Luxury’s comeback? Why one leading bank thinks the sector is about to rebound


Luxury’s comeback? Why one leading bank thinks the sector is about to rebound
Luxury’s comeback? Why one leading bank thinks the sector is about to rebound Proactive uses images sourced from Shutterstock

After two years of disappointing growth, a new report from HSBC argues that luxury’s slowdown is ending. The surprising driver is not just China. It is the US consumer, wealth effects from stock markets, and a long-overdue reset in pricing and creativity.

Luxury has had a rough couple of years. Sales growth stalled in 2024 and barely improved in 2025, leaving investors questioning whether the industry’s long golden era had finally peaked.

But according to a new global sector report from HSBC, the worst may already be behind it. The bank expects luxury sales to rebound meaningfully in 2026, with growth returning to levels much closer to the industry’s long-term average.

If HSBC is right, luxury could soon move from being one of the market’s most doubted sectors back to one of its most attractive.

A sector coming out of a self-inflicted slowdown

HSBC’s thesis is simple but blunt: luxury’s recent slowdown was not primarily macroeconomic.

It was largely self-inflicted.

Over the past few years, many brands pushed aggressive price increases while offering limited product innovation. This phenomenon, sometimes labelled “greedflation”, left consumers feeling that prices were rising faster than perceived value.

At the same time, creative stagnation and constant leadership changes across major houses weakened brand momentum.

The result was a sector that looked increasingly tired just as macroeconomic uncertainty was rising.

Now, HSBC believes that cycle is reversing. Pricing has become more reasonable, merchandising pipelines are improving, and several brands have refreshed creative leadership.

In short, the industry is rebooting.

The US wealth effect is back

The biggest surprise in the report is the role of the United States.

While much attention in luxury always focuses on China, HSBC argues that US wealth creation may be the strongest driver of growth in 2026.

The logic is straightforward. Luxury spending has historically been tightly correlated with equity market performance in the US.

When stocks rise, wealthy consumers feel richer and spend more.

With equity markets near record highs and consumer confidence among high-income households improving, HSBC expects American luxury demand to grow at high single-digit rates this year.

That alone could significantly lift global sales.

China is stabilising rather than collapsing

China remains the most debated market in luxury.

Despite concerns about property weakness and youth unemployment, HSBC’s view is that the Chinese luxury consumer is not disappearing.

Instead, demand is stabilising and gradually improving.



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