American Eagle Outfitters Inc. defended its media campaign featuring Sydney Sweeney following criticism that the ads have racist undertones.
Sydney Sweeney for American Eagle – American Eagle
The spot “is and always was about the jeans,” the company said in a post on Instagram. American Eagle said it will “continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way.”
The apparel retailer launched an ad blitz last week with the tagline “Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans.” One of the campaign’s videos plays on the same-sounding word “genes” as Sweeney zips up her jeans and intones that “genes are passed down from parents to offspring often determining traits like hair colour, personality and even eye colour.”
“My jeans are blue,” she adds, flashing her blue eyes at the camera.
The video sparked a debate online about whether the focus on the genes of a White, blond woman conjured up the racist theory of eugenics. Other social media users have said critics are reading too much into the ads.
When the campaign was initially unveiled on July 23, American Eagle shares rose. “I think this is potentially one of the biggest gets in American Eagle history,” Chief Marketing Officer Craig Brommers, said in an interview with Women’s Wear Daily on July 23. “Sydney Sweeney is the ‘It’ girl of the moment, and she is helping us create the ‘It’ jeans campaign of the season,” he added.
Data from Bloomberg Second Measure data, which tracks debit and credit card transactions from US consumers, hasn’t shown any immediate impact on sales at American Eagle. Analysts are closely watching spending at the retailer during the important back-to-school season.
Some shoppers might be turned off by the ad campaign and the noise around it, said Jessica Ramírez, managing director at retail analysis firm the Consumer Collective, and opt to shop at competitors such as Levi Strauss & Co., Abercrombie & Fitch Co. or Gap Inc. “There are other options out there,” she said.
JPMorgan analyst Matthew Boss recently cut his recommendation for American Eagle to underweight from neutral, saying that the market’s expectations for earnings are too high. The company is looking to bounce back after pulling its 2025 outlook and a charge of $75 million related to the write-down of merchandise.
Rebag’s Clair report, which studies the value retention of bags on the resale firm’s platform, said Hermès has reclaimed the top position in 2025, reaching an average 138% value retention—a 38% year-over-year increase.
Rebag
The New York-based Rebag’s report also said that a ten-year analysis of Birkin data shows resale values have surged 92% since 2015, outpacing Hermès’ own retail price growth of 43%.
Behind Hermès, Goyard logged 132% retention in 2025, up 28% from 2024; The Row recorded 97% value retention, while Miu Miu climbed to 104% average retention, according to the report.
In fine jewellery, Van Cleef & Arpels extended its lead, with 112% retention led by the Sweet Alhambra collection, while in the watches category, Rolex remained steady at 104%, with standout models like the Submariner Hulk reaching 244% of their original retail price. Comparatively, Cartier witnessed 87% retention.
Louis Vuitton x Takashi Murakami‘s return boosted search demand and pushed top styles above 130% resale value, the report added, while renewed interest in Balenciaga‘s Le City, Celine‘s Phantom, and Chloé‘s Paddington saw an increased demand for early-2000s bags.
Rebag’s 2025 Clair Report, which analyses millions of data points across the primary and secondary markets to reveal the brands, styles, and investment opportunities shaping the luxury landscape, said that global tariff shifts and changing consumer behaviours have made 2025 a “defining year for luxury resale.”
“Higher primary prices pushed more consumers to the secondary market, reaffirming its stability. The 2025 Clair Report highlights the brands demonstrating lasting long-term value,” said Charles Gorra, CEO and founder of Rebag.
In June, Rebag reported its launch on Luxury Stores at Amazon, bringing its pre-loved designer handbags, jewelry, watches, and more to the platform.
Lululemon Athletica’s CEO shake-up has put the spotlight on the once-dominant yoga pants maker’s race to wrest back younger and affluent shoppers from rivals and revive its sagging U.S. business.
Calvin McDonald – Reuters
Its shares, which have halved in value this year, rose 10% on Friday following the departure of CEO Calvin McDonald after about seven years in the role.
An athleisure pioneer known for its premium yoga apparel, Lululemon lost ground as newer rivals such as Alo Yoga and Vuori weaned away its core younger shoppers with trendier styles, marketing campaigns and celebrity partnerships.
Meanwhile, established players like Nike and Gap also entered the market with lower-priced styles.
Lululemon “caught the perfect wave in fashion, becoming the trend for the last five years,” said Brian Mulberry, senior client portfolio manager at Zacks Investment Management.
“But as its core customers graduate college and face tighter budgets, affordability is a challenge and a new outfit at Lulu can cost as much as a month’s groceries.”
Lululemon sells a range of yoga, running and training apparel such as Align yoga pants priced at $108 and men’s joggers at $128.
The slow refresh to core styles and product missteps, such as its decision to pull its $98 “Breezethrough” leggings from shelves last year, have led to heavy discounting to clear aged inventory.
At an earnings call late on Thursday, company executives said the board is “focused on a leader with experience and growth and transformation”.
“It’s understandable to think that a strategic overhaul with a new leader at the helm will be a positive, but this opens the door to more questions as to what direction the board will go with a replacement,” said Jay Woods, chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets.
Lululemon is the latest global consumer company facing leadership churn as macroeconomic uncertainty fuels increasingly divergent spending patterns.
Lululemon is making efforts to speed up product development, launch fresh styles and drive company-wide efficiencies to offset cost inflation and protect margins.
The company beat third-quarter results, lifted by strong China sales, but issued a weaker-than-expected holiday forecast as higher promotions and increased spending on marketing weigh on margins.
Founder Chip Wilson, who is also Lululemon’s largest independent shareholder, in a statement on Friday slammed the board for “poor succession planning” and value erosion.
He called for an urgent CEO search led by new, independent directors with deep company knowledge to restore a product-first focus. Lululemon did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on Wilson’s statement.
The company’s forward price-to-earnings multiple, a common benchmark for valuing stocks, is 14.66, compared to 31.26 for Nike and Abercrombie & Fitch‘s ratio of 10.8, according to LSEG data.
“The main challenge I foresee for the new leadership is not how consumers see Lulu, but how does it see itself?” said Mulberry.
Ferragamo appoints Alberto Tomba as a brand ambassador. The collaboration with the Italian skiing legend celebrates values shared by the Florentine fashion house: dedication, perseverance, resilience and attention to detail.
Alberto Tomba
Born in 1966, Tomba is the quintessential emblem of an Italy that invests in talent, commitment and the ability to push beyond one’s limits. His career is marked by major international successes, including three Olympic gold medals and two silver medals, two World Championship gold medals and two bronze medals, and 50 World Cup victories.
The Bologna-born skier is also the only athlete to have won races in 11 consecutive seasons (1987-1998) and to have claimed four World Cup discipline titles in giant slalom and four in slalom.
“Tomba’s sporting journey perfectly reflects Ferragamo’s philosophy: every achievement comes from sacrifice, every result from dedication. We share with him a deep sense of authenticity and a love of excellence, values that continue to inspire our daily work,” said Leonardo Ferragamo.
“Being chosen by Ferragamo is an honour,” Tomba commented. “I have always believed that sport and style share a common language: that of passion, rigour and the desire to improve every day. Representing a brand that embodies all this, and that brings Italian beauty and craftsmanship to the world, is a source of great pride.”
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