LVMH’s fashion and leather goods division posted a 2% revenue decline in Q1 2026, according to results reported on April 13. The figure marks a continuation of the softening that began in mid-2024, as consumer appetite for high-priced logo goods in key markets — particularly China and Europe — normalises after the post-pandemic surge.
The results sit alongside a broader pattern: Gucci (Kering) fell 8% in Q1 on an organic basis; Hermès, the market’s most resilient house, grew 6% but missed the 7% consensus. The luxury sector’s aggregate Q1 performance was its weakest since 2020.
Vogue Business’s quarterly luxury tracker, published the same day, identifies three structural shifts underpinning the slowdown:
- Price fatigue: Average selling prices for entry-level luxury handbags have doubled in five years; repeat purchases from aspirational buyers are contracting.
- China normalisation: The post-reopening rebound has fully unwound. Domestic Chinese consumers are buying more selectively, with a preference for either ultra-accessible or ultra-exclusive price points — and pressure in the middle.
- Tourism disruption: Middle East conflict has reduced international travel to key European retail hubs, particularly Paris, where several major houses reported double-digit foot traffic declines in March.
For brands that sit below the ultra-luxury tier, the environment creates a clear brief: offer genuine quality at a price that makes the comparison with a declining mega-brand embarrassing for the mega-brand.