Fashion
India’s Page Industries sees steady Q2 growth despite soft margins
In the first half (H1) of fiscal 2026 (FY26), the company’s performance was stronger. Revenue grew 3.3 per cent to ₹26,704 million, and sales volumes increased 2.23 per cent to 115.2 million pieces. EBITDA rose 9.4 per cent to ₹5,742 million, and PAT expanded 9.7 per cent to ₹3,956 million, reflecting healthier profitability.
Page Industries has posted modest Q2 FY26 growth, with revenue up 3.6 per cent to ₹12,909 million (~$145.5 million) and sales volumes rising 2.5 per cent, though EBITDA and PAT saw slight declines.
H1 performance was stronger, with revenue up 3.3 per cent and healthier margins.
The company expects consumption to improve with GST 2.0, lower lending rates, and e-commerce growth.
The company noted that expected improvements in consumption—driven by GST 2.0, lower lending rates, rapid e-commerce expansion, and strengthening quick-commerce channels in metros and other cities—are likely to support future growth. The company added that it maintains a leading position in modern retail, and early consumer response to its new bonded-tech product line has been promising, Page Industries said in a press release.
“Our continued focus on operational efficiency and cost optimisation measures while investing in product innovation and distribution expansion has contributed to strong operating margins. While revenue growth was moderate this quarter, we are well positioned to capitalise on the improvement in demand in the coming months,” said VS Ganesh, managing director, Page Industries Limited.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
Kashmir Box evolves into ‘House of Brands,’ eyes global retail expansion
Published
November 20, 2025
Kashmiri heritage fashion and lifestyle retailer Kashmir Box has announced a shift in its business strategy and will evolve into a global ‘House of Brands,’ fuelled by an investment round and FDI (Foreign Direct Investment).
“Our expansion is not just about geography; it is about value creation,” said Kashmir Box’s co-founder and CEO Moheet Mehraj in a press release. “The gradual transition to a House of Brands began in 2019. We are building deeper equity in specific categories. We have proven that an impact-driven model can be financially robust, achieving 4x growth while staying profitable. With the influx of this strategic funding, we are now ready to take this blueprint to the world.”
The business will put its recent investment funds towards expanding its physical retail footprint across the world to connect global shoppers with Kashmiri heritage. In its House of Brands model, Kashmir Box will serve as a parent entity and manage a curated portfolio of brands which celebrate Kashmir’s cultural and aesthetic traditions.
The business will pursue strategic online and offline retail partnerships in India and the Middle East before foraying into new international markets. A flagship store in Delhi NCR is set to launch soon and Kashmir Box plans to open first international retail boutique in the UAE by June, 2026.
“Kashmir Box is proving that heritage, when paired with innovation and design excellence, can fuel a global luxury movement,” said BeyondSeed’s co-founder and CEO Kuldeep Mirani. “Their House of Brands model unlocks unprecedented value for artisans and consumers alike, and BeyondSeed is proud to support this next phase of global expansion.”
Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
Fashion
Frasers Group buys Glasgow’s Braehead mall as its acquisition spree continues
Published
November 20, 2025
It’s rare that a month goes by without news of Frasers Group buying another business and the latest announcement came on Thursday with the acquisition-hungry retail giant buying Braehead Shopping Centre.
It’s just a month since the group bough a majority stake in American luxury retailer The Webster and three months since it revealed it now had a stake in leisure specialist We Do Play.
But as well as buying such businesses it’s also been increasing its ownership of malls and retail parks. So why Braehead in particular?
Well, the Glasgow destination is Scotland’s largest retail and leisure destination with annual footfall of over 15 million visitors and totalling over 1 million square feet.
The company said the acquisition reinforces its “commitment to investing in high-potential retail destinations. Property acquisitions such as this one play a key role in Frasers Group’s Elevation Strategy, adding Braehead — which serves the UK’s largest retail spend catchment outside of London — to a strong and growing property portfolio across the UK”.
A few months ago, former owner SGS said Braehead had attracted a record number of visitors in the year ending June, with a year-on-year increase in footfall and spend by 4% and 3%, respectively, “outperforming regional and industry benchmark figures”.
And its tenants had committed to investing £10 million in their stores over the course of 2025 up to that point, “driven by demand from both new entrants and reinvestment from existing brands”, with 16 tenants renewing or extending leases so far in 2025.
CEO Michael Murray added on Thursday that the purchase “cements the group’s position as a leading operator and champion of physical retail destinations while unlocking greater opportunities to serve communities with the best brands, environments and experiences possible”.
Claire Barber, CEO of SGS UK Retail, also said: “The sale of Braehead was always part of our strategic plan and through active management, we have delivered substantial value enhancement and successfully stabilised the asset, attracting new brands and increasing its relevance and appeal to customers. We have created a strong platform from which Frasers Group can continue to drive growth, leveraging its retail expertise to further unlock Braehead’s potential as one of the leading retail destinations in Scotland.
“In light of strong leasing performance and the significant progress made in discussions with brands, we continue to see significant value creation opportunities in the group’s remaining three assets.”
Those assets are Lakeside Shopping Centre in Essex, Victoria Centre in Nottingham and Harlequin Watford.
Braehead had been owned by SGS since it took it over after the collapse of Intu Properties in 2020. There have been rumours for a while that it wanted to sell the centre (as well as rumours that Frasers has also been eyeing a big stake in Manchester’s Arndale mall).
While the purchase price wasn’t disclosed, the company certainly has enough cash to make big-league acquisitions. Back in July it announced new funding facilities that gave it access to borrowings of up to an aggregate amount of £3 billion.
Braehead isn’t the first Scottish shopping destination Frasers has acquired. It also bought Overgate Dundee back in 2023 and has invested heavily in it since then.
It has bought others across the UK too. Just over a year ago it confirmed full ownership of the 600,000 sq ft Princessshay Shopping Centre in Exeter, the 350,000 sq ft Fremlin Shopping Centre in Maidstone, Kent, and the 65,000 sq ft Olympus Centre retail park in Quedgeley, Gloucester.
That was just a month after it bought the St Nicholas Arcade (St Nics), the 160,000 sq ft shopping centre in Lancaster. It has also taken on Doncaster’s Frenchgate shopping centre, The Mall in Luton and Junction 32 on the outskirts of Leeds.
Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
Fashion
Lyle & Scott celebrates terrace football culture with a Fly Nowhere collab
Published
November 20, 2025
Football (at all levels) and its culture have long been close to Lyle & Scott’s heart. And the journey continues with the premium fashion brand’s latest collab with Fly Nowhere, the full-service creative studio that “bridges sport, arts and passion”.
Kindred spirits combine Lyle & Scott’s natural presence “in both teamwear and terraces” with Fly Nowhere’s reputation for “pushing the boundaries of modern football identity… rooted in art and storytelling”.
The result is reimagined Lyle & Scott casual pieces “that echo the longstanding influence of UK terrace culture upon the world” with a mashed-up capsule made up of engineered knitwear, football jerseys, graphic long sleeves, track jackets and collaborative accessories.
Each piece has been developed to “exist comfortably in both fashion spaces and cultural football circles”, with cuts and detailing that reference “warm-up kits, bootleg club gear and early 2000’s terrace fashion”.
The colour palette blends violet blues, neon purples, iced greys, and saturated cobalt tones, along with a tartan created for Lyle & Scott’s 150th anniversary last year.
The Lyle & Scott x Fly Nowhere collection is available from today (20 November) online at lyleandscott.com and footballcafe.shop. It coincides with the opening of the new Football Cafe Imports shop in New York and an accompanying exhibition ‘Clobber: 150 years of style inspired by UK subculture and football’.
Copyright © 2025 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.
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