Fashion
Ssense files for bankruptcy protection
Published
August 28, 2025
Ssense is reportedly filing for bankruptcy protection following a move by creditors to initiate the sale of the Canadian luxury retailer, as per a letter sent to employees on Thursday.
In an email sent to staff, the Montreal-based company said the protection move follows the filing of an application to sell the company by its main creditor, without consent from the retailer, under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA), according to a B0F report.
Chief executive Rami Atallah explained that Ssense will in response file its own CCAA application within 24 hours “to protect the company, keep control of our assets and operations, and fight for the future of the company,” according to the memo.
“Recently, we have worked closely with financial and legal advisors to develop our own restructuring plan to stabilize the business and rebuild it for the future,” said Atallah, as cited by BoF.
“The court will decide which path we follow, likely within the next week. Until then, our focus remains clear: protect value, stabilize the business, and set up a restructuring plan to secure our future.”
It is unknown which creditor pulled the sale trigger.
The retailer’s CEO went on to explain the headwinds facing his company following the Trump administration’s recent trade policies, which have imposed 25 percent tariffs on goods imported from Canada.
Ssense also cited the closure of the “de minimus” exemption, which allowed packages worth less than $800 to enter the U.S. duty free as a hit operationally for the company.
The bankruptcy protection news follows layoffs at Ssense earlier this year, including 100 positions in May, as the firm tries to lower overheads amid the luxury slowdown affecting demand for high-price goods, especially more younger, aspirational luxury shoppers — Ssense’s target market.
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Fashion
American Eagle Outfitters raises annual sales forecast
By
Reuters
Published
December 2, 2025
American Eagle Outfitters raised its annual comparable sales forecast on Tuesday, betting on marketing-driven demand for its apparel and accessories during the holiday season, sending its shares up about 15% after the bell.
Marketing campaigns and newer collections of clothing, along with a focus on high-earning consumers, have helped the company offset losses from the broader retail slowdown and budget-conscious consumers pulling back on discretionary spending amid inflationary prices and trade-policy-driven uncertainty.
The company has been trying to boost demand through its marketing initiatives, including the “Great Jeans” denim campaign with actress Sydney Sweeney, a tie-up with NFL player Travis Kelce’s clothing brand Tru Kolors, and partnerships with tennis player Coco Gauff and actress Jenna Ortega.
The company sees annual comparable sales rising in the low single digits, compared to its previous expectations of about flat growth.
The company posted quarterly net revenue of $1.36 billion, compared with analysts’ estimates of $1.32 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Quarterly comparable sales rose 4%, compared with analysts’ estimates of a 2.4% rise. The company sees current quarter comparable sales rising between 8% and 9%, compared with analysts’ estimates of a 2.2% rise.
© Thomson Reuters 2025 All rights reserved.
Fashion
Global manufacturing momentum weakens in November
Although three of the five PMI components continued to reflect improving operating conditions, employment and stocks of purchases contracted. Production and new orders rose for the fourth straight month, supported by consumer and intermediate goods, but investment goods saw renewed declines.
Thailand, India, Vietnam, Colombia, Pakistan and the US led global output rankings. The euro area and the UK registered mild growth, Japan contracted, and China saw output stagnate. Export demand remained a drag: global new export orders fell for the eighth consecutive month, though at the slowest pace in the current downturn. Developed markets such as the US, Japan and the euro area saw declines, while emerging markets, including mainland China and India, recorded increases.
Global manufacturing growth softened in November as the PMI slipped to 50.5, reflecting slower gains in output and new orders and a return to job losses.
Consumer and intermediate goods drove expansion, but investment goods weakened.
Export demand continued to contract, while business sentiment improved slightly yet stayed below average.
Inflation pressures persisted, especially in developed markets.
Business confidence edged up to a five-month high but stayed below its long-run average for the twentieth consecutive month. Brazil, Colombia and Thailand were the most optimistic, with the UK and the US also ranking high. The new orders-to-inventory ratio reached an eight-month peak, signalling tentative resilience ahead.
Employment fell for the second time in three months, with job cuts in China, the euro area and the UK offset by gains in the US, Japan and India. Backlogs of work continued to shrink, marking forty-one straight months of decline. Inventory, purchasing activity and input stock indices all pointed to contractions.
Input costs and factory-gate prices rose again, with inflation pressures sharper in developed markets. Supply chains remained strained as average vendor delivery times lengthened for the eighteenth month running.
“The JP Morgan global manufacturing output PMI fell back 0.3-points to 51.2 in November, a level consistent with modest but resilient growth in global industry. In our forward-looking indicators, the future output PMI made a reassuring 1.4-point rebound after dropping in October, though this was tempered somewhat by a fall in the new orders index to a four-month low. By economy, output in the US and India are still expanding at solid rates, whereas the performances in China and the rest of the G-4 remain lacklustre in comparison,” Maia Crook, Global Economist at JP Morgan, said in a release.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KD)
Fashion
Chinese group JD.com secures majority stake in holding company MediaWorld–Saturn
By
Ansa
Published
December 2, 2025
Chinese group JD.com has acquired an 85.2% stake in Germany’s Ceconomy, the holding company that controls the MediaMarkt (MediaWorld in Italy) and Saturn retail chains, in a deal worth €2.2 billion, according to several specialist trade publications.
Around 60% comes from JD.com’s takeover bid, with the remainder resulting from an agreement with Convergenta, the Kellerhals family’s holding company, which will retain a 25.35% stake. The company announced it in a statement.
Germany’s federal antitrust authority gave its approval in September, noting that JD.com had previously been ‘active in Germany only to a very limited extent.’
However, according to Ceconomy, completion of the public tender offer is still subject to approval by the relevant foreign trade authorities and to approval under the EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation. Completion is therefore expected in the first half of 2026.
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Copyright © 2025 ANSA. All rights reserved.
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