Italian Textile, Fashion Supply Chain Has Found Its Sweet Spot in M&A and Aggregation

MILAN — The wave of consolidation in Italy’s supply chain is not showing any signs of a slowdown.

At a time of uncertainty and volatility marked by the swift downturn in luxury consumption seen since the last quarter of 2023, smaller suppliers in the downstream end of the fashion manufacturing pipeline are at risk of losing ground.

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Small and medium-size companies make up the majority of Italy’s 62,000 fashion firms, according to Confindustria Moda, forming the backbone of Made in Italy production, which entrepreneurs are increasingly willing to protect via M&A activity, partnerships and deals to reach common goals.

The trend, which emerged in the immediate post-pandemic years, has altered the landscape of the country’s pipeline. It is now less reliant on tiny, family-owned businesses with little managerial and financial resources to deal with luxury juggernauts, their primary clients, as well as to face the challenges ahead, including policymakers’ mandates on enhancing the sustainability practices of the fashion and textile sectors.

“The supply chain’s control operated by big groups — when handled with transparency — represents a strong advantage because it tends to get rid of bad practices sometimes rooted [in the industry],” said Luca Sburlati, chief executive officer of Pattern, an Italian manufacturing pole. “Clients and big brands should consider a fair reward of the manufacturing pipeline and [better] allocation of profits to avoid the ‘price war’ in the supply chain that comes to the detriment of quality.”

Inside a Pattern-owned manufacturign plant
Inside a Pattern-owned manufacturing plant.

Last month in its latest M&A activity, the publicly listed Pattern, which operates in the prototyping and production of fashion collections for a range of luxury brands, bought out the storied knitwear specialist Umbria Verde Mattioli for 20 million euros, bulking up its division in that product category, which already comprises the SMT, Zanni and Nuova Nicolo companies.

Pattern joins other players active in the same space. In more ways than one, Italy’s fashion system has proven to be inventive, with conglomerates that group supplier companies under a single umbrella being formed over the past 10 years.

In addition to Pattern, other examples include Gruppo Florence, a 670-million-euro group currently comprising 26 manufacturers, and Holding Industriale, founded in 2008 by Claudio Rovere with a 12-enterprise portfolio and sales of 350 million euros in 2023.