Fashion
VSP Vision appoints Nicola Zotta as head of both Marchon and Marcolin
Published
January 12, 2026
US eyewear group VSP Vision, headquartered in Rancho California, has announced the appointment of Nicola Zotta as president of eyewear and managing director of both Marchon Eyewear and Marcolin. Following VSP Vision’s acquisition of Marcolin, completed last month, Zotta will lead the integration of Marcolin and Marchon, two groups that are global leaders in the design, production, and distribution of eyewear.
“Nicola uniquely combines Italian roots with leadership experience in the US, a proven ability to drive growth, and a deep understanding of, and alignment with, our commitment to all stakeholders,” said Michael Guyette, president and CEO of VSP Vision. “In this new chapter for our eyewear business, we are confident that his guidance and vision will enable us to bring our customers the very best that Marchon and Marcolin can deliver together.”
Zotta succeeds Fabrizio Curci, who has chosen to step down after serving as CEO and general manager of Marcolin since June 2020. To facilitate the transition, Curci will work alongside Zotta as an adviser in the coming months.
In addition, Thomas Burkhardt, Marchon’s president since 2022, has also decided to leave his position and will continue as an adviser to Nicola Zotta, focusing on the integration of the respective brand portfolios of Marcolin and Marchon.
“Under Fabrizio’s leadership, Marcolin has accelerated its growth through the strategic expansion of its brand portfolio, improved operational efficiency and a strong focus on commercial excellence,” Guyette added. “We are grateful for the contribution he has made over the years and intend to build on the foundation laid during his tenure.”
Reporting directly to Guyette, Zotta returns to VSP Vision after serving as CEO of Artsana Group since 2022. A seasoned executive in the eyewear industry, Nicola Zotta was President of Marchon from 2016 to 2022, having previously held key roles at the company, including vice president and managing director for EMEA and APAC from 2009. Before joining Marchon, he gained more than a decade of experience at Safilo, where he held several leadership positions.
“It is an honour to lead two world-class eyewear companies: the combination of their strengths creates an exceptional portfolio of luxury, lifestyle, and performance brands,” said Zotta. “By bringing together complementary capabilities and distinctive strengths, we are ideally positioned to continue offering eyewear of the highest standards of design and quality, underpinned by craftsmanship and innovation.”
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Fashion
Birkenstock reports strong sales amid calls for more clarity
By
Bloomberg
Published
January 12, 2026
Birkenstock Holding Plc reported strong sales figures for the final months of 2025 as demand stays robust for its high-end sandals and clogs, despite the impact of a weaker US dollar and tariffs.
Revenue rose to €402 million ($470 million) in the three months to December 30, roughly in line with analyst expectations and 18% higher in constant currency terms than a year earlier, according to preliminary results for the company’s fiscal first quarter. Birkenstock had disappointed investors last month when it forecast a slower pace of sales growth of as much as 15% in fiscal 2026.
Chief executive officer Oliver Reichert is trying to win over investors with his slow-but-steady approach to growth, making sure consumer demand for Birkenstock’s footwear always exceeds its production. That’s allowed the company to raise the average selling price of its shoes and avoid markdowns.
He’s been criticised, though, for not giving enough information on Birkenstock’s performance and expectations. That’s one reason the stock has recently traded below its 2023 initial public offering price of $46, despite strong growth and profitability. The shares fell 28% in 2025.
“It’s clear that investors are not responding well to the ‘trust us, we know what we’re doing’ messaging from the company,” Williams Trading analyst Sam Poser said in a note last month. He has called Birkenstock “one of the best, if not the best, run companies” in his coverage, though he renewed his criticism of its financial messaging last week and cut his price target to $49 from $51.
Birkenstock’s first-quarter sales grew 11% on a reported basis, weighed down by the weaker US dollar compared to prior year, it said. Birkenstock reports earnings in euros but pulls in about half of its revenue in the US dollar. That situation- and the tariff burden- will continue in 2026, when Birkenstock expects adjusted earnings to exceed €700 million, it said last month.
Birkenstock is currently taking part in the ICR Consumer Conference in Orlando and plans to host a capital markets day on January 28. It will offer full first-quarter results on February 12, it said.
Fashion
Goldman, JPMorgan, and UBS lead Golden Goose’s buyout debt
By
Bloomberg
Published
January 12, 2026
Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., and UBS Group AG are leading a debt financing deal backing a Chinese firm’s acquisition of Italian high-end sneaker producer Golden Goose Group SpA.
The deal could total between €800 million to €900 million ($935 million to $1.05 billion) of debt and other lenders are expected to join the bank group, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified because the deal is private.
HSG, formerly known as Sequoia Capital China, agreed to buy the maker of $500 dollar distressed sneakers from private equity firm Permira Holdings LLP, in a deal said to value the company at slightly over €2.5 billion, Bloomberg reported in December.
The financing is expected to come in the form of high-yield bonds, possibly floating-rate notes, in line with Golden Goose’s previous debt, the people said.
It is due to launch for investors to buy toward the end of the first quarter, they added, and could attract global high-yield investors, including Asian funds, seeking to play in a high profile brand backed by an Asian owner, one of the people said.
Singapore-based investment firm Temasek Holdings Ltd will take a minority stake in Golden Goose, and Permira will also maintain a minority shareholding.
Representatives for Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, UBS, and Permira declined to comment. Golden Goose, HSG and Temasek didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment.
The deal is one of the most prominent purchases of a European luxury brand by a Chinese buyer, and one of the biggest in the sector this year, ahead of Prada SpA’s roughly €1.25 billion acquisition of fashion house Versace.
Fashion
India apparel exporters rattled by looming 500% US tariffs
Industry executives said US brands that had earlier been looking to expand their India sourcing footprint are now stepping back. Several exporters have received messages from buyers seeking clarity on whether the steep duty would apply, and in some cases asking who would bear the cost if it is imposed. With no clear answers, buyers are increasingly shifting sampling and production discussions to alternative manufacturing hubs in Asia.
Indian textile exporters face fresh uncertainty ahead of the US fall–winter buying season as fears of a punitive 500 per cent tariff unsettle buyers.
US brands are delaying or diverting orders, intensifying pressure on exporters already hit by earlier duties.
With Tiruppur reporting sharp order declines, industry leaders warn prolonged uncertainty could drive large-scale sourcing shifts away from India.
The risk is particularly acute because the US is India’s largest single apparel and textile market. In 2024–25, India exported textiles and garments worth about $37 billion, with nearly 28–30 per cent of that destined for the US. A 500 per cent duty, exporters warn, would make Indian products unviable overnight, effectively shutting India out of the US market.
The industry is already under strain from the earlier 50 per cent US tariff imposed in August. To keep shipments moving, exporters have been forced to offer deep discounts, divert surplus capacity to domestic brands, and route some export orders through neighbouring countries. Even with these adjustments, overall textile exports slipped 2.27 per cent in April–November 2025, while apparel shipments grew only marginally by 2.28 per cent, underscoring how fragile demand has become.
The knitted garment hub of Tiruppur, which accounts for nearly 90 per cent of India’s knitwear exports, is feeling the pressure most sharply. Exporters there report that US orders for the coming fall season are already down by about 50 per cent, as buyers test suppliers in other countries to hedge against tariff risk.
Companies that have begun production for all-season orders now fear that a 500 per cent levy would amount to a de facto embargo. With US buyers already shifting sampling programmes abroad, industry leaders warn that a prolonged standoff could trigger a large-scale migration of business away from India, putting factory utilisation, jobs and investment plans at serious risk just as the peak export season approaches.
Talk of a fast-tracked US–India trade deal has added another layer of uncertainty to the market. Negotiators from both sides have been working to stabilise bilateral trade ties ahead of the US election cycle, with India pushing for the removal of punitive duties on key labour-intensive sectors such as garments, home textiles and footwear. While officials have signalled progress on a limited trade package, exporters say the absence of a clear timeline is keeping buyers cautious. Until a formal agreement or tariff rollback is announced, US brands are continuing to diversify sourcing away from India to avoid the risk of sudden cost shocks in the middle of the buying season.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KUL)
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