Fashion
Germany’s LuxExperience appoints Francis Belin as new CEO of Mytheresa
Francis Belin brings extensive and diverse luxury experience and proven leadership in driving international growth. He also brings a deep understanding of high net worth individuals worldwide. Most recently, as President Asia Pacific and overlooking global Luxury and Asian Art at Christie’s, Francis has achieved numerous milestones, cementing Christie’s position as the global market leader. He has played a key role in securing some of the most important collections and works of Art. Francis has been pivotal in several important strategic initiatives, including acquisitions such as Gooding & Company, a leading car auction house in California. Prior to that, he held various roles at Swarovski and Richemont, having started his career as a management consultant at McKinsey & Company.
Mytheresa parent LuxExperience has appointed Francis Belin as CEO effective January 01, 2026.
Belin, formerly president Asia Pacific at Christie’s, brings deep global luxury and HNWI experience.
He succeeds Michael Kliger, now LuxExperience Group CEO.
Belin will lead Mytheresa’s existing leadership team and drive the platform’s next phase of global expansion.
Francis Belin graduated from ESSEC in France and holds a diploma in International Management & Psychology from the University of Mannheim in Germany.
Following the tenure of Michael Kliger, who over the last 10 years successfully transformed Mytheresa into the leading luxury multi-brand digital platform, Francis Belin will succeed him as Mytheresa CEO and drive Mytheresa’s continued global expansion while delivering exceptional value for its customers and partners. Francis will report to Michael, who in his role as LuxExperience Group CEO, will continue to lead the overall strategy at Mytheresa, NET-A-PORTER, MR PORTER and YOOX. Francis will lead the current Mytheresa leadership team, including the Chief Commercial Officer, the Chief Growth & Site Management Officer, the Chief Marketing & Customer Officer, the Chief Buying & Group Fashion Ventures Officer and the Chief Creative Officer, who will all continue with their current responsibilities.
Michael Kliger, Chief Executive Officer of LuxExperience, said, “I am extremely delighted to appoint Francis Belin as the new Mytheresa CEO. With Francis we have found an exceptional leader, who is renowned for his customer-centric focus, global mindset, delivery of excellent results and collaborative leadership style. I am looking forward to supporting Francis as he leads the next exciting chapter for the Mytheresa business.”
Francis Belin adds, “I am truly honored to take on the lead of Mytheresa. I am deeply impressed by the robust business model and strong brand positioning that Mytheresa has established under Michael’s leadership. I look forward to working alongside the talented team to unlock Mytheresa’s next phase of global growth as an industry leader in the luxury market.”
Note: The headline, insights, and image of this press release may have been refined by the Fibre2Fashion staff; the rest of the content remains unchanged.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (RM)
Fashion
Indian textile players hail Budget’s ESG & circularity thrust
Industry stakeholders said the Budget signals a transition away from volume-driven growth towards a value-led, low-carbon and traceable textile ecosystem, supported by initiatives such as the Text-ECO initiative, the National Fibre Scheme, Samarth 2.0, and sustainability-linked capacity building.
Indian textile industry has welcomed the Budget for its strong focus on sustainability, circularity and responsible manufacturing.
Industry leaders said the measures signal a shift towards value-led, low-carbon and traceable growth.
Initiatives such as Text-ECO, Samarth 2.0 and the National Fibre Scheme are seen as strengthening competitiveness, skills and sustainable sourcing across the value chain.
Shruti Singh, Country Director–India at Canopy Planet, said, “This Budget creates enabling conditions for India to lead in manufacturing of low carbon textile fibres and paper packaging. Investing in circular material ecosystems can meet business ESG goals, create domestic fibre security and global export competitiveness,” she said. Singh added that as demand grows across textiles, packaging and paper-based applications, the real test will lie in responsible sourcing. “For companies linked to forest-based supply chains, this is a moment to strengthen traceability, reduce deforestation risk, and move sustainability from intent to execution,” she noted.
From a fashion brand perspective, Amar Nagaram, co-founder of Virgio, said the Budget clearly links sustainability with innovation and design-led growth. “India’s next phase of growth will be driven by the convergence of design, technology and sustainability. The emphasis on sustainable textiles, MSME scale-up, AI-led innovation and design education reflects a long-term vision to move Indian manufacturing up the global value chain,” he said. Nagaram added that the policy direction supports responsible production, data-driven decision-making, and positions India as a credible global hub for future-ready fashion and lifestyle businesses.
At the manufacturing end, Sabhari Girish, chief sustainability officer at Sulochana Cotton Spinning Mills, Tiruppur, said that sustainability and circularity receiving prominence in the Budget is encouraging for the sector. “Circularity and sustainability taking a prominent spot in the Budget speech is a positive signal. The announcement of Text-ECON will help Indian textile companies showcase their environmentally friendly contributions to the world,” he said. Girish noted that upcoming FTAs with the UK and EU are expected to sharpen the focus on sustainability, adding that Samarth 2.0 will play a critical role in skilling the workforce with updated technologies across the value chain, from fibre to garments.
He also pointed out that the National Fibre Scheme could enhance the quality and global competitiveness of Indian-made fibres, though capital-intensive modernisation will require a clear funding roadmap. “Adopting best practices needs more support, and a proper roadmap will help indigenous fibres take centre stage,” Girish said, while welcoming the proposal to upgrade sports goods manufacturing as a boost for R&D and technical textiles.
Industry experts said the Budget’s sustainability-led approach aligns closely with stricter environmental regulations in markets such as the EU and UK, and could strengthen India’s positioning as a responsible, compliant and future-ready sourcing destination.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
Fashion
US inks reciprocal trade agreement with Guatemala
“President Trump’s leadership is forging a new direction for trade that promotes partnership and prosperity in Latin America, further strengthening the American economy, supporting American workers, and protecting our national security interests,” said Ambassador Greer in a USTR release.
USTR Jamieson Greer and Guatemala’s Minister of Economy Adriana Gabriela Garcia recently signed the US-Guatemala Agreement on Reciprocal Trade.
The agreement addresses trade barriers facing American workers and producers, expands and solidifies markets for US exports and strengthens strategic economic ties in the Western Hemisphere, Greer said.
US trade body NCTO welcomed the signing.
The agreement addresses trade barriers facing American workers and producers, expands and solidifies markets for US exports and strengthens strategic economic ties in the Western Hemisphere, he said.
“This agreement builds on our long-standing trade relationship and shared interest in reinforcing regional supply chains,” he added.
The key terms of the agreement includes breaking down non-tariff barriers for US industrial and exports, advancing trade facilitation and sound regulatory practices; protecting and enforcing intellectual property; preventing barriers for digital trade; improving labour standards; strengthening environmental protection; strengthening economic security alignment; and confronting state-owned enterprises and subsidies.
Guatemala has committed to take steps to restrict access to central level procurement covered by its free trade agreement commitments for suppliers from non-free trade agreement partners, permitting exemptions as necessary, in a manner comparable to US procurement restrictions.
Welcoming the announcement, National Council of Textile Organizations (NCTO) president and chief executive officer Kim Glas said the agreement marks an important step toward strengthening the US textile supply chain.
“Guatemala is a key partner in the CAFTA-DR [Dominican Republic-Central America-United States Free Trade Agreement] region, with nearly $2 billion in two-way textile and apparel trade. Together, the region operates as an integrated co-production platform that is essential to the US textile supply chain,” he noted.
The US-Western Hemisphere textile and apparel supply chain remains ‘a critical strategic alternative’ to China and other Asian producers, he added.
Fibre2Fashion (DS)
Fashion
Canada could lift GDP 7% by easing internal trade barriers
Canada could boost long-term economic output by nearly 7 per cent if it dismantles policy-related barriers that restrict the movement of goods, services, and labour across provinces, according to new analysis by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Despite being one of the world’s most open economies globally, Canada’s internal market remains fragmented, with non-geographic barriers equivalent to an average 9 per cent tariff nationwide.
Canada could raise long-term GDP by nearly 7 per cent by removing internal trade barriers that restrict interprovincial movement of goods, services, and labour, new analysis shows.
Policy-related frictions act like a 9 per cent internal tariff nationwide.
Liberalising high-impact sectors could deliver productivity-led gains worth about C$210 billion (~$153.04 billion).
Model-based estimates suggest that fully removing these barriers could add around C$210 billion (~$153.04 billion) to real GDP over time, driven largely by productivity gains rather than short-term demand, IMF said in a release.
While full liberalisation will be gradual, targeted reforms in high-impact sectors could deliver sizable benefits and improve economic resilience. Analysts argue that stronger federal–provincial coordination, wider mutual recognition of standards and credentials, and transparent benchmarking of internal trade barriers will be key to turning Canada’s fragmented domestic market into a more integrated national economy.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (HU)
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