UK’s Boohoo to Stop Supplying US Customers Locally 

 A woman poses with a smartphone showing the Boohoo app in front of the Boohoo logo on display in this illustration taken September 30, 2020.  (Reuters)
A woman poses with a smartphone showing the Boohoo app in front of the Boohoo logo on display in this illustration taken September 30, 2020. (Reuters)
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UK’s Boohoo to Stop Supplying US Customers Locally 

 A woman poses with a smartphone showing the Boohoo app in front of the Boohoo logo on display in this illustration taken September 30, 2020.  (Reuters)
A woman poses with a smartphone showing the Boohoo app in front of the Boohoo logo on display in this illustration taken September 30, 2020. (Reuters)

Online fashion retailer Boohoo said on Wednesday it would stop supplying US customers from a site in Pennsylvania and return to fulfilling orders from Britain, in a strategy reversal it said would lead to an unquantified write-down.

Boohoo shares were down 2% in early trade, extending 2024 losses to 32%, after the British company said it would stop using the distribution center by Nov. 11, just over a year after it started operations there. It said it would sublet its space at the center, which is run by a third party.

CEO John Lyttle had previously described the site as a "complete gamechanger" as it would slash delivery times to shoppers in the US, Boohoo's largest overseas market.

However, the company said on Wednesday it would return to fulfilling all US orders from its automated center in Sheffield, northern England, enabling it to cut costs over the medium term and broaden its product offering to US shoppers.

"To us, the short life of the US warehouse ... is concerning, highlighting a naivety of the American market, along with a waste of time and resources," Shore Capital analysts said.

Boohoo said the move would result in a write-down on its balance sheet against the investments and costs associated with the US operation, as well as certain one-off exceptional cash costs. Further details will be given at its half-year results.

Analysts at Peel Hunt estimated a 34 million pounds ($44.5 million) capital expenditure write-off.

Boohoo said it "remains excited" about the opportunity in the US market and had been developing wider routes-to-market strategies, the first of which was the recent launch of its Nasty Gal brand in Nordstrom stores.

Boohoo said it was in advanced talks with major US brands over new routes to market for other brands within the group.

The company, like UK peer ASOS, was a winner during the pandemic, which drove a boom in online shopping. It has struggled since, hurt by supply chain problems, higher product returns, competition from rivals such as Shein and subdued consumer demand.



Bold Looks Among Boulders at Michael Kors’ New York Fashion Week Show 

A model walks the runway during the Michael Kors Spring/Summer 2025 fashion show during New York Fashion Week in New York on September 10, 2024. (AFP)
A model walks the runway during the Michael Kors Spring/Summer 2025 fashion show during New York Fashion Week in New York on September 10, 2024. (AFP)
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Bold Looks Among Boulders at Michael Kors’ New York Fashion Week Show 

A model walks the runway during the Michael Kors Spring/Summer 2025 fashion show during New York Fashion Week in New York on September 10, 2024. (AFP)
A model walks the runway during the Michael Kors Spring/Summer 2025 fashion show during New York Fashion Week in New York on September 10, 2024. (AFP)

Fashion sometimes involves risk and designer Michael Kors would tell you some risks aren’t worth taking. Last year, his September show was held outside and the weather did not cooperate, so he decided his spring/summer 2025 collection at New York Fashion Week would bring nature inside instead.

Kors and his team created a unique runway in a cavernous raw space in a midtown building, with stark metal benches lining the rectangular walls and gigantic faux black rocks scattered in the center and sides, similar to the rocky beaches of the Amalfi Coast. The drama of Italian cliffs in an urban setting was part of Kors’ abstract inspiration.

Kors says he’s “glued” to pop culture and was especially fascinated by the recent Netflix series “Ripley,” based on Patricia Highsmith’s classic novel, “The Talented Mr. Ripley.” The dark story is set in coastal Italy where a man who covets a friend’s wealthy life kills him and takes over his identity, killing anyone else who threatens his new persona.

“Seeing this romantic, moody, dark story shot all in black and white, I thought it brought something very different to the romance of it,” Kors told The Associated Press backstage before the show. “There was this sort of dark side of romance that’s not sweet, not insipid, and mysterious. And then also, this is my 35th anniversary of working with Italian artisans and I really wanted to play up all of the incredible tailors and craftspeople in Italy.”

The result was a show that used stark lighting and a haunting instrumental score to set the mood for a lot of black and white and muted colors with looks that evoke Ripley’s 1950’s hybrid style of city and resortwear.

“There’s lots of texture, black raffia, white embroideries. Everything is very tactile,” Kors explained. “It’s all the colors that you would find in the Mediterranean. So all of the natural colors have very soft browns and creams. And then of course, there’s going to be blue.”

The brand’s craftsmanship was on display with intricate peekaboo lace dresses and skirts and several dresses, skirts and coats adorned with flower applique’. Accessories stood out in the collection with leather handbags, hats and shoes teeming with black raffia that looked like leather straw. Nearly every look had a belt — some styled loosely but extra-long and knotted to dangle, and others wide and tight at the waist. The ever-present trench coat appeared for men and women on the runway, mostly oversized and slouchy.

This season’s shows brought guests and media to all corners of the city and surroundings, showing off its beauty and designers’ creativity — from a horse ranch in the tony Hamptons for Ralph Lauren, to a giant ferry boat docked on the East River for Tommy Hilfiger, to an old Domino sugar factory in Brooklyn for Tory Burch.

The show’s front row was packed with celebrities, including Kerry Washington, Mary J. Blige, Shailene Woodley, Mindy Kaling, and Lindsay Lohan.

“I’m always really inspired by the simplicity, the craftsmanship. He has a real kind of a love for women that is so kind of understated, but just so consistent,” Olivia Wilde said. “I always feel so beautiful in his clothes.”

Suki Waterhouse was wearing a pink lace Kors dress and matching fluffy coat. “The straw shoes with the matching bag was my absolute favorite,” the actor and recording artist said after the show. “I need to book a holiday to be able to wear those things.”