Luxury Stocks Look Ready for a Stronger Year After Their ‘Detox’

Luxury Stocks Look Ready for a Stronger Year After Their ‘Detox’

Luxury Stocks Look Ready for a Stronger Year After Their ‘Detox’

(Bloomberg) — Optimism is building that a second-half rally in Europe’s luxury-goods sector can extend into the new year as signs point to better times for the continent’s flagship equity sector.

Upbeat third-quarter earnings, a recovering Chinese market and a wave of newly installed creative directors have all spurred confidence that the post-pandemic hangover could soon be over, leading a slew of analysts to turn more positive in recent weeks.

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“We are entering 2026 hopeful that the worst is over,” said UBS Group AG analyst Zuzanna Pusz. “Although the recovery is still at an early stage, there are reasons to be more hopeful amid recovering Chinese demand and an increased level of creativity in the industry, which could bring consumers back to stores.”

Luxury stocks had a rough ride in the first half of 2025 as concerns over slowing demand in China and Donald Trump’s tariffs weighed heavily on sentiment. A Goldman Sachs Group Inc. basket of European names fell 9% through the end of June, only to rally 12% since. The question for investors now is whether the rebound has room to run.

For UBS’s Pusz and others, the signs favor the bulls. After a year of stagnation for the industry, Pusz projects a return to 5% organic sales growth. That’s in line with other brokers such as JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Chiara Battistini, who for the first time in two years expects the sector to report increased sales numbers.

Oddo BHF strategist Thomas Zlowodzki this week upgraded European consumer goods to neutral from underweight due to his bullishness about the outlook for luxury.

“We saw some signs of life in the third quarter,” wrote HSBC Holdings Plc analysts including Erwan Rambourg and Anne-Laure Bismuth. “What we are now anticipating is proper reversion to growth for the industry in 2026.”

All global regions are expected to grow in the mid-single digits next year, with a major contribution coming from China. Authorities in Beijing are mulling further stimulus to meet economic growth targets and revive consumer demand.

Chinese shoppers account for more than a quarter of annual luxury sales and their purchases are projected to grow by about 6% in 2026, a sharp turnaround from the 5% decline recorded this year, analysis by UBS shows. That improvement will be particularly crucial to brands most exposed to this group of customers, like Moncler SpA and Swatch Group AG.

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