C&A is no longer manufacturing in Germany. The Dutch fashion retailer with headquarters in Düsseldorf, Germany, has decided to close down its state-of-the-art jeans production facility in Mönchengladbach, as local daily paper Rheinische Post has reported. The site, called Factory for Innovation in Textiles (FIT), specialised in producing more sustainable jeans and was opened in 2021, in what has turned out to be a failed localisation effort. Until the 1980s-90s, C&A used to operate up to 14 manufacturing sites across Germany.
A pair of jeans being laser-washed at FIT – FNW
FIT, which FashionNetwork.com visited in 2023, was initially equipped to produce approximately 420,000 pairs of jeans per year, with the goal of eventually producing 800,000 pairs. C&A spent several million euros to set up the factory, saying it was “a key investment designed to experiment with alternative manufacturing processes.” Many of the production stages were automated, in an effort to make Europe-based manufacturing profitable. But FIT has failed to meet its objectives, and C&A has thrown in the towel. Nearly 90 jobs are at risk.
FNW
The closure was announced last week, to the surprise of employees, commercial partners and local authorities. “We were shocked by the news,” said Felix Holtgrave, from partner start-up 140fahrenheit, which co-founded the factory. However, halting C&A production may not mean the factory will become useless. “We still believe in the basic concept,” said Holtgrave. “It’s a shame, especially for image reasons, because it was a showcase project,” said Ulrich Schückhaus, of Mönchengladbach’s municipal business development agency, speaking to German media outlet WDR.
C&A, which operates over 13,000 stores in 17 countries, is undergoing a tough transition period in Europe. Last July, the CEO of C&A Europe, Giny Boer stepped down. Edward Brenninkmeijer, a member of the family that owns C&A, is still acting as interim CEO. In France too C&A is navigating choppy waters: Tarek Hosni, a corporate restructuring specialist, took charge of the local subsidiary, which operates nearly 160 stores, in December 2024.
Café Dior by Dominique Crenn has arrived at the brand’s Highland Park Village boutique in Dallas.
Café Dior by Dominique Crenn opens in Dallas. – Dior
Multi-starred chef Dominique Crenn, behind San Francisco’s three-Michelin-starred Atelier Crenn, has specially designed an exclusive menu inspired by the archives and elegance of haute couture silhouettes devised through different eras.
Working alongside her executive pastry chef and partner, Juan Contreras, Crenn reinterprets Dior’s designs in edible form, while the architectural identity of the café embodies the codes of 30 Montaigne.
Dishes, including starters, main courses and desserts, reflect the colors, textures, and intricate embellishments of some of the house’s most celebrated creations, such as the Miss Dior dress from the Spring-Summer 1949 collection, the May gown from 1953, and the Pamplemousse ensemble designed by Marc Bohan in 1965.
The café pays tribute to the enduring relationship between Dior and Dallas, a bond that dates back to 1947 when Christian Dior received the Neiman Marcus Award.
What better way to celebrate the 40th anniversary of North Face’s classic Mountain Jacket by also tying it to an all-new 2025 collection and a global campaign featuring a new face for the brand, British singer/songwriter Griff.
The just-launched collection and campaign features a new iteration of the Mountain Jacket, bringing together tried-and-tested styles with outdoor-ready technology, it said.
Through the decades, it said the jacket’s “timeless design” has evolved with the “best in technology and utilitarian craft” now featuring the latest DryVent Mono technology.
The collection includes two standout jackets:Mountain Jacket DryVent Mono (£225), made with a 100% recycled fabric with a waterproof, seam-sealed, mono-material construction; and Mountain Jacket Gore-Tex (£425) for alpine performance, featuring waterproofing, pit zips, and alpine pockets.
The collection “builds on its storied legacy with advancements in protection, sustainability, and performance, offering unparalleled versatility for both mountain and city adventures”, we’re told.
Fronting the Mountain Jacket campaign, Griff adds her “creative ethos, bound by her candid songwriting about self-discovery and personal evolution” to bolster The North Face’s commitment to “elevating emerging talent, and the Mountain Jacket’s roots in creativity”.
Griff is also joined in the campaign by The North Face athletes snowboarder Blake Paul and freeride skier Dennis Ranalter.
The dollar fell on Tuesday, extending declines after a disappointing reading on U.S. consumer confidence and a drop in U.S. yields weighed, while optimism for more spending in Germany helped lift the euro.
Reuters
The greenback extended declines after the Conference Board said its consumer confidence index dropped 7 points, its largest fall since August 2021, to 98.3, well short of the 102.5 estimate of economists polled by Reuters.
“The present situation index improved, but consumers are expecting dark skies ahead. Change can be scary, so it’s not surprising that confidence is falling,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, fell 0.51% to 106.20, just off the two-month low of 106.12 hit on Monday, with the euro up 0.46% at $1.0514.
Concerns have started to emerge about U.S. economic growth, and worries about inflation are growing as tariff deadlines by Trump on Canada and Mexico are set for next week. Investors also fear the labor market impact from actions taken by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.
“There’s going to be a lot of back and forth on Trump’s initiatives, and certainly markets in general long term, don’t like tariffs,” said Joseph Trevisani, senior analyst at FXStreet in New York.
“There’s definitely nervousness out there because some of these things could go the wrong way, certainly inflation hasn’t shown any sign of further retreat.”
Reflecting the worries, the yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes fell 10.6 basis points to 4.287% after hitting a 2-1/2 month low of 4.283%. After initial signs Germany may be able to move quickly, election winner Friedrich Merz on Tuesday ruled out a rapid reform to Germany’s state borrowing limits known as the “debt brake” and said it was too soon to say whether the outgoing parliament could wave through a massive military spending boost.
The developments in Germany also prompted Deutsche Bank’s head of FX research, George Saravelos, to revise on Tuesday his bearish view on the euro against the dollar to neutral. He had previously been bearish, despite the rally in Treasuries, because “the outcome of the German election was not conducive to a quick easing of the German fiscal stance”.
“We see the balance of risks as evenly distributed over the next few months,” he added.
A move higher by the dollar late on Monday against the Mexican peso and Canadian dollar after U.S. President Donald Trump said tariffs on Mexico and Canada would proceed as scheduled and go into effect next week was largely unwound on Tuesday, suggesting investors still view the threat of duties as a negotiating tool by Trump.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent argued on Tuesday the U.S. economy is more fragile under the surface than economic metrics suggest, citing interest rate volatility, sticky inflation and job growth focused on the government sector, while also saying that tariffs are an important source of revenue.
The Mexican peso strengthened 0.32% versus the dollar at 20.414 although the Canadian dollar weakened 0.2% versus the greenback to C$1.43.
Analysts at Goldman Sachs noted, “the risk remains that we see a repeat of Trump’s brinkmanship from last month, with choppy price action in those currencies are we approach March 4.”
Against the Japanese yen, the dollar weakened 0.75% to 148.59 while Sterling strengthened 0.36% to $1.2669.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he would increase annual defense spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2027 and target a 3% level, last seen just after the Cold War, a signal to Trump that Britain can help boost Europe’s security.
In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin plummeted 8.13% to $86,340.15 as tariffs and growth worries dented risk appetite.