When scrolling through London Stock Exchange filings to find stories to report on, the usual headlines are pretty dull (“transaction in own shares”, “new corporate presentation”, “full-year results” etc). But on Tuesday, Boohoo Group filed one entitled “Debenhams is back”, which was something of an attention-grabber.
So what did Boohoo have to share? The news that the “successful multi-year turnaround” of Debenhams is now complete and the “reinvigorated business” is now the majority contributor to group profitability.
That’s great news for a group that has been under pressure for several years. What came next was an obvious step… the entire business is being renamed Debenhams Group.
The company said Debenhams “has been successfully turned around since it was acquired out of administration in 2021. It has been repositioned as Britain’s online department store and is underpinned by a new marketplace-led business model. Debenhams is growing rapidly. The business model is stock-lite and capital-lite. It is very profitable and highly cash generative”.
Changing the name to Debenhams makes senses given that “Debenhams is once again becoming [consumers’] destination of choice. It is an iconic British heritage brand with huge brand awareness and significant consumer trust. For our partners, Debenhams is becoming a partner of choice, providing access to millions of consumers and driving strong growth for those selling on the Debenhams platform”.
The group sees “significant future growth opportunities” for it with a medium-term ambition to create a multi-billion-pound GMV business with a target of around a 20% EBITDA margin on a net sales basis.
As for its impact on the rest of the company, the ongoing business review has confirmed that “Debenhams, its business model and its technology is at the epicentre of our group going forward. It is the driving force of the business and will lead the group recovery. It is at the heart of the investment case”.
That also makes sense and sees the group moving away from a positioning as a cheap seller of fast fashion that saw it battered by cheaper, nimbler rival Shein.
It said that under group CEO Dan Finley (who was originally Debenhams CEO), the “marketplace-led business model, proprietary technology and lean operating model will be extended across the group. This is critical to the turnaround of the youth brands and will help accelerate value creation in Karen Millen”.
And the company added that the now-renamed group “is sharply focused on maximising value for all shareholders. It will be at the forefront of global digital retail. It will be a leaner, faster and more technologically advanced business — utilising next-generation technology to maximum effect. The group will be underpinned by a new ESG strategy”.
Debenhams success, Youth Brands challenges
The Tuesday release also told us that the Debenhams business (the e-marketplace that is, not the entire group) is fast-growing and highly profitable, with a roughly 12% EBITDA margin on a net sales basis.
Debenhams sells around 15,000 brands across fashion, beauty and home and is also the home for the group-owned labels, including Wallis, Burton, MissPap, Coast, Oasis, Dorothy Perkins and Warehouse, “which have now been turned around” and which combined have a 7% EBITDA margin.
In the Youth Brands category, we’ve already heard this month about the rebrand of the group’s PrettyLittleThing (PLT) label with a more upmarket positioning. And the company said that in PLT, Boohoo and MAN, it has “three highly relevant online retail brands that between them serve approximately 15 million customers and [have] a social media reach of c.50 million”.
The new PrettyLittleThing
It admitted that “recent trading has been tough for Youth Brands, but the group believes there’s “future potential in these brands by pivoting them to be fashion-led marketplaces and by investing to strengthen the consumer proposition. We believe this will enhance the consumer experience, increase the group’s share of wallet and reduce future stockholding requirements. This will be underpinned by the leaner Debenhams operating model”.
It recognised that this “turnaround will take time and that we have a period of substantial change ahead of us” but it has addressed legacy stock issues and significantly reduced operating costs. On Boohoo, it has “created a community of over 1,400 brands, which grows every day and we are pleased with the traction this is gaining with our consumer”.
It also said that Karen Millen has been transformed into a digital-first, premium global brand. Its future growth potential is “significant as it evolves into a premium lifestyle destination, accelerated through marketplace (including pre-loved luxury), licensing and international expansion”.
ESG focus and trading update
As for the aforementioned new ESG strategy, it announced four new partnerships. These are with Segura, “a global leader in supply chain visibility, to deliver transparency in our end to end supply chain”; the Carbon Trust “to turn our environmental ambitions into impact through the development of a robust Net Zero Transition plan”; with Pennies, “the UK’s leading micro-donation tech charity, to drive positive social change”; and with the Graduate Fashion Foundation “to invest in and develop future fashion talent”.
That’s all well and good for the future, but how did the last year go for the business? The company raised cash and cut debt and costs during the year, but as far as its performance was concerned, Debenhams aside, it still clearly has work to do it, as it has recognised.
In FY25, group GMV pre-returns was almost £2.322 billion, down from £2.581 billion in the previous financial year. Debenhams jumped to £654 million from £488.7 million but Karen Millen dipped to £157.1 million from £161.9 million. Meanwhile the Youth brands fell to £1.51 billion from £1.93 billion.
Post-returns, those GMV figures were £1.639 billion for the group, down from £1.784 billion. And group revenue fell to £1.22 billion from £1.461 billion. Debenhams revenue was £204.6 million, up from £186 million, while at Karen Millen it fell to £68.4 million from £70.1 million. The Youth Brands dropped to £947.3 million from just under £1.205 billion.
Karen Millen
The group expects to report adjusted EBITDA for FY25 of around £40 million. And while it continues to invest in the Youth Brands in the short term as part of their turnaround, it’s raising its medium-term guidance for Debenhams to EBITDA margins of around 20%, as mentioned earlier. Medium-term targets for Karen Millen and the Youth Brands remain unchanged, with double-digit EBITDA margins for Karen Millen and 6%-8% EBITDA margins for the Youth Brands.
New CFO
The company also said that reflective of this new strategy and the acceleration of the group to the Debenhams-led business and operating model, Phil Ellis will become group CFO and a member of the board, replacing Stephen Morana with immediate effect.
Ellis is currently finance firector of Debenhams and MD of DebenhamsPay+. He’s worked for Dan Finley for over six years. He has “extensive commercial finance experience in the retail industry” and immediately prior to the Debenhams job, he held senior financial roles at JD Sports for six years, and seven years at The Very Group.
So what did Dan Finley have to say about all this? On Debenhams itself he said that “we’ve created a thriving community of brand partners with millions of consumers and we are growing rapidly. The most exciting thing is that we are just getting started”.
Debenhams
And he added that the “successful turnaround of Debenhams is our blueprint for the wider turnaround of the group. The turnaround of our Youth Brands is under way and will take time. I have inherited significant challenges. I can see their future potential as they evolve into fashion-led marketplaces and adopt a leaner operating model.
“We go forward as Debenhams Group. This is a defining moment in our journey, reflective of our new strategy, new leadership and new beginnings.”
The Philipp Plein group is actively deploying an ambitious retail expansion plan for its three labels (Philipp Plein, Plein Sport and Billionaire), as the mercurial Hamburg-born designer and owner of the Switzerland-based group told FashionNetwork.com. Plein has been working at his customary headlong pace during the recent Milan Fashion Week, busy with events and runway shows featuring celebrity guests like rapper Busta Rhymes.
Philipp Plein unveiled its Wild West-inspired co-ed Fall/Winter 2025-26 collection, featuring 51 looks, at the iconic Plein Hotel in Milan. The mood was Cowboy Couture, translating into a casual but high-spirited style for the daytime, and a boldly elevated one for the evening. The collection focused on Philipp Plein’s signature denim looks, notably indigo jeans matched with oversized denim shirts and striking coats. Vintage Americana motifs and a pair of glittering Stars & Stripes trousers featured alongside polished tailored looks combining dark red and green with bright blue. Notable accessories included Wild West hats, road-trip style bags, and a range of footwear including knee-high red leather boots, functional combat boots, and classic sneakers.
“We wanted to take advantage of the truly unique venue we’ve created in Milan. We didn’t stage a fashion show here, but a show full-stop, the Plein Show cabaret, with 25 dancers and performers entertaining 500 guests who kept eating and partying until 5 a.m. We love filling this place with joy and happiness,” Plein told FashionNetwork.com. “We opened the Plein Hotel with its three restaurants in September 2024, and in just a few months we have held several events and shows, including a black-tie masked ball – think Kubrick‘s Eyes Wide Shut film – and performances by DJs like Marco Corona and Sven Väth. We’ve had scores of events, all of them creating fun party memories,” he added.
Plein used to stage runway shows for his main label that were real events, held in large venues with thousands of guests. “Right now, I think that, not just for us but for the fashion world as a whole, everything should be more restrained and confidential,” said Plein. “And we haven’t finished yet, because in summer we’ll open a beach club on the upper floor, where we can accommodate over 1,500 people. The Plein Hotel is a unique opportunity, which we must take advantage of,” he added.
In the meantime, the Philipp Plein group is busy with a spate of new store openings. On Sunday, March 2, it opened a Plein Sport store in Spain and, between April and May, new Philipp Plein and Billionaire stores will be opening in Munich. A new Plein Sport store was inaugurated last week near Calabasas, in Los Angeles County, while two Plein Sport stores will open in Malta, another in Lebanon, and a further one will open in a few days in Berlin. A Philipp Plein store is also opening at around the same time in Warsaw, Poland.
Plein also dwelt on the challenging year that the industry experienced in 2024. “Many companies took the Covid pandemic as an excuse to raise prices, suppliers raised them too due to a shortage of raw materials and because they couldn’t meet demand, and this led to a situation in which consumers have become hostile to such an unfair pricing policy, as they’re facing price increases of up to 20-30-50%. While quality has failed to rise accordingly,” said Plein, adding that “of course, some groups are under pressure, because they are listed on the stock exchange, there are investors behind them, financial reports every quarter, so they’re pushing for margin, but there comes a point when you can’t push any more.”
“The Gucci case is emblematic of an expansion drive taken to extremes. They did an extraordinary job of bringing the [Gucci] brand to such levels of sales and product desirability. I do believe that there are momentum shifts in the market. For years, consumers wanted Gucci products, now not as much as before, also for the reasons I mentioned earlier, so sales have dropped, and as usual it’s the designer who pays the price, because there always has to be a scapegoat. But I repeat, for me this is just a phase, a change in trend,” concluded Plein.
The Philipp Plein group is based in Lugano, Switzerland. It is financially independent and debt-free, employing over 700 people and operating over 110 monobrand stores worldwide, including flagship stores in Milan, Paris, Barcelona, Berlin, Dubai, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Shanghai and Singapore.
The Première Classe trade show was held on March 7-10 once again at the Tuileries Garden in Paris, having been staged at the Carrousel du Louvre last September. This season, the show featured 250 exhibitors, fewer than in the past, presenting their latest fashion and accessories collections with a focus on handbags, shoes, jewellery, and headgear. Première Classe was held in parallel with Matter and Shape, the contemporary design show launched by WSN in March 2024, which hosted almost double the number of exhibitors this session, generating new commercial energy.
A handbag by Michino – DR
The Michino brand exhibited its range of high-end leather goods at Première Classe. “French elegance combined with Japanese minimalism,” is how Yasu Michino likes to describe the brand he founded 10 years ago. Michino handbags are made in Italy in the Florence area, by artisanal workshops supplying some of the leading luxury houses. They are characterised by evergreen lines enhanced with subtle graphic details, and are priced from approximately €1,000. Michino, a French-Japanese designer who moved to Paris a long time ago, is a leather goods expert who has worked for labels like Givenchy, Balenciaga and Le Tanneur. A year ago, he decided to focus exclusively on his eponymous brand, which is doing very well in Asia and the USA.
Boots by United Nude – DR
Dutch footwear brand United Nude returned to Première Classe after a few years’ absence. It was co-founded in 2003 by renowned architect Rem D. Koolhaas, and is well-known for its extremely futuristic models (for example, it adopted 3D printing techniques early on) and de-structured heels. This season, it has gone in a rather more urban direction, with bright colours and XL platform soles. United Nude also presented a pair of boots, in black or white, featuring rows of transparent plastic pouches along the legs, which can hold letters forming sentences. A concept that was replicated on a handbag.
The Caro Bag – DR
Studio Caro was launched at the end of 2024 by Estonian-born designer Caro-Liine Tikk, who has worked at Bally, and defines itself as a brand of sustainable luxury accessories. The first products launched by Studio Caro are handbags made in Italian workshops using leather from dormant stocks. The Caro Bag, the collection’s firstborn, comes in small (€1,940), medium and large size, and is decorated with a clasp in 24-carat gold and palladium. Studio Caro is planning to introduce other product categories soon, such as hats and home decoration objects.
UK fashion brand New Look has joined Dutch knitwear brand Rhea and Norwegian sports label Active Brands in signing up to ‘Brand Letter of Intent’, the appeal by international fashion brands to stop mulesing (live lamb cutting).
New Look
The trio takes the number of brands signed up to 100, four years after its launch by global animal welfare organisation Four Paws.
Sending a “clear signal for more animal welfare in the industry… to stop mutilation of 10 million lambs per year”, it urges the Australian wool industry “to stop the process by 2030, and transition to industry-proven alternatives that are kind to animals”.
The trio join leading names such Zara, Patagonia and Hugo Boss to publicly commit to excluding wool sourced from live lamb cutting. In the open letter, they call “to end this cruel practice”.
Rebecca Picallo Gil, wool campaign lead at Four Paws, said: “This global wave of support is a clear message. It is time for a kind solution to a global problem. The wool industry must evolve to meet the demands of modern brands and consumers who ask for cruelty-free fashion.
“It is time for all stakeholders to come together and push for an industry-wide change and end to this cruel practice and ensure a kinder future for millions of lambs in the wool industry.”