If Gucci's creative reset and commercial discipline arrest the decline, Kering can stabilize revenue by mid 2026, recover 80 to 120 bps of group EBIT margin, and prevent further market share losses while preserving brand equity.
Kering replaces Gucci's chief with Francesca Bellettini, signaling an urgent turnaround as Gucci's sales fell 21 percent in 2024 and another 25 percent in H1 2025. With Demna set to debut his vision on 23 September in Milan and the Valentino buyout deferred, Kering is concentrating capital and leadership to stabilize its largest brand and protect group margins.
Next 30 to 90 days will focus on stabilizing internal operations, lockstep coordination between Gucci merchandising and communications around the 23 September show, and rapid SKU and buy recalibration for Holiday. Expect near term sales volatility as wholesale partners reassess orders; decisive guidance from Kering could prevent 5 to 10 percent incremental order cuts versus plan.
Luxury demand remains bifurcated: China recovery is uneven with weaker aspirational spend, the Americas are stabilizing at lower run rates, and Europe is increasingly tourist driven. Gen Z and younger Millennials are trading toward craftsmanship and brand substance with lower logo intensity, while sustainability and repair services are becoming hygiene factors. Versus peers, LVMH and Hermes maintain pricing power and low markdown exposure; Prada Group and Miu Miu are capturing fashion momentum. Kering's concentration risk in Gucci has amplified group volatility, making swift execution and disciplined capital allocation critical to defend share.