Skip to main content
BoF Logo

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

Introducing High Margin, a Luxury Newsletter From Robert Williams

Weekly perspectives on creativity and business in the world of expensive things.
Installation by Alex Da Corte entitled Kermit The Frog, Eden on Place Vendome during the Art Basel Paris.
Installation by Alex Da Corte entitled Kermit The Frog, Eden on Place Vendome during the Art Basel Paris. (Getty Images)

Hello from Paris, where much of the city seems to be taking a breather, having reached the end of the fashion week-to-art week tunnel.

We gained a museum (the Fondation Cartier’s new space at Palais Royal) and lost a museum (the Centre Pompidou threw a closing bash before a renovation that will take at least five years). One legend stepped aside — Veronique Nichanian — while a legend in-the-making, Grace Wales Bonner, stepped up, succeeding the veteran designer as menswear artistic director at Hermès. That’s not to mention the debut shows at Chanel, Loewe, Dior womenswear, Jean Paul Gaultier and more.

Amid all of that, you may have noticed a signup link at the top of my stories: Please click on it, if you haven’t yet. BoF’s Professional subscription now includes access to Expert Perspectives, single-topic newsletters from my colleagues covering beauty, sustainability, sports, technology and more. Luxury is the latest addition to the lineup with High Margin, Wednesdays in your inbox.

What can you expect to read in High Margin? I’ll provide an additional perspective each week on creativity and business in the world of luxury — broadly defined to include fashion, jewellery, art, hospitality and more.

ADVERTISEMENT

Sometimes we’re rounding up and analysing the major news of the week — LVMH’s earnings, or Kering’s $4 billion beauty deal with L’Oréal. Other times we’re diving into a specific strategy or initiative, like the celebrity-fronted ‘zines’ fueling growth for Katie Grand’s “Perfect” magazine, or the rise of global restaurant chains like Langosteria and Saint Ambroeus.

This week, we’ll unpack the wild trajectory of Kering’s valuation and, at the opposite end of fashion’s price spectrum, explore why Shein’s decision to open its first-ever physical store in Paris is ruffling feathers in luxury’s stronghold.

The idea linking each week’s newsletter is that the business of selling expensive things is becoming ever more transversal: you can’t just sell fashion or art, you need a point-of-view on a variety of cultural disciplines and competing product categories. At the same time, luxury is becoming more homogenized, with many of the same conglomerates, clients and destinations at play. That convergence plays out against the background of fashion weeks, design fairs, exhibitions, performances and more throughout the year. I’ll be out there tracking the latest on creativity, craft, consumer culture and the web of businesses that ties them together.

I hope you’ll enjoy reading.

Subscribe to High Margin by Robert Williams and other Expert Perspectives to get authoritative points of view from our expert journalists on the topics that matter most to you.

Further Reading
About the author
Robert Williams
Robert Williams

Robert Williams is Luxury Editor at The Business of Fashion. He is based in Paris and drives BoF’s coverage of the dynamic luxury fashion sector.

In This Article
Topics

© 2026 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Luxury
How rapid change is reshaping the tradition-soaked luxury sector in Europe and beyond.

Pieter Mulier Exits Alaïa After 5 Years

As the first creative director to succeed founder Azzedine Alaïa, Mulier rejuvenated the Paris-based brand with highly-refined, sculptural styles, bringing runway drama and spawning commercial hits like the Teckel bag and mesh ballerina flats.


How Jewellery Houses Aim to Stay Ahead In 2026

High jewellery brands including Boucheron, Chaumet, De Beers and Dior showed new collections at Haute Couture week in Paris as they manage so far to ride out geopolitical tensions which have sent gold and silver to new highs while the dollar sinks.


LVMH Sees Tough Year Ahead as Fashion Sales Struggle

Fourth-quarter sales in the world’s biggest luxury group rose 1 percent, slightly ahead of expectations. Sales fell 3 percent in the key fashion and leather goods division as the sector continues to face sluggish demand. ‘2026 will not be easy,’ chairman Bernard Arnault said.


view more
Latest News & Analysis
Unrivalled, world class journalism across fashion, luxury and beauty industries.
VIEW MORE
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON