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Primark plans major Italian expansion

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Primark’s international expansion programme continues apace as the value fashion/lifestyle retailer grows in Italy, announcing a further €40 million (£34 million) investment with five new stores planned for Rome, Biella, Perugia and two in Naples.

Lo store di Torino – Primark Turin

The new stores will a create 700 new jobs and take its Italian tally to 26 locations across the country.

As part of the latest expansion Primark will enter three new cities: Biella (Gli Orsi shopping centre), Perugia (Collestrada shopping centre) and Naples (Grande Sud Retail Park and La Cartiera shopping centres). 

And “following the success of Primark Roma Maximo and Roma Est”, which opened in 2020 and 2021 respectively, the retailer is bringing a third store to ‘Caput Mundi’.

Each of the five new stores will offer the brand’s wide of fashion, beauty and homeware products and will also feature self-service checkouts alongside traditional cashier checkouts.

Primark pointed out that the latest  announcement follows its €50 million investment in Italy in November 2023, which included five new stores in Turin, Livorno, Salerno, Cosenza and Genoa. A further new store in Parma was also announced that year.

Luca Ciuffreda, director of Primark Italy said: “In just nine years, we’ve expanded to 18 stores across 10 provinces and there’s so much more potential…. we’re not stopping here — stay tuned, because there’s even more to come.”

Primark’s investment in Italy is part of the retailer’s ambitious international growth plans to expand across new and existing markets — currently the retailer has 462 stores across 17 markets.

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Prada CEO Andrea Guerra says uncertainty triggered by tariff war is concerning

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By

Ansa

Translated by

Nicola Mira

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May 14, 2025

“I’m not concerned by tariffs, but by the uncertainty that this [tariff war] has created. It’s clear that we’re heading for less than wonderful times, but we have the conditions for doing well,” said Andrea Guerra, CEO of the Prada group, speaking at the Family Business Forum held in Arezzo, Italy.

Andrea Guerra – Courtesy of Prada

“Of course young people are leaving Italy, the important thing is that they come back eventually, it’s clear that it’s good for them to go. I think the really big opportunity is finding people who have been out [of the country] and bringing them back,” he added.

“We’ve come to a generation that no longer cares whatever someone in America might say. My children have a different perspective, they look to see if someone walks the walk as well as talking the talk. They reason differently, and the world is in their hands, in the hands of the 30-35-year-olds, whatever Mr Trump says,” said Guerra.

“In four to five months we will begin a journey with a label, [Versace], that has been one of the founders of luxury fashion in Italy. We’re talking about an exceptional name that surely has lost some of its shine, but over the course of one to five years we will try to understand how far we can take it again,” added Guerra. “In the luxury sector, patience is not a complementary ingredient, it’s an essential one, as are the calm and tranquillity of starting a fresh journey in the right way,” he concluded.

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12 bids filed for French womenswear chain Jennyfer, including by Beaumanoir, Pimkie and Celio

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Nicola Mira

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May 14, 2025

May 13 was the deadline for potential buyers of French fashion chain Jennyfer to file their bids. Jennyfer, which has 999 employees, was placed in judicial liquidation while continuing to trade on April 30, and FashionNetwork.com has learnt from sources close to the matter that 12 bids for the chain have been put forward, most of them for a partial acquisition. The bids will be officially presented to Jennyfer’s employee representatives at a committee meeting scheduled on May 15. Jennyfer, whose main consumer targets are teenagers and young women, was placed in receivership in 2023. In summer 2024, it was sold to two of its senior executives, Yann Pasco and Jean-Charles Gaume, backed by Shanghai Pure Fashion Garments Co. Ltd., a Chinese manufacturer producing for Jennyfer.

Last year, Jennyfer changed logo and name, dropping the words ‘don’t call me’ – Jennyfer

Jennyfer, which has been allowed to continue trading until May 28, currently runs 130 directly operated stores in France (plus 53 affiliated ones), and approximately 40 outside France. A store fleet that has attracted several potential buyers, including some big names in French retail.

FashionNetwork.com has learnt that Brittany-based group Beaumanoir (owner among others of Cache Cache, Bonobo, La Halle, and Boardriders) would like to buy 26 Jennyfer stores. “The units in question are positioned in strategic locations that would allow the Beaumanoir group to continue to extend the retail footprint of its existing brands,” Beaumanoir told FashionNetwork.com. The group’s bid reportedly means that 160 jobs would be saved. Beaumanoir is also interested in buying the rights to the Jennyfer brand, to have the option of subsequently relaunching it. 

A joint bid has been put forward by fashion retailers Celio and Pimkie, which are said to have agreed to acquire approximately 50 stores, the majority of them for Pimkie, which could still operate them under the Jennyfer name. Over 300 jobs would be involved in this bid. After an organisational overhaul, Pimkie has recently claimed to have found new momentum. Menswear retailer Celio would instead have the opportunity of expanding its fleet of ‘twin stores’ combining the Celio and Be Camaïeu brands, by adding seven new addresses, as Celio told FashionNetwork.com.

Jennyfer

Other bids relate only to Jennyfer’s inventory, notably by inventory clearance specialists like Noz, which in the past acquired the stock of several struggling brands, notably Minelli, Olly Gan, and Esprit. Finally, a few bids relate to a limited number of Jennyfer stores only.

All the bids will be examined by the Bobigny trade court on May 28. Until then, Jennyfer stores will continue to operate, but the brand’s e-shop has been closed.

Jennyfer deployed a recovery plan last year, which included revamping its brand image and broadening the consumer target, but in the last nine months the chain’s owners have failed to make the recovery a reality, penalised by “skyrocketing costs, slumping purchasing power, changes in the apparel market and increasingly aggressive international competition.”

Jennyfer was founded 40 years ago, and in 2023 it filed a redundancy plan that related to 75 positions at headquarters and logistics.

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Red Luxury buys men’s jewellery brand Le Gramme, plans London, NY stores

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May 14, 2025

Red Luxury, the watches-jewellery group founded in Paris in 2012 by Romain Bénichou and David-Emmanuel Cohen, has acquired French men’s jewellery brand Le Gramme. Le Gramme was founded in 2012 by Adrien Messié and Erwan Le Louër, and specialises in silver men’s bracelets named after their weight in grams. Le Gramme went into receivership in October 2023, and was liquidated in December 2024.

A bracelet by Le Gramme – DR

“Le Gramme has all the attributes of a major label: a strong identity, a clear positioning and a loyal clientèle. We will give [Le Gramme] the means to achieve a new dimension,” said Bénichou, president of Red Luxury and now also president of Le Gramme.

The brand’s new owners have drawn up plans to expand its footprint both in France and abroad.

“An ambitious expansion strategy is already under way, and we plan to soon open flagship stores in Paris, London and New York, strengthening the brand’s high-end positioning,” said Red Luxury in a press release, without providing details of the future store’s locations.

To steer Le Gramme on its new course, Red Luxury has named as managing director Mehmet Kartal, former head of fine and costume jewellery and watches at Parisian department store Printemps.

Le Gramme is currently available at 200 stores in 25 countries. In 2020, the brand boosted its retail presence in Paris with concessions at Le Bon Marché, Printemps Haussmann, and Galeries Lafayette Haussmann. Le Gramme has approximately 20 employees, and is chiefly active in France and the USA.

Red Luxury designs, produces and distributes proprietary brands like Ginette NY and licensed ones like Vilebrequin (watches) and Sonia Rykiel. Its latest published results date back to 2022, when it recorded a revenue of €40 million, and set itself the goal of reaching €100 million in 2027.

In July 2023, Red Luxury sold a minority stake to London investment fund Ewo Capital.
 

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