Tradeinn, a Spanish company specialising in the online sale of sporting goods, increased its revenue by 5.6% in the 2025 financial year to €585 million, up from €554 million in the previous financial year.
David Martín, founder and CEO of Tradeinn – Tradeinn
The Girona-based company frames its 2025 results as part of a “growth trajectory that has been reinforced by its commitment to catalogue specialisation, technological innovation, and adaptation to new consumer habits.”
Over the past year, Tradeinn dispatched a total of 9.2 million parcels to customers in 190 countries. The company notes that 85% of its sales are generated outside the Spanish market, further consolidating its international position. Logistically, the group dispatched more than 8.4 million parcels from its operations centre in Celrà (Girona), while over 700,000 originated from its logistics hub in Germany.
“Our evolution reflects a robust model based on specialisation, direct distribution, and the trust of millions of athletes around the world. Our priority is to continue investing in technology, logistics and artificial intelligence to strengthen our competitive agility and optimise our operational processes. Looking ahead to 2026, we are entering a new phase of international consolidation with an increasingly specialised and differentiated value proposition,” said David Martín, CEO and founder of Tradeinn.
The retailer, launched in 2008 as an e-commerce business but with roots in a diving shop founded in the 1990s, employs more than 530 people. Its catalogue features over 3.5 million products from more than 12,500 brands across 18 categories, and its business model is built on direct distribution and acting as the official distributor for various brands. The company says it drives its competitive agility through AI, “applying artificial intelligence solutions for operational process optimisation, advanced inventory management, demand forecasting and the improvement of the customer experience.”
In 2025, the US private equity fund Apollo acquired a 30% stake in Tradeinn, a holding that had been in the hands of Suma Capital and minority shareholders since 2015. Following this transaction, the founder and CEO retained his 70% stake in the company through Didavid Management, which also includes Dídac Lee, co-founder of Galdana Ventures.
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Maybe the economic outlook isn’t as gloomy as some predict, especially for fashion retail. Despite ongoing economic pressures, UK consumers “continue to prioritise fashion spending, with value-led and demand-responsive brands emerging strongest”, a cheerier report from MediaVision claims.
‘Brand search leader’ Next
Analysing real-time consumer search behaviour, tracking how demand shifted during the final quarter of 2025 and identifying the brands best positioned for growth in 2026, step forward Primark, Vinted, Next, M&S and Selfridges, with the first two leading the battle in the ‘affordability’ category.
Over the past quarter, Primark and Vinted emerged as the fastest-growing fashion brands in terms of share of search. Primark led the way with the value retailer increasing its share of search by +0.65 on a search score of 3.88% with Vinted (2.24% brand search) slightly behind at +0.47.
“Their growth highlights a growing consumer preference towards affordability and value, with shoppers increasingly opting either for lower-cost new fashion or turning to second-hand platforms like Vinted as a way to maximise value”, the report said.
Meanwhile, Next “continued to dominate overall brand share of search in Q4 (5.67%/+0.43 increase), “maintaining its position at the top of the market while continuing to grow… maintaining strong consumer interest and engagement heading into 2026”, the report said.
M&S and Selfridges were also given the briefest of mentions, given their share of brand search came into the top five, 2.85%/+0.39, for the former and 1.68%/+0.16 for the latter.
The report also revealed the three big high street names with declining brand searches were led by Sports Direct, whose share of brand search (4.21%) dipped 0.3 year-on-year, followed by TK Maxx (4.06%/-0.19) and John Lewis (3.71%/-0.26).
Louis Venter, CEO at MediaVision said: “Consumer search behaviour is shifting faster than most brands can track, and in fashion, the margin between capturing demand and losing it often comes down to weeks, not months. The quarter reveals a market in motion, with fashion still commanding the majority of share of wallet across retail sectors and high-street fashion dominating at category level.”
Adam Bly, MediaVision growth director added: “Fashion holds a commanding, growing share, even if you were to disregard the short-term spike of Black Friday. Farther down the pecking order ‘nice-to-have’ and ‘need-to-have’ categories battle it out, but it appears that consumers continue to make sure a decent amount of buying power is set aside for Fashion, even whilst tail and headwinds appear to hit other markets with considerable force.”
Luxury skincare brand Genaura has promoted Nicola Young to managing director, moving up from chief marketing officer following the brand’s product launch to market in September.
Genaura
Young’s promotion is underscored by “an impressive career”, which has included senior positions at Carlton Screen Advertising, marketing director at Jazz FM and Magic 105.4FM, and group director of Marketing at radio conglomerate Global Player.
Most notably, her beauty industry involvement included director of Media UK at Estée Lauder Co.
Young said the launch of Genaura “has the potential to revolutionise the beauty and wellness sector… my experience in this field has helped drive the marketing vision so far, and I look forward to progressing even further”.
She added: “Looking to… the growth of Genaura, I am excited to scale and innovate whilst remaining authentic to the scientific background of the product, planning global recognition of this revolutionary ingredient exclusive to Genaura.”
Available in the UK currently, the business has “aspirations for 2026 and beyond… extending skincare products within the range.”
Genaura claims to be a “world first in skincare”, with its Genaura Levagen + Smart Face serum “boasting a powerhouse formula alongside patented technology… creating an ‘age-proofing’ approach to the skin and supporting the skin’s natural barrier function”.
William Costelloe as been appointed creative director of the Paul Costelloe brand following the death of his father in November.
William Costello with his father, Irish designer Paul
“William will lead the development of all the brand’s collections moving forward, championing the values of creativity, quality and craftsmanship laid down by Paul over more than 40 years”, a statement from the house read.
William added: “My father taught me to see fashion through the eyes of an artist; to respect materials, the process, the people. I am honoured to be continuing his legacy, and I approach this role with determination, gratitude and excitement for what lies ahead for the Paul Costelloe brand.”
He was design director to Paul Costelloe for the past seven years, during which time father and son worked hand in hand to develop the seasonal catwalk collections. Alongside Paul, he has also led the design and development of the collections with its retail and license partners globally, including ready-to-wear womenswear and menswear, homewares, bridal, children’s occasionwear, bags and accessories.
Known for his expertise in colour and material, William previously worked as a print and textile designer for Portuguese bedding manufacturer Piubelle and homewares producer Matceramica. He was also a visual merchandiser and stylist for department store La Rinascente in Milan, the same department store Paul worked at early in his career.
The Paul Costelloe AW26 collection, which will officially open London Fashion Week on the 19 February, marks the first collection under William’s leadership as creative director.