Waning confidence among China’s middle class consumers could further undermine sales of global luxury brands, analysts say.
Here's what to look out for when making your next pricey purchase, including smell and hardware.
Plus, there's the waste factor. In the past, some luxury brands would reportedly destroy unsold items to protect their image.
Louis Vuitton’s owner seems surprised at how quickly Chinese consumers have closed their wallets and abandoned its brands. It ...
Luxury fashion brand LVMH (MC.PA) — whose umbrella of brands includes Christian Dior, Fendi, Marc Jacobs, and Louis Vuitton — ...
Koyanna Redstar’s journey in luxury resale began early. At the age of 13, she sold her mother’s old Kate Spade handbags on ...
The ads pair drawings by British artist David Shrigley, best known for his sly social commentary, with the surreal ...
A 5 percent decline in quarterly sales may not spell disaster for LVMH's annual revenue, but sets the tone for the industry ...
Faced with a depressed luxury goods market, the sector's global leader has published a fall in revenue for the first time ...
Luxury spending in China traditionally is correlated with home prices. That is bad news for global brands that start ...
LIKE MARVEL VILLAINS, most fashion writers have origin stories. Mine began with a navy nylon Prada purse, salvaged from a Boston thrift store when I was a teen in the 1990s. Scuffed with black ...
An Australian luxury goods retailer has been cleared of more than 1000 customer complaints it had sold them “superfake” designer handbags.