Lorenzo Bertelli, 37, the eldest son of fashion designer Miuccia Prada and industrialist Patrizio Bertelli, is set to take up his new post as executive chairman of Versace once the deal with Prada is finalised on December 2. In April, Prada agreed to acquire Versace from US-based Capri Holdings Ltd. for about €1.25 billion ($1.45 billion), the largest acquisition in the Prada Group’s 112-year history. The brand brings a distinct aesthetic to Prada’s portfolio and paves the way for the creation of a larger Italian player, potentially better placed to compete globally with rival luxury groups.
Lorenzo Bertelli – Camera della Moda
Meanwhile, from 2019 to the end of 2024, the Prada Group has invested a total of more than €200 million to enhance the company’s industrial infrastructure. In 2024 alone, the Milan-based company invested about €40 million in vertical integration, progressively bringing certain stages of the production process in-house and building strategic capabilities.
FashionNetwork.com discussed all this, as well as supply chain compliance and Made in Italy, with Lorenzo Bertelli himself and Andrea Guerra, CEO of the Prada Group, during a meeting in Scandicci in Florence, Italy, at the state-of-the-art facility dedicated to the full-cycle production of bags and leather goods for Prada’s Women’s and Men’s lines, which also produces items in fine leathers and carries out certain special processes at customers’ requests.
FashionNetwork.com: What new investments in the production chain does the Prada Group have in the pipeline for 2025? Andrea Guerra: We have never stopped investing, and we will continue. In the near term, in Milan we will expand and deepen our work on fine leathers. The workshop will become far more sophisticated. The second major investment, planned over the next 12 months, is a new leather-goods plant in Piancastagnaio [in Siena], which will be cutting-edge in terms of sustainability and will bring together a number of our workshops in the area. In Umbria, we will create a new knitwear production hub in Gubbio, which will complement the site we already have in the region at Torgiano (Perugia), where there is also an Academy project. Torgiano houses at least seven or eight highly specialised production processes, and wherever we have a similar kind of production, we have established an Academy. And that’s not all: we will invest to increase the production capacity of the Northampton plant in England, we will expand the Foiano della Chiana (Arezzo) plant, and we are preparing other developments in the Marche region related to footwear. Acquiring new suppliers, however, is not on the agenda.
FN: What checks have you implemented over the years to minimise the risk of problems such as those some fashion players are having with their subcontractors? Lorenzo Bertelli: First of all, aside from our group- and very few others in our industry- from day one the fashion show goes hand in hand with the factory. When you meet managers who come from other companies, factories and industrial matters are often unfamiliar; they don’t even see them as part of their remit, because they don’t consider them within the scope of their responsibilities. And this has led to many of the difficulties you read about in the newspapers. I say this because from day one my father believed in owning factories. In fact, my parents’ story is: one person more dedicated to design (Miuccia Prada, ed.), and one more dedicated to factories (Patrizio Bertelli, ed.). It’s our story- culturally embedded and in our blood. In our Milan offices, we don’t talk about business without talking about factories and their impact on production. I can assure you that many managers working in other companies simply don’t concern themselves with factories. Along our growth journey, we fought many of the battles that may be creating problems for other players in the sector today- not because we were better, but because we tackled them earlier- and therefore we have more experience in trying to keep the supply chain as clean as possible. We were almost frowned upon at the time, because people didn’t understand why we would embark on something laborious and costly when the work could easily be delegated to others with higher value added and greater margins. And it is a constant battle: you have to carry out inspections and audits of suppliers continuously.
FN: Is only about 50% of your supplier list shown on your site? Why not 100%? LB: In terms of compliance, we are not legally required to disclose all levels of the production chain. Until recently, disclosure was required only for tier 1 of the supply chain, not tier 2 or tier 3; so, depending on how one builds the production architecture, it’s easy to appear ‘cleaner’ if you have a few very green tier‑1 suppliers who then have many subcontractors that are not… We work almost exclusively with tier‑1 suppliers and very few tier‑2s. One, because no minimum percentage is required in today’s sustainability reports; if the reporting rules change one day, we’ll be happy to disclose 100%. Two, because there is also a competitiveness issue: why should we give an advantage to competitors who might go and gather information on our supply chain? Three, because, although all our suppliers are fully compliant, we chose to disclose only those we are particularly proud of.
FN: How much of the Prada Group’s production is internalised? AG: We don’t disclose that information. From our point of view, production is totally internalised, in the sense that we have the ability to steer our entire supply chain from A to Z, and we have shortened it dramatically. I believe our level of in-house production is the highest in the industry.
FN: In your opinion, are prices in the fashion and luxury industry too high? AG: In the post‑Covid period, some of our competitors thought it was possible to raise price levels continuously without, in some cases, delivering the necessary value in the product. I believe that was one of the contributing factors to this industry’s recent downturn. I think many companies and brands are reflecting on this today.
FN: How can Made in Italy be conveyed and protected? AG: We have been, are, and will remain very strong on Made in Italy. Italy’s problem is not the ‘Made in,’ manufacturing or innovation, but sales: the ability to tell the story, to do marketing, to have a role with the consumer, to know how to run stores everywhere in the world. Italian companies have always been extraordinary at making, but unfortunately not equally good at selling. Companies like Prada, which decided to move into the end‑consumer world more than 30 years ago, are an exception compared to the majority of Italian businesses. I always give this example: if I go to a French or Anglo‑Saxon entrepreneur and ask ‘Tell me about your business,’ they will take me to one of their stores, one of their restaurants, one of their hotels. If I go to an Italian entrepreneur and ask ‘Tell me about your business,’ he will take me to a factory. That’s the difference. Here, the tradition of the store, the restaurant, and the hotel has always been family‑based, but we haven’t taught the new generations- or we have done so only very little, or perhaps we have only just started- how to manage the consumer as the landscape evolves. Today in Italy we probably produce 80% of luxury, but Italian companies account for not even 20% of this sector’s revenue. That’s where we have lost out and need to improve, considering this sector as a linchpin of Italian industry.
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Ami Paris is continuing its flagship opening programme but instead of Europe, this time it has turned its attention to Asia with a debut in Seoul. It has just opened its new multi-level flagship in the heart of Hannam at 45, Itaewon-ro 55ga-gil, Yongsan-gu.
Ami Paris, Seoul
And it said this “signals a meaningful evolution for the brand’s retail experience: spanning over 425 sq m, it stands as Ami Paris’s largest flagship globally, introducing a Parisian wardrobe and gathering place rooted in the timeless principles of Korean Hanok architecture”.
It added that the space “embraces Seoul’s cool contemporary soul, connecting with a culturally rich neighborhood and a style-attentive crowd who value effortless elegance, art, and discovery”.
Intended to be more than a traditional boutique, the venue is conceived as an “urban haven and welcoming residence, representing a respectful adaptation to the local context, with a unique sense of intimacy and togetherness”.
It’s certainly an interesting design. Visitors are guided from the street through an underground passage, emerging into the Ami Garden (“a curated oasis of local flora including rowan and maple trees”) before “ascending to the main entrance. This transitional ritual marks a shift from the city’s pace to a serene, breathing space”.
The design concept is based in traditional Hanoks, “creating a cosy atmosphere through a refined interplay of materials: dark oak, granite, and Maljat stone, accented by Ami Paris’s signature elements of beige limewash, gold, champagne gold and mirror finishes”.
Custom wooden furniture and low-slung seating areas are designed to invite visitors to linger, while bespoke paper lighting, evocative of traditional Hanji, “bathes the interiors in a soft, diffused glow”.
The store also inaugurates an artist residency in collaboration with the Pipe Gallery. Talents “will be invited to engage with the space, ensuring the Ami Paris home remains a dynamic site of cultural conversation”.
At launch, the presentation features the work of Korean-French contemporary artist Chansong Kim.
The unpredictability involved in doing business with the US has come into sharper relief with the threat of new tariffs being applied to UK exports. And international delivery specialist ParcelHero said Britain’s small businesses “will be the first casualties of [President] Trump’s new Greenland tariff war”.
Donald Trump at the White House, Washington, D.C. (United States), 16 January 2026 – AFP
Any new tariffs come after extra duties were already imposed last year while the de minimis exemption was abolished.
In 2024, the UK exported around $828m-worth of textiles such as clothing to the US. Most of these products will have had a value of under $800 and that de minimis abolition will have had a huge impact.
But even those business selling luxury goods that didn’t previously qualify for zero duties under the de minimis rule have been hit hard already.
ParcelHero said that the UK currently has one of the most favourable US tariff rates of 10%, following a trade deal with the country, but “even so, a UK-made coat costing $800 is already likely to cost US shoppers at least an extra $80 (£60) more than it did at the beginning of 2025, assuming that the UK seller passed on all the tariff costs to their US customers. That may not be the only applicable tariff, however, as it could also attract a further tax depending on the item’s tariff code.”
With the new tariff threat just issued, from the beginning of February, “that same coat could cost American consumers around $960 due to the imposition of a further 10% tariff. More concerningly still, from June it could cost them more than $1,000, as February’s 10% tariff rises to 25%. UK specialist and family-run businesses will struggle to survive in the US market as American shoppers turn to cheaper products from elsewhere”.
Parcelhero thinks Trump’s tariff threat over Greenland will particularly impact small UK businesses — which are less able to absorb extra costs and to have the mega-marketing budgets to cement their desirability in consumers’ minds — disproportionately.
The company’s head of consumer research, David Jinks, said he “agrees with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer that the imposition of new tariffs on the UK and seven other countries that oppose Trump’s plans to take control of Greenland is ‘completely wrong’.
“Many smaller UK exporters are already reeling from the impact of the 10% tariff imposed on the majority of UK products last year. On top of that came the axing of the US de minimis tariff exemption that previously enabled British goods valued at $800 (around £600) or under to enter America duty free. Britain’s SME manufacturers and exporters are likely to be the first casualties of Trump’s new tariff war. Many smaller UK companies may have to quit the US market entirely if the Greenland tariffs are imposed.
“The US is Britain’s largest single overseas market and in 2024, before Trump announced his ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs in April 2025, around 39,500 UK VAT-registered businesses exported goods to the US. Many of these are SME businesses and marketplace traders that are disproportionately affected by the new tariffs.”
And the company thinks that if the tariffs are applied, it will mean a wider move towards tariffs globally. “Whatever the ongoing impact of new US tariffs, the repeal of its de minimis rules and a potential tit-for-tat trade war over Greenland, we are inevitably looking at a period of continuing volatility and changes to US shipments,” Jinks added.
Matalan is the latest big-name UK retailer to report on the Golden Quarter as well as the narrower festive season and it appears to have done well late last year.
It said that in Q3 (the three months ended 28 November) EBITDA was up 38% year-on-year “reflecting sales growth and market share gains”.
The fashion and homewares retailer said that pre-IFRS16 EBITDA jumped to £27 million during the quarter on the back of like-for-like sales growth of 2%, coupled with its ongoing focus on margin and efficiencies. This builds on the strong momentum delivered in H1 2026, with pre-IFRS16 EBITDA up 53% to £61 million in the financial year to date.
Its digital performance was “very strong” in Q3, with like-for-like sales up 11% and Black Friday delivering its strongest ever online sales day outside of the pandemic. That reflects the firm’s heavy investment in this channel of late and with a new native app due to launch later this year alongside a refreshed loyalty scheme, it’s clearly expecting the outperformance to continue.
But its stores are a key part of its investment programme too and in particular, during Q3, its refreshed stores outperformed the wider estate by 12%. The company didn’t detail how the stores performed overall but did say that it plans to upgrade 40 more locations in its next financial year.
As for the nine weeks up to 2 January, like-for-like sales rose 1%, which is below the 2% recorded for Q3 but coming against a backdrop in which many retailers reported falls, it’s not a bad result.
Categories including women’s outerwear and men’s formalwear and sportswear performed particularly well and the retailer said it gained market share across both women’s and men’s in the period, “reflecting the renewed product offer and significant improvements in brand perception”.
Overall, it “outperformed the wider market in October through to December, delivering year-on-year sales growth ahead of peers”.
Executive chair Karl-Heinz Holland said: “Our business transformation continues to deliver tangible results, with another strong quarter of EBITDA performance, alongside a return to sales growth. This reflects our relentless focus on delivering better quality, style and value, underpinned by sustained investment in product, stores and digital. This has enabled us to outperform the market, despite a challenging trading backdrop. Looking ahead, we look forward to welcoming our new CEO next month and remain confident in the business delivering sustainable profitable growth.”