Will 2025 be a decisive year for Jacquemus? The French ready-to-wear label founded in 2009 by Provence-born designer Simon Porte Jacquemus, 19 years old at the time, needs to pivot to new markets and growth drivers to keep up its momentum and move to the next level. Jacquemus has recently reached a new milestone, having inked an exclusive beauty partnership with L’Oréal. A step that is all the more crucial since the French cosmetics giant has also acquired a minority stake of 10% in the label, in order to bolster its “independent growth.”
Simon Porte Jacquemus at his label’s January runway show – ph Stephane Feugère – Jacquermus
A source close to the matter said that L’Oréal bought the 10% stake in Jacquemus for “just under €100 million.” Both partners have mentioned a long-term agreement, and are set to develop a perfume as their first joint project. At the conference for the presentation of L’Oréal’s annual results on Friday February 7, the group’s CEO Nicolas Hieronimus said that L’Oréal doesn’t intend to increase its stake in Jacquemus, nor to acquire a fashion brand. “We do happen to own [a fashion label], Mugler, but it came as part of the acquisition of the brand from Clarins,” he said.
“Simon Porte Jacquemus is an amazing genius, and I’m delighted to have convinced him to work with L’Oréal to develop a beauty range,” said Hieronimus, adding that the group believes in and fully supports Jacquemus. According to Hieronimus, this minority investment could also help Jacquemus fund its retail expansion. The latter would be a clear boost for the label, which is actively searching for fresh resources in order to continue to grow, while waiting for the results of its diversification in the thriving beauty market. A project that will take between 18 months and two years to reach completion, according to L’Oréal’s top executives.
Long-standing interest in beauty segment
This is not the first time that Porte Jacquemus is making a foray in the beauty segment, having collaborated with Lancôme (a brand from L’Oréal’s luxury division) by designing a make-up kit in 2014, nor the first time he has sold a minority interest in his label. In 2019, he ceded a 10% stake in the business to Puig. The Spanish group, a benchmark name in the beauty sector, was also set to partner Jacquemus in a beauty project that should have launched in 2022. But Porte Jacquemus bought back the stake that same year, keen to preserve his independence.
Obviously, the situation is now different. Jacquemus has changed dimension, growing from a small family company to an international luxury label of a significant size. In 2018, the label generated a revenue of €11.5 million. It jumped to €100 million in 2021, and soared to €270-€280 million in 2023, according to market estimates. A Parisian label with a Mediterranean vibe, renowned for its sunny, colourful fashion, and for its track record in highly popular accessories, like the famous miniature handbags and giant straw hats, Jacquemus has changed tack in recent years, adopting a diversification and premiumisation strategy, strengthening its links with the art world and transforming its brand image.
This was evident at Jacquemus’s recent comeback show at Paris Fashion Week Men, after a five-year absence. Instead of staging an event attracting a large crowd, Porte Jacquemus invited only 40 guests, mostly celebrities, to discover his new creations for Fall/Winter 2025-26, presenting a very “haute couture” collection, as he now likes to describe his fashion.
Porte Jacquemus was also keen to make an impression with potential investors. Last October, he commissioned investment bank Rothschild & Co. to find a financial partner. As he said at the time to French newspaper Le Figaro: “I value my independence, I want to pass on the business to my children, but I need to break the glass ceiling and find the right minority partner.”
In order to keep growing, the company had no choice but to find fresh resources externally. Thanks to L’Oréal’s investment, it now has greater heft. Jacquemus debuted with women’s ready-to-wear, then expanded its assortment with a men’s line in 2018 and a childrenswear range in 2023, while adding accessories (handbags, shoes, eyewear, hats, and jewellery) and home decoration items to its portfolio.
In parallel, the label, still chiefly distributed through its e-shop and a network of multibrand retailers, began to develop its own fleet of monobrand stores. Jacquemus opened a first store on Avenue Montaigne in Paris in September 2022, followed by one in Dubai, UAE, in 2024, run in partnership with the Chalhoub group. In October, it inaugurated a store in New York’s trendy SoHo district, and the following month another one in London, on New Bond Street.
Jacquemus has also added to its staff. Notably, it is said to have hired a new CEO, poaching Sarah Benady from LVMH-owned Celine, where she was in charge of North America. The CEO role had been vacant since December 2023, following Bastien Daguzan’s departure. The news has been reported by various media outlets but hasn’t been confirmed by Jacquemus. In early 2024, the label created the post of commercial director, tapping Mélissa Ait-Ouakli from LVMH.
2025 is therefore set to be a pivotal year for Jacquemus, despite the fact that, given the luxury market’s slowdown and the investments committed to the international expansion push, the label’s pace is likely to decelerate, with a revenue downturn expected for fiscal 2024.
Richard Bradbury, executive chair of family-owned fashion retailer River Island, is stepping down from his role, citing personal reasons, the retailer conformed in a statement.
Photo: Sandra Halliday
Following the announcement of his departure, River Island also said Ben Lewis, who is related to founder and owner Bernard Lewis, will return to the position of CEO with immediate effect. Clive Lewis, the son of the founder, will also take on his previous role as non-executive chair with immediate effect.
Ben Lewis, who previously held the CEO position for nearly a decade before stepping down in 2019, said: “I am excited to be rejoining River Island at such a pivotal time.”
He added: “Richard has built a great team, and I look forward to working with them to continue to develop the business and capture the many opportunities ahead.”
Bradbury, who had served as its CEO until 2010, rejoining River Island in December 2022, added: “It has been a great honour to have worked in this amazing business twice. The River Island team is incredible, and during the last two years we have achieved so much together to position the business for its next phase. I know [it] will be in strong and capable hands under the experienced leadership of Ben.”
After swinging to a loss in 2023, River Island reportedly last month drafted in consultants from AlixPartners to focus on profit improvement.
Italian hatmaker Borsalino is diversifying by introducing a capsule collection of glasses. It is Borsalino’s first foray in the eyewear segment since it was bought in 2018 by Haeres Equita, the investment fund led by Philippe Camperio. Borsalino had developed a line of glasses in the 2000s, and this time it has partnered with emerging brand Ophy Eyewear, creating an exclusive collaboration.
Borsalino will drop a collection of glasses with Ophy Eyewear in spring – Borsalino
“The collaboration with Ophy marks a new milestone in our brand’s growth,” said Mauro Baglietto, CEO of Borsalino, in a press release. He added that this is a “new chapter in Borsalino’s quest for creative synergies, as it continues to promote a dialogue between tradition and innovation.”
Ophy is an emerging Italian eyewear brand founded in 2018 by Sicilian designer Placido Minissale, an architecture enthusiast who designs his collections with a contemporary approach, deconstructing the forms of classic eyewear.
Borsalino and Ophy have developed a capsule collection of four models called ‘Jean’, ‘Alain’, ‘Ingrid’ and ‘Marcello’, previewed at the Mido eyewear trade show held in Milan on February 8-10. In the press release, Borsalino described them as “glasses that strike a perfect balance between contemporary design and timeless style” with their “essential geometric lines and distinctive details.”
The cellulose acetate frames are available in black and in dark or light brown tortoiseshell, and are all decorated with the golden Borsalino logo. The line will be commercialised at a retail price of €330 from end of March and April via Borsalino retailers and duty-free stores and the brand’s e-shop, as well as selected eyewear specialists worldwide.
In the last few years, Borsalino has dropped a number of collaborations, notably with long-established brands. Recently, it partnered with iconic Neapolitan tie brand E. Marinella, and with century-old Italian jewellery brand Damiani. In 2023, Borsalino created capsule collections with Saint Laurent, Elie Saab and Chloé.
The Hugo Boss group has renewed until 2029 the license agreement for the Boss and Hugo childrenswear collections with French company CWF (Children Worldwide Fashion), the group’s licensee for over 15 years.
Hugo Boss has renewed its kidswear license deal with CWF until 2029 – HUGO BOSS
The deal includes the Boss Newborn, Boss Infant Boy, Boss Kid Boy and Boss Kid Girl lines, covering the 0-16 age group, and the Hugo Boy and Hugo Girl lines for 4 to 16-year-olds. CWF will take care of the design, production and worldwide distribution of the lines’ apparel, footwear, underwear and hosiery.
“As the European market leader in high-quality children’s fashion, CWF is the right partner for us to further leverage the potential of Boss and Hugo in the kidswear segment in the years to come,” said Daniel Grieder, CEO of Hugo Boss.
CWF was founded in 1965 and is based in Les Herbiers, France. Its portfolio includes one own brand and 13 licences for brands in the premium and luxury childrenswear segment. The company has over 900 employees, and in 2024 it distributed approximately 8 million units in 83 countries via 2,000 stores, including 350 department stores, 30 leading e-tailers, and 70 stores of the Kids Around chain, the group’s multibrand childrenswear retailer.