Fashion
China’s Anta Sports has offered to buy Pinault family’s 29% Puma stake, sources say
By
Reuters
Published
January 8, 2026
China’s Anta Sports Products has offered to buy 29% of struggling German sportswear firm Puma from France’s Pinault family, three people with knowledge of the talks said.
Anta made the offer a few weeks ago and has secured financing for the acquisition should a deal go ahead, said two of the sources. However, the situation had stalled, one added.
Artemis had been expecting any offer for its Puma stake to exceed 40 euros a share, a fourth person with knowledge of the matter told Reuters. All four sources spoke on condition of anonymity because the matter is private.
Artemis is run by Francois-Henri Pinault, chairman of Kering , which includes fashion house Gucci among its brands. The Pinault family acquired its Puma stake from Kering when it transformed the conglomerate into a pure luxury player in 2018.
Artemis and Puma declined to comment. Anta did not immediately reply to a request for comment. Puma’s market capitalisation was 3.3 billion euros ($3.85 billion) at Wednesday’s close, down around 50% from the same date last year as the brand faced a steep decline in sales.
Puma’s new CEO Arthur Hoeld set out his turnaround strategy in October after sneaker releases like the Speedcat failed to generate the hype executives hoped for, while sales have fallen as shoppers opted for rivals such as Adidas, On and Hoka.
Hong Kong-listed Anta, which has a track record of acquiring and revamping Western sports and lifestyle brands, had been exploring a bid for Puma, a source close to the matter said in November. In 2019, it led a consortium to buy Amer Sports, owner of racquet maker Wilson and mountain sports specialist Salomon.
A senior source close to Artemis said in September the Pinault family would not sell their Puma stake at the then current market valuation but conceded the stake was “non-strategic.” Puma shares have since risen by 15%.
Artemis, which controls Kering as well as auction house Christie’s and Hollywood talent agency CAA, has been under investor scrutiny due to the debt it built up as Pinault sought to diversify away from Gucci during a slide in luxury sales.
© Thomson Reuters 2026 All rights reserved.
Fashion
Vietnam’s GDP growth beats forecasts despite US tariff pressure
Vietnam’s economy has expanded by 8.5 per cent year on year in the fourth quarter of 2025, outperforming expectations and lifting full-year GDP growth to 8 per cent, according to analysis by BMI, a Fitch Solutions company. Despite falling short of the government’s 8.4 per cent target, the result exceeded BMI’s earlier 7.4 per cent forecast.
International trade was the key growth driver. Exports and imports surged 16.3 per cent and 17.1 per cent respectively in 2025, a notable rebound despite Vietnamese shipments to the US facing 20 per cent tariffs imposed under President Donald Trump. Manufacturing and construction together contributed around 3.5 percentage points to overall growth, helped by strong real estate activity and robust goods production.
Looking ahead, BMI now expects GDP growth of about 7.2 per cent in 2026, revising up its earlier 7 per cent estimate. Investment growth between 2023 and 2025 has nearly doubled, expanding productive capacity, BMI said in a release.
In parallel, general secretary To Lam has approved reforms aimed at liberalising the private sector, including preferential credit for small and medium enterprises and enhanced tax deductions for research and development.
While growth is unlikely to reach the government’s longer-term 10 per cent ambition during 2026-2031, faster reform implementation could lift near-term output. However, risks remain balanced. A sharp property market correction or a potential increase in US tariffs to 40 per cent, if Vietnam is accused of trans-shipping Chinese goods, could weigh heavily on growth.
Vietnam’s economy grew strongly in 2025, with Q4 GDP up 8.5 per cent, lifting full-year growth to 8 per cent and beating BMI forecasts despite missing the 8.4 per cent target.
Trade and investment drove growth even as US tariffs weighed.
GDP is seen growing 7.2 per cent in 2026, supported by private-sector reforms, though tariff risks persist.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (HU)
Fashion
Germany’s employment steady at 46 mn in November 2025
Without seasonal adjustment, the number of persons in employment rose slightly by 7,000 month- on-month. This increase was weaker than the average rise typically recorded in November between 2022 and 2024, signalling softer labour market momentum towards the end of the year, Destatis said in a press release.
On a year-on-year (YoY) basis, employment in November 2025 was 51,000 lower than in November 2024, representing a decline of 0.1 per cent. This continued the mild downward trend observed since July, with similar annual declines recorded between August and October.
Germany’s employment held steady at around 46 million people in November 2025, with seasonally adjusted figures virtually unchanged MoM, according to Destatis.
Employment was 0.1 per cent lower year on year, extending a mild downward trend.
Unemployment rose to 1.64 million, up 11.6 per cent from a year earlier, while the adjusted jobless rate remained stable at 3.8 per cent.
Unemployment, however, showed a clearer increase. The labour force survey indicated that 1.64 million people were unemployed in November, up by 171,000, or 11.6 per cent, compared with a year earlier. The unemployment rate rose to 3.7 per cent, up 0.4 percentage points YoY.
After adjusting for seasonal and irregular effects, unemployment stood at 1.67 million, an increase of 7,000 from October. The adjusted unemployment rate remained unchanged at 3.8 per cent, suggesting limited short-term movement despite rising annual pressures.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
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