still, to be positive in a difficult moment – with three wars, economies slowing down, inequality at a maximum ever – it’s not a market in collapse,” said Bain partner and co-author of the study Claudia D’Arpizio. “It is slowing down but not collapsing.”
Alongside external headwinds, luxury brands have alienated consumers with an ongoing creativity crisis and sharp price increases, Bain said. Buyers have also been turned off by recent investigations in Italy that revealed that sweatshop conditions in subcontractors making luxury handbags.