Four consecutive years of losses in China tells you everything about what happens when a Western brand treats a market as a territory rather than a culture. The Sephora situation is not about pricing or product mix in isolation. It is about a brand that built its identity around curation and aspiration failing to recognise that Chinese consumers have developed their own curation logic, one driven by local platforms, local creators, and product development cycles that move at a speed Western brand infrastructure cannot match. The signal here is structural: any Western beauty or retail brand still running China through a headquarters-led model is watching a slow bleed it will eventually have to explain to a board.
Three stories today converge on the same failure mode: Sephora bleeding losses in China because its brand logic does not translate, H&M commissioning a Brazilian photographer because its own visual identity carries no local weight in Rio, and Rosewood entering Milan through a deceased Italian designer's archive because it has no design history of its own to offer.
The pattern is consistent: Western brand infrastructure is being exposed as culturally thin the moment it leaves its home market, and the response in each case is to borrow local or historical credibility rather than build it. The brands that will hold ground in the next five years are the ones that have already embedded local creative intelligence at the source, not the ones that retrofit it at the campaign level.
For people who’d rather be early and wrong than late and safe.