H&M x Mugler’s European takeover signals street marketing’s moment. – H&M x Mugler
Case in point, H&M and Mugler turned the streets of Europe’s fashion capitals into a visual runway with a fly posting and street art campaign across London, Paris and Berlin, delivering a high-impact activation designed to stop passersby in their tracks.
Launched in Spring 2024, the street marketing initiative was conceived to generate maximum visibility in H&M’s three key European markets while spotlighting the breadth of the H&M x Mugler collaboration.
Across the three cities, the activation focused on neighbourhoods surrounding H&M points of sale. In total, 3,000 B1-format posters (70 x 100 cm) were deployed alongside 10 full-scale wall installations per city, using four different creatives. Visuals showcased a vast array of pieces from the collection, including bodycon dresses, mesh catsuits synonymous with the Mugler house, structured blazers and M-logo belts.
The campaign ran for two weeks and achieved significant scale, generating more than 36 million contacts across the three markets. In London, installations appeared along some of the city’s most heavily trafficked areas, including Mayfair, Soho and Marylebone. Paris placements spanned major arteries such as the Champs-Élysées, Haussmann and Saint-Lazare, while Berlin’s rollout covered high-visibility zones including Alexanderplatz, Friedrichstraße and Torstraße.
By transforming city walls, the H&M x Mugler campaign demonstrated how street marketing can drive mass awareness while remaining culturally resonant.
Black Friday and all the discounts in the period leading up to it are supposed to boost retail sales, right? Well, not so much in the UK as official statistics on Friday showed that volume-wise, they actually fell by 0.1% in November from October. Analysts had expected sales to rise by 0.4% month-on-month.
Reuters
Coming after they’d already fallen (again, month-on-month) in October by 0.9%, it wasn’t good news. The month also saw sales volumes fall as shoppers pulled back from online shopping specifically.
The Office for National Statistics figures aren’t as useful as they used to be — they frequently get revised up or down and the headline doesn’t include a value-based percentage anymore. Plus it focuses mainly on quarterly readings as it says monthly ones are too volatile.
Confused? Let’s try to make it clearer. As mentioned, sales volumes dipped marginally month-on-month despite understandable expectations of a Black Friday-driven rise.
Volumes rose 0.6% in the quarter up to and including November compared to the previous quarter (the three months to August). And the quarter was up 0.7% compared to same period in 2024.
Volumes were also down by 3% compared with their pre-Covid pandemic level in February 2020.
We’re told that clothing stores maintained a strong three-monthly performance.
Online retail grabbed a bigger share of overall sales but the numbers still dipped. The ONS said non-store retailing was down 2.9% for the month and 0.8% for the three months.
Jonathan Moyes, Head of Investment Research at Wealth Club, called it “another grim reading on the health of the UK economy. The credit for these numbers will surely go to the Chancellor, who spent much of the month running what little confidence the UK consumer had into the ground. Clearly consumers are hurting and higher taxes will only make matters worse, potentially hampering economic growth and risking an economic doom loop”.
And Jacqui Baker, head of retail at RSM UK and chair of ICAEW’s Retail Group, added: “Speculation around potential tax hikes and the wettest weather seen this year dampened retail sales in November. The drop in sales compounded a bleak start to the all-important Golden Quarter, not even Black Friday deals could entice shoppers to splurge ahead of Christmas, with the biggest fall in online.”
Pacsun announced on Thursday it plans to opens its first Dubai store in early 2026, after the U.S. retailer open nine domestic stores in 2025 with 20-35 slated to open across the U.S. next year.
Pacsun
The debut flagship Dubai store will be Pacsun’s first international location in its 40-year history, and comes after the retailer revealed it had inked a new regional partnership in the Middle East with Majid Al Futtaim, earlier this month.
Under the agreement, Pacsun said it plans to open up to 20 stores across the Middle East over the next five years, including another flagship location in Abu Dhabi.
The Dubai location comes on the back of two recent store openings across the U.S. — in New York City and Westchester — as the Los Angeles-based retailer looks to capitalise on double-digit growth in in-store traffic.
Looking ahead, the brand plans to add 20–35 new stores over the next three years, with nine leases already signed for 2026 — making next year the biggest domestic retail expansion for the company in nearly two decades.
“Our stores have become cultural touch points for a generation that values experience as much as product. What begins on our social channels—inspiration and community—ultimately drives young people to see it in person. Doubling down on brick-and-mortar simply reflects what our community is already telling us,” said Brieane Olson, chief executive officer, Pacsun.
Earlier this month, PacSun launched a curated resale shop, introducing PS Vintage Powered by Springy, a dedicated collection of thousands of one-of-a-kind vintage pieces for men and women.
Montpellier-based group Socri Limited has announced a change of identity to become Ceiba, a name registered in around thirty countries to support the group’s international ambitions.
Ceiba
The group notably operates the Polygone shopping centres in Béziers and Montpellier, the Galeries Lafayette department stores in Avignon and Béziers, and the La Coupole shopping centre in Nîmes.
“Ceiba is a logical step,” explained its chairman, Nicolas Chambon. “We are not changing what we do; we are embracing what we have become. This new name allows us to assert an identity that is clear, committed, and true to our values.”
The name Ceiba, taken from the sacred Latin American tree, had already been used by the group’s U.S. subsidiary. Its adoption at group level “forms part of a deliberate international trajectory,” according to the company, which was founded in 2023.
The company’s new logo – Ceiba
The group’s Nîmes shopping centre recently welcomed the opening of a Galeries Lafayette store, inaugurated on October 2. The opening is reported to have delivered a 45% increase in footfall at the 13,500-square-metre shopping centre at the start of autumn.