Fashion
Global cotton prices ease as key benchmarks slip in October

The December NY/ICE contract fell below key support levels near 66 cents per pound, reaching new life-of-contract lows below 65 cents before a mild recovery above that mark in recent sessions.
The A Index also eased slightly from 78 to 76 cents per pound. In China, the CC Index (3128B) dropped from 98 to 94 cents per pound in international terms and from 15,250 to 14,750 RMB per ton domestically, with the RMB stable around 7.12 RMB/USD, according to Cotton Incorporated’s Monthly Economic Letter – Cotton Market Fundamentals & Price Outlook for October 2025.
Cotton benchmarks weakened in October 2025, with the NY/ICE December contract dipping below 65 cents per pound before recovering slightly.
The A Index fell to 76 cents, while China’s CC Index declined to 94 cents.
Indian and Pakistani prices remained stable, cushioned by steady local currencies.
Softer trend signals ongoing global demand sluggishness across key cotton-producing and consuming regions.
In India, Shankar-6 cotton prices held steady near 78 cents per pound, or about ₹55,000 per candy, supported by a stable rupee at ₹88 per USD.
Meanwhile, Pakistan’s spot rates remained around 68 cents per pound, or 15,600 PKR per maund, with the PKR steady near 281 PKR/USD.
The overall decline across global benchmarks suggests continued demand sluggishness and seasonal market softness as the 2025 harvest season progresses.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KD)
Fashion
Quiz Clothing plans store expansion after improved results

Published
October 16, 2025
Recent news that Quiz Clothing has returned to growth (after a very bruising period in its history) was encouraging. Even better, this week it said it’s back in store expansion mode.
Following its wide-reaching operational streamlining strategy introduced in February, the Scotland-based group is planning between five and 10 new UK store openings over the next 12 months.
It unveiled the prototype for these new stores last month with the Braehead, Glasgow, store set to be its design blueprint. And it’s now looking for “a focused number of new sites to showcase the brand’s extended product offering”. The company is looking at regions across the UK but with a focus on London and the south.
CEO Sheraz Ramzan said: “We have evolved our retail formula and, encouraged by a strong uplift in [like-for-like] retail sales over the summer, we are confident the new strategy is working. The plan is to now expand in the right locations through units that provide the best possible backdrop for our extended product offering. This will be underpinned by an improved capex and return model with more flexible lease terms.”
The Glasgow store covers 1,800 sq ft and has a “softer design concept framed by white and gold fittings”. It introduces an “elevated and aspirational environment for customers, with in-store screens for video-led campaign content and enhanced digital offerings”.
Extended product ranges including coordinated separates, contemporary tailoring and day-to-evening dresses also expand the brand’s appeal and the company said “customer reaction has been very positive, with attention to fits, extended sizing options and improved fabrications helping to drive a 20% uplift in sales across the business in September”.
Retail growth is also “being supported by international franchise partners, an enhanced concession model and expansion of online partnerships”.
The brand currently has 40 stores in the UK and a network of UK and international franchise and online partners. And last month its said it saw an average 14% uplift in like-for-like store sales during July and August. In the same period, online sales also grew 5% like-for-like.
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Fashion
Frasers Group dives headfirst into agentic commerce with Commercetools link-up

Published
October 16, 2025
Frasers Group on Thursday announced a deal that means shoppers will be able to “discover and purchase products from Frasers Group’s retail ecosystem directly within AI shopping channels such as ChatGPT” via the Agentic Commerce Protocol (ACP).
It’s linking up in an exclusive European retail partnership for agentic commerce with Commercetools and becomes the first European retailer to deploy the firm’s full agentic commerce suite. For those who’ve not heard of it, Commercetools is a major AI-first commerce platform for global enterprises.
It means shoppers of retail brands such as Sports Direct, Flannels and Frasers get a variety of benefits, including “richer personalisation” and being able to complete purchase via ChatGPT.
And the company said it makes it a sector leader in AI-first shopping with the link-up forming “a key part of Frasers Group’s broader AI strategy to reimagine the customer journey across its brand and retail ecosystems”.
“The digital customer ecosystem is evolving faster than ever before, and so are customers’ expectations,” said David Clark, chief customer officer at Frasers Group. “With this partnership, [we’re] now at the forefront of this evolution to deliver enhanced customer experiences across ChatGPT, Gemini and Perplexity – including native checkout in ChatGPT. This marks a shift in our digital capabilities, delivering an even more intuitive and personalised shopping experience for our consumers. Crucially, it builds on our group-wide investment into cutting-edge MACH Architecture to lead the group into a new era of seamless agentic commerce.”
And Commercetools CEO Andrew Burton added that “the future of commerce is agentic, and it’s arriving faster than most retailers realise. Frasers Group understands that when customers start delegating shopping to agents or doing their shopping through an LLM, the retailers who will win will be those ready to deliver seamless, trusted, consistent experiences through those agents. As our exclusive European retail launch partner, [it’s] setting the standard for how established retailers can move at the speed of this transformation—preparing to deploy agentic commerce responsibly, securely, and at scale across a diverse brand portfolio.”
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Fashion
Giorgio Armani: Giuseppe Marsocci appointed Chief Executive Officer

Published
October 16, 2025
Giorgio Armani has always valued executives who truly ’embrace’ a company’s vision and do not depart after just two or three years to chase the next highest bidder- each time with a lavish severance. The appointment, announced a short while ago, of Giuseppe Marsocci as CEO of the Armani Group with immediate effect (together with his simultaneous entry to its Board of Directors) reflects this philosophy. As confirmed in a statement by the Board of Directors of Giorgio Armani SpA, Marsocci brings more than 35 years of international experience in the fashion and luxury sector, 23 of them within the Armani Group, in roles of increasing responsibility in Milan and abroad; most notably in New York, where he served as CEO of the Americas.
Over the past six years, from 2019 to the present, the Piedmontese executive has reported directly to Giorgio Armani, serving as the group’s deputy general manager and global chief commercial officer. He has sat on numerous corporate boards and served as chairman of Giorgio Armani Retail Srl, as well as CEO and/or president of various overseas subsidiaries of the group.
Proposed unanimously by the Armani Foundation, Marsocci will report to the board chaired by Leo Dell’Orco, on which Silvana Armani will serve as vice-chair. In the coming weeks, the company notes, the Board of Directors of Giorgio Armani SpA “will take its final shape upon completion of probate procedures and execution of the will, but it was decided to move ahead now by appointing the CEO in advance, to inaugurate the new course without any interruption in the management of the company,” the fashion group’s statement reads.
Leo Dell’Orco, chairman of the company’s board, highlighted Marsocci’s key qualities in the statement: “His international professional experience, deep knowledge of the sector and of the company, discretion, loyalty, and team spirit, together with his closeness in recent years to Mr Armani, make Giuseppe the most natural choice to ensure continuity along the path mapped out, built and perpetuated for 50 years by the founder,” in keeping with the company’s founding principles and the enduring direction set by the Piacenza-born designer, who passed away earlier this month.
Giuseppe Marsocci expressed his gratitude “for the trust placed in me. This is a project of extraordinary importance, focused on continuity and on enhancing one of the world’s most prestigious Made in Italy brands which, for clients and the market, has transcended the status of a simple label to rightfully become a lifestyle brand.”
‘The objective is demanding,” continued the new CEO, “all the more so in a luxury market engaged in deep self-reflection, but it is achievable thanks to the fundamental contribution of an outstanding network of clients, suppliers, partners, and passionate colleagues around the world, particularly in Milan, many of whom have been close to Mr Armani for many years. Together we will do everything to perpetuate his model of enterprise and his idea of beauty, and we will carry it forward with consistency and sensitivity, taking into account the values and expectations of a changing world.”
Giuseppe Marsocci, a 61-year-old from Turin with a degree in Economics and Business from the University of Turin, has prior experience in sales, marketing and brand management at the Turin-based GFT Group, a licensee of Valentino, Dior, Ungaro, Stone Island and Armani. Other notable roles include five years at Fila Sport (HDP Group) as head of international business development.
Marsocci joined the Armani Group in 2003, taking on roles of increasing responsibility both at the Milan headquarters and in the group’s overseas subsidiaries. These included: commercial director of Armani Collezioni; CEO of the Swiss subsidiary (formerly the logistics and customer service hub for all overseas markets); global director for diffusion/wholesale lines; and, for more than ten years in the New York office, first as president of Trimil US, the Zegna/Armani joint venture, before serving as CEO of the Americas from 2014 to 2019.
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