Fashion
Italy’s Zegna H1 profit surges as DTC drives 82% of branded sales
The profit rose 53 per cent to €47.9 million (~$56 million), lifting the profit margin to 5.2 per cent from 3.3 per cent. Adjusted EBIT was €68.7 million, with a 7.4 per cent margin (8.4 per cent in H1 2024).
Ermenegildo Zegna Group has posted revenues of €927.7 million (~$1,085.4 million) in H1 2025, down 3.4 per cent as wholesale streamlining offset 4.2 per cent DTC growth, now 82 per cent of branded sales.
Profit surged 53 per cent to €47.9 million (~$56 million), with gross margin at 67.5 per cent.
Zegna brand stayed resilient, Thom Browne fell, and Tom Ford Fashion posted losses.
The DTC revenues grew 4.2 per cent (6.1 per cent organic) to €698 million, reaching 82 per cent of branded revenues (76 per cent in H1 2024), and wholesale branded declined 27.1 per cent (26.5 per cent organic) to €154.2 million, Zegna Group said in a press release.
The gross margin improved to 67.5 per cent (+110 basis points), aided by the higher DTC mix, meanwhile the operating profit was €61.3 million (6.6 per cent margin) vs €73.1 million (7.6 per cent). The net financial items and foreign exchange (FX) turned positive €6 million (vs negative €24.8 million), aided by put-option remeasurement and a favourable US dollar/euro move.
Brand and segment wise, Zegna brand revenues were €570.4 million, up 0.8 per cent (2.6 per cent organic). Thom Browne recorded revenue of €129.2 million, down 22.5 per cent (21.7 per cent organic). Tom Ford Fashion saw a revenue of €152.7 million, up 2.8 per cent (3.8 per cent organic), and Textile with €67.1 million revenue was down 6.6 per cent.
Zegna delivered adjusted EBIT of €94.4 million, with margins rising to 14.3 per cent (up 150 basis points), supported by stronger operating leverage and disciplined cost management. Thom Browne generated €4.5 million, with margins falling to 3.5 per cent from 12.1 per cent, pressured by lower revenues and upfront costs tied to new DTC store openings. Tom Ford Fashion reported a loss of €19.4 million, with margins at –12.7 per cent, reflecting heavy investments in retail expansion, talent, IT systems, and organisational infrastructure.
By region, revenues in the Americas rose 6.8 per cent (9.3 per cent organic) to €262.7 million. Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) generated €328.9 million, a decline of 2.3 per cent (1.9 per cent organic). Greater China fell 16.2 per cent (14.7 per cent organic) to €223.1 million, while the Rest of Asia-Pacific (APAC) edged up 1.4 per cent (3.4 per cent organic) to €111.5 million.
The capital expenditure totalled €54 million, directed mainly towards DTC network growth and the new shoe plant in Parma (Italy). Trade working capital improved to €441.8 million, supported by reduced inventories and receivables following wholesale rationalisation. The net financial indebtedness stood at €92.1 million, remaining broadly stable.
“Our first-half 2025 results reflect the Group’s strategic decision to invest in the DTC store network and capabilities across our three brands, while continuing to support projects that fuel our long-term growth ambitions,” said Ermenegildo Gildo Zegna, Group chairman and CEO. “In this context, we are pleased with the operating results reported by the Zegna segment where stronger operating leverage and disciplined execution led to an improvement of the adjusted EBIT margin by 150 basis points. This strong performance helped balance the impact of the strategic transformation underway at Thom Browne and Tom Ford Fashion.”
“With the strength of our Filiera, the authenticity of our brands, and—above all—the clarity of our vision and the talent of our team, we remain on track to achieve our 2027 targets, despite sector and currency headwinds,” added Zegna.
The management reiterates confidence in achieving 2027 targets, citing the stronger Zegna segment profitability, continued DTC investments, and the group’s integrated Italian supply chain (Filiera). Near-term headwinds include sector softness and currency volatility as Thom Browne and Tom Ford Fashion continue strategic transitions.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
EU-funded RegioGreenTex pushes 25 SME pilots to commercialisation
RegioGreenTex was one of the first projects funded under the Interregional Innovation Investments (I3) Instrument programme that focused on process, service and business model innovation, developing advanced textile recycling technologies, regional recycling hubs, and a digital ecosystem for matchmaking and capacity building.
Five regional hubs mapped SME needs and developed services and value chains as well as tools that keep helping SMEs, an official release said.
The RegioGreenTex Digital Tool keeps matchmaking, sharing trainings and hosting the participants’ knowledge base.
The Waste Wizard shows how artificial intelligence-enhanced matchmaking can link leftover textiles with the right reuse or recycling routes.
From recycled-content yarn processes (Tintex) to Recycrom low-impact dyeing (Officina39), ultrasonic quilting for full recyclability (Rovitex) and hybrid recycled-fibre yarns (Hilaturas Mar), the pilots showed concrete, repeatable ways to cut impact without losing performance.
The hubs are now open for collaboration, the digital tools are live and the pilot portfolio is primed for investors and adopters.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Higher energy costs to slow India FY27 growth to 6.5%: ICRA
While trends in high frequency indicators for January-February 2026 appear favourable, the heightened uncertainty around the duration of the Middle East conflict casts a shadow on the near-term macroeconomic outlook for India amid high import dependency for items like crude oil, natural gas and fertilisers, it noted.
India’s FY27 GDP growth is likely to slow to 6.5 per cent from the projected 7.5 per cent in FY26 owing to the impact of higher energy prices and concerns around energy availability, ICRA Ratings said.
The heightened uncertainty around the duration of the Iran war casts a shadow on the near-term macroeconomic outlook for India.
If the conflict lasts longer, the adverse effects could widen across sectors.
If the conflict lasts for an extended period, the adverse implications of the same could widen across sectors, amid an uptick in input costs and the consequent impact on profitability of the India corporate sector.
Amid the projected uptrend in the consumer price index-based inflation in FY27 with risks tilted to the upside, ICRA Ratings expects an extended pause on the policy rates by the central bank’s monetary policy committee in the fiscal despite the anticipated softening in the GDP growth. However, it expects the Reserve Bank of India to continue to intervene on the liquidity front during FY27.
The available data for January–February FY2026 indicate a positive trend across most non-agricultural indicators, with the year-on-year performance of 12 out of 18 indicators improving compared to the third quarter of FY26, while the remaining six deteriorated.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
Indonesia’s apparel exports at $8.7 bn; 56% shipments to US
Indonesia’s apparel exports rose modestly to $8.705 billion in 2025 from $8.316 billion in 2024, reflecting gradual recovery.
The US remained dominant, accounting for over 56 per cent of shipments, highlighting growing market dependence.
While Japan, South Korea and Europe offered stability, exports stayed concentrated in key products and segments.
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