Fashion’s ‘Reverse Inflation’ Has Cost Hikes Following Pricing Gains

Fashion is backing its way into the new world order.

Inflation usually starts with rising costs on raw materials and other essentials that eventually force companies to bring higher prices to consumers.

More from WWD

But this time through, the process has been operating out of sync. Many brands, particularly on the higher end of the spectrum, were able to hike their prices last year, supported by a strong consumer and a scarcity of merchandise given the COVID-19-induced supply chain backups.

That made for an industry filled with hot companies with better margins and led to more interest in the consumer sector (as evidenced by the string of fashion IPOs).

Now costs are going up in earnest with inflation at a 40-year high, with prices on all goods and services in the U.S. rising 8.5 percent over the past year, bringing the sector back down to earth.

BMO analyst Simeon Siegel calls the progression “reverse inflation.”

It’s not just a novel situation, but a disorienting one for investors who fell in love with the peppier look retail had last year with sweeter margins and strong growth prospects.

“When costs go up, retailers and brands and investors are trained to believe there’s room to raise price,” Siegel said. “The problem is, everyone [already] did.”

Over the long run, he described it as “net neutral” for retailers, but acknowledged “it feels negative now.”

That is particularly true at Gap Inc., which last week cut its sales outlook and shook up leadership at the struggling Old Navy. The retailer said it has “taken a more aggressive approach to assortment balancing resulting in increased promotional levels primarily at Old Navy.”

That sounds a lot more like the familiar retail narrative defined by price promotions than the power-margin story the industry was settling into last year.

“People are asking, ‘Is Old Navy the beginning of the end?’” Siegel said.

That might depend on how other chief executive officers across the industry react to the growing pressures — on cotton costs, on freight, on labor and more.

Many, including John Idol, CEO at Capri Holdings, and Chip Bergh, CEO of Levi Strauss & Co., have been vocal about being willing to run more profitable, healthier businesses even if that means giving up some size or accepting slower sales growth.

But how many will be able to hold the line as pressures increase and Wall Street continues to seek growth?