Strategic delivery consultancy Newton, which works with a wide range of retailers, has appointed Wil Schoenmakers senior partner, becoming global head of Retail and Consumer Goods.
His hiring “complements… and expedites the expansion and growth of the company globally, positioning the business to capitalise on its competitive advantage when it comes to increasing its presence and offering across broader Europe and North America within the retail and consumer sector”.
Schoenmakers will be responsible for “expanding and evolving” the impact and value that Newton is able to offer clients in Europe and beyond, “helping them solve their most complex challenges”.
He joins with “an extensive understanding of the challenges the sector faces, and experience in building solutions that address them”. He has led a large number of strategically significant projects for clients over many years”.
That’s via a 30-year track record in the global consumer sector, from Procter & Gamble as PA Consulting as a Partner and Global Head for Consumer, Retail and Manufacturing to leading Korn Ferry’s global consulting business for consumer, specialising in organisation and cultural transformation.
Newton MD Steve Phillips said:“His track record within the sector is exemplary and he is committed to spending significant time with clients on the ground to support their strategic delivery and ambitions.”
Schoenmakers added:“Newton already has a huge impact in the consumer goods and retail sector, with a potent mix of a strong culture, bright minds, deep sector insights, a true collaborative spirit and real impact offering huge potential globally.
“We are on an exciting journey to be able to deliver even more impact to current and future clients as true global strategic delivery partners.”
U.S. President Donald Trump‘s initial tariff actions against Canada, Mexico and China sparked a rise in broad market volatility and a rush to take guard against increased ructions across asset classes from stocks to currencies.
The U.S. President’s weekend orders for additional levies of 25% on imports from Mexico and most goods from Canada, as well as 10% on goods from China, jolted markets surprised by the speed and intensity of these moves so soon after his inauguration.
Analysts estimate the tariffs could raise the risk of a sharp slowdown in global growth, resurgent inflation and a pause to Federal Reserve rate cuts, prompting a bout of risk aversion from investors.
The Cboe Volatility Index – an options-based gauge of investor expectation for near-term stock market moves – jumped to a 1-week high of 20.41, before paring gains to trade up 2 points at 18.43. While that is still below the index’s long-term average of 19.4, it is well above its average reading over the past year of 15.8.
Currency markets were also roiled with an across the board rise in implied volatility – a measure of how much the market expects prices to fluctuate in the future. Volatility expectations for currencies directly in Trump’s crosshairs saw the biggest surge, but other major pairs including the euro-dollar saw a rise in expectation for future moves.
One-month implied volatility for the dollar/Mexican peso pair jumped to 15.6, the highest since mid November, and about 3 points higher than its 5-year average. Meanwhile, implied volatility for the dollar/Canadian dollar pair soared as high as 9.3, its highest since November 2022.
While volatility expectations for various assets had ticked up in the days before the tariffs announcement and various currencies had weakened against the dollar on expectations for tariff-related headlines, the intensity of the market reaction to the weekend headlines shows investors were not quite prepared for it, analysts said.
“Generally speaking, investors were not taking Trump seriously or literally … the announcement on Saturday as well as comments after that have compelled investors to reassess the risk,” Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist with payments company Corpay in Toronto, said.
Adding to the uncertainty is the possibility that some sort of deal is arrived at between the U.S. and other countries that allows for tariffs to be averted in a lasting way.
The Mexican peso, which had plunged to a near three-year low against the dollar on news of the impending tariffs, reversed course to trade up 0.5% on the day after Trump said he would pause new tariffs on Mexico for one month.
“The headlines come at you very fast,” Mandy Xu head of derivatives market intelligence at Cboe Global Markets, said. “I think this unpredictability is partly what is driving this huge surge in option volume that we’re seeing so far,” she said.
U.S. footwear Timberland announced on Monday the appointment of Drew Villani to the role of global creative director, marketing.
In this role, Villani is responsible for bringing the VF Corp.-owned Timberland’s creative vision to life across all aspects of brand marketing, including art direction, photography, store design, styling, and video production, according to a press release.
A veteran fashion creative, Villani joins Timberland from fellow American brand Calvin Klein, where he served as senior director, global creative. Before Calvin Klein, the executive worked as a contractor creative director, after working as artistic director at 3.1 Phillip Lim.
In its most recent trading update last month, parent company VF Corp., which also owns Vans, North Face and Dickies, reported sales that beat expectations, a sign that its transformation plan is showing results.
Revenue climbed 2% to $2.8 billion during the company’s fiscal third quarter ended December 28, the company said in a presentation.
Liberated Brands, which until recently operated skateboard and surfing-inspired retail brands including Quiksilver, Billabong and Volcom, has filed bankruptcy as more customers choose “fast fashion” competitors.
Liberated sought court protection in Delaware Sunday, saying it intends to close its stores as part of a wind-down of its North American operations. The company, which had operated the brands under a deal with brand licenser Authentic Brands Group LLC, said it will also seek to sell its international businesses and has closed its corporate offices and laid off nearly 1,400 employees.
The bankruptcy filing caps a rapid rise and sudden fall of a business that was founded in 2019 after Volcom’s management team sold that brand to Authentic, which has acquired several several retail brands through Chapter 11. Liberated listed more than $100 million in liabilities on its Chapter 11 petition and has lined up a $35 million loan to fund the bankruptcy.
Liberated’s revenue increased from $350 million in 2021 to $422 million in 2022, a jump the company attributed to a sharp increase in demand during the Covid-19 pandemic and acquisition of more brand licenses. About half of the company’s income came through retail sales on brand websites and physical stores and selling apparel wholesale to other retailers, according to court documents.
The business expanded in 2023 when Liberated started running several more Authentic-acquired apparel brands, including Billabong, Quiksilver, Roxy, and RVCA. But Liberated CEO Todd Hymel said in a court filing that the company’s fortunes changed as the effects of the pandemic abated and interest rates began to rise, resulting in lower demand for its offerings.
Company management believed the trend would diminish last year but in the past 18 months “the average consumer has shifted their spending away from discretionary products such as those offered by Liberated,” Hymel said. The business was also hurt by a shift to large “fast-fashion” retailers that can sell garments at lower prices and capitalize on so-called micro-trends as opposed to the traditional seasonal retail model, he said.
“Consumers can cheaply, quickly, and easily order low-quality clothing garments from fast fashion powerhouses and have such goods delivered within days,” he said.
Authentic in December terminated Liberated’s North America license for the wholesale businesses of Volcom, RVCA and Billabong after the company failed to make a royalty payment, according to court documents. The license rights to those brands were subsequently transitioned to new operators, Hymel said.
The case is Liberated Brands LLC, number 25-10168, in the US Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.