Fashion
Russell & Bromley physical stores at risk in potential takeover
Published
January 12, 2026
Recent news that Next was eyeing an acquisition of Russell & Bromley has been added to with reports that it has teamed up with a stock clearance specialist and that the premium footwear chain’s stores could disappear from the high street.
The company is reportedly working with Retail Realisation on its offer for the retailer, a fact that reinforces Next’s interest in the IPR rather than the physical business.
Retail Realisation is a liquidation with links to Modella Capital, the company that controls TOFS and Claire’s UK, both of which are said to be in danger of administration filings.
Not that Next is a shoe-in as the new owner with its proposal said to be one of a number currently being considered by Russell & Bromley’s adviser Interpath.
Acquisition-hungry Next is also believed to be looking at a takeover deal for another key name in UK footwear, the distressed LK Bennett business.
Sky News cited “industry sources” saying the link-up between Next and Retail Realisation underlined its “interest in Russell & Bromley’s brand rather than its store estate or stock”.
Family-owned Russell & Bromley currently trades from 37 stores and employs more than 450 people. It’s run by fifth-generation family member Andrew Bromley and has Billie Piper as the face of the brand.
If Next bought only the IPR, it would leave the stores without the right to carry the Russell & Bromley name, reports said.
None of the parties involved have commented so far.
Copyright © 2026 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
Fashion
India apparel exporters rattled by looming 500% US tariffs
Industry executives said US brands that had earlier been looking to expand their India sourcing footprint are now stepping back. Several exporters have received messages from buyers seeking clarity on whether the steep duty would apply, and in some cases asking who would bear the cost if it is imposed. With no clear answers, buyers are increasingly shifting sampling and production discussions to alternative manufacturing hubs in Asia.
Indian textile exporters face fresh uncertainty ahead of the US fall–winter buying season as fears of a punitive 500 per cent tariff unsettle buyers.
US brands are delaying or diverting orders, intensifying pressure on exporters already hit by earlier duties.
With Tiruppur reporting sharp order declines, industry leaders warn prolonged uncertainty could drive large-scale sourcing shifts away from India.
The risk is particularly acute because the US is India’s largest single apparel and textile market. In 2024–25, India exported textiles and garments worth about $37 billion, with nearly 28–30 per cent of that destined for the US. A 500 per cent duty, exporters warn, would make Indian products unviable overnight, effectively shutting India out of the US market.
The industry is already under strain from the earlier 50 per cent US tariff imposed in August. To keep shipments moving, exporters have been forced to offer deep discounts, divert surplus capacity to domestic brands, and route some export orders through neighbouring countries. Even with these adjustments, overall textile exports slipped 2.27 per cent in April–November 2025, while apparel shipments grew only marginally by 2.28 per cent, underscoring how fragile demand has become.
The knitted garment hub of Tiruppur, which accounts for nearly 90 per cent of India’s knitwear exports, is feeling the pressure most sharply. Exporters there report that US orders for the coming fall season are already down by about 50 per cent, as buyers test suppliers in other countries to hedge against tariff risk.
Companies that have begun production for all-season orders now fear that a 500 per cent levy would amount to a de facto embargo. With US buyers already shifting sampling programmes abroad, industry leaders warn that a prolonged standoff could trigger a large-scale migration of business away from India, putting factory utilisation, jobs and investment plans at serious risk just as the peak export season approaches.
Talk of a fast-tracked US–India trade deal has added another layer of uncertainty to the market. Negotiators from both sides have been working to stabilise bilateral trade ties ahead of the US election cycle, with India pushing for the removal of punitive duties on key labour-intensive sectors such as garments, home textiles and footwear. While officials have signalled progress on a limited trade package, exporters say the absence of a clear timeline is keeping buyers cautious. Until a formal agreement or tariff rollback is announced, US brands are continuing to diversify sourcing away from India to avoid the risk of sudden cost shocks in the middle of the buying season.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
Fashion
2026 to be challenging for Bangladesh exporters: CPD expert
Bangladesh may struggle to meet its export target for the current fiscal, he noted.
“Competition in European and other markets has intensified as China and India aggressively capture orders displaced by US tariffs,” he was cited as saying by domestic media.
The persistent decline in exports in Bangladesh is a warning signal, according to Mustafizur Rahman, distinguished fellow at the Centre for Policy Dialogue.
He has cautioned that 2026 would be challenging for exporters due to graduation from the least developed country status and the scheduled national election.
Bangladesh may struggle to meet its export target for the current fiscal, he noted.
Innovation, reduced lead times, reducing the cost of doing business and product and market diversification could have a significant bearing on exports, he added.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Adidas challenges players to ‘Choose a Side’ as Yamal and Bellingham front latest Predator and F50 campaign
Published
January 12, 2026
Do you choose chaos or control? That’s the question behind the latest Adidas football boot spring/summer campaign for its latest Predator and F50 products.
Consumers are asked that same question, inviting players to choose either chaos (via Lamine Yamal and F50), or control (Jude Bellingham and Predator), with both Adidas styles receiving “striking” colour updates for spring/summer 2026.
“More than just a boot launch”, the campaign “captures a playful rivalry that has taken over the game”, asking footballers around the world to “choose one” – either Team Predator or Team F50.
While the new Predator Elite FT is designed for “control, enabling players to execute with precision in high-pressure moments”, the F50 Elite is for those “who break with convention, players who push themselves to the limit to create unexpected brilliance”.
Of course, the campaign features two of football’s biggest names – Yamal (“chaos personified”) and Bellingham (“the master of control”), starring in a film that “brings to life picking between electrifying pace and game-breaking skill or calmly commanding any situation on the pitch”.
Predator will be also worn on pitch by star players including Bellingham, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Pedri, Alessia Russo and Aitana Bonmati while, alongside Yamal, F50 will be put through their paces by players including Ousmane Dembélé, Florian Wirtz, Vicky Lopez and Trinity Rodman.
Sam Handy, GM Football at Adidas, said: “Through this campaign, we’re igniting a conversation that sits at the heart of football culture. These boots are about more than just innovation; they represent the two fundamentally opposing forces that define the modern game: raw speed and ultimate control.”
The F50 Elite (£235/€270) and Predator Elite Fold-Over Tongue (£245/€280) models are available to purchase from today, in-store and online.
Copyright © 2026 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
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