Hermès, the leather goods house that has spent a decade being held up as the model of luxury discipline, is losing momentum. Analyst Luca Solca draws a direct comparison to Louis Vuitton's 'Capucine moment' in the early 2010s, when product fatigue set in and growth stalled. For an industry that has treated Hermès as immune to market forces, this is not a wobble. It is a reassessment of whether craft and scarcity alone can sustain a luxury business in a culture that now moves faster than production cycles allow.
IKEA is turning a viral joke into a physical product within two months. Kelly Wearstler is designing for H&M instead of a luxury house. Allbirds is abandoning shoes entirely to chase an AI valuation spike.
The pattern is not about any single category. It is about response time. The brands moving fastest are the ones treating the internet as their primary feedback loop, not their quarterly earnings call. The ones optimising for legacy timelines (Hermès, Kering, Gucci) are watching momentum slip because culture no longer waits for craft to catch up.
For people who’d rather be early and wrong than late and safe.