The narrative from the world’s most elite brands has been one of resilience. As global economies wobbled, LVMH, Kering, and Hermès reported record profits, their CEOs insisting that the ultra-wealthy are recession-proof. But the numbers now tell a different story. LVMH’s latest quarterly results showed a 3% drop in organic revenue, its worst performance since the pandemic. Kering warned of a 40% profit slump. The industry is not merely slowing: it is cracking along structural fault lines that executives have spent years papering over.
The conventional wisdom blames China. A property crisis and youth unemployment have cooled demand for $5,000 handbags. That is true, but it is a convenient scapegoat. The deeper concern no one is raising is the industry’s reliance on a shrinking cohort of consumers: the aspirational middle class. Bain & Company data shows that 60% of luxury purchases are made by customers who earn less than $100,000 annually. These buyers are not insulated from inflation, rising interest rates, and stagnant wages. They are the ones cutting back, not the billionaires. Yet brands have spent the last decade pricing them out, pushing $2,000 sneakers and $3,000 canvas bags. The strategy worked until it didn’t.
Second: the secondary market is cannibalizing primary sales. The resale platform The RealReal reported a 15% jump in luxury consignments in 2023. A Chanel classic flap bag now holds value better than most equities. Why buy new when you can get near-mint condition for 30% less? Brands have responded by hiking prices, which only fuels the secondhand market. It is a death spiral. Meanwhile, the industry’s obsession with exclusivity has backfired. When Burberry burned £28 million of unsold stock in 2023 to protect its brand image, it signaled not control but desperation.
Third: generational shift. Gen Z and young millennials are not buying into the status-signaling model. A 2024 Deloitte survey found that 45% of under-35 consumers consider luxury brands “out of touch” and “environmentally wasteful.” They prefer experiences over objects, and when they do buy, they favor direct-to-consumer disruptors like Fear of God or secondhand vintage. The big houses are scrambling: Gucci hired a new creative director, Saint Laurent relaunched couture. But these are cosmetic fixes for a systemic illness.
Then there is the China overhang. The country once accounted for 35% of global luxury sales. Now, that figure is dropping. But what the analysts miss is the structural shift within China itself. The new wealthy are not the flashy spenders of the 2010s. They are more discreet, more digital, and more local. They are buying from homegrown brands like Shang Xia, owned by Hermès, which remains a niche player. The days of Chinese tourists flooding Paris stores are over.
Finally, the hidden cost of sustainability. Luxury brands have marketed themselves as stewards of craftsmanship, yet their supply chains are opaque. A 2023 investigation by the Swiss NGO Public Eye found that 90% of Italian luxury leather comes from Brazilian cattle linked to deforestation. Consumers are waking up. Stella McCartney has long argued that the industry must shift to regenerative materials, but the cost would crush margins. The truth is that the luxury business model relies on hyper-consumption. You cannot sell infinite numbers of “timeless” products.
The industry is being squeezed from all sides: a tapped-out aspirational class, a booming resale market, a skeptical younger generation, a restructuring China, and a sustainability reckoning. The executives know this. They have seen the internal forecasts. But they will not admit it. Instead, they will blame currency fluctuations, weather, or a “normalization” after Covid. They will announce buybacks and raise prices again. They will pray for a miracle.
But the numbers do not lie. The luxury boom was a bubble inflated by cheap credit and viral marketing. The air is hissing out. The question is not whether the decline continues. It is what happens when a $1.5 trillion industry built on the illusion of scarcity meets the reality of saturation.








