The 'Friends' trend: '90s fashion revival for
back-to-school season
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[August 09, 2018]
By Nivedita Balu
(Reuters) - Urban Outfitters Inc <URBN.O>,
American Eagle Outfitters Inc <AEO.N> and other retailers are filling
stores with styles from the 1990s in a bet that fanny packs,
chunky-soled sneakers and high-waisted "mom jeans" will lift
back-to-school sales.
U.S. apparel retailers, hurt by more consumers shopping online and
declining mall traffic, have been starved for a major new fashion
movement to entice finicky millennial buyers.
With back-to-school spending expected to rise due to a strong economy
and high consumer confidence this year, retailers are hoping renewed
interest in '90s fashion will fuel a recovery in the sector after
several quarters of sales declines.
The trend is a leading back-to-school story, with a six-fold increase in
the number of kidswear products described as 90s' style online in July,
said Katie Smith, analyst for retail technology company Edited.
Chunky sneakers or Buffalo shoes alone, - a streetwear classic from the
'90s with thick rubber soles - recorded a 76 percent rise in arrivals in
kidswear this June, Smith said.
The fashion reboot is being characterized as the "Friends" trend,
according to A-Line Partners analyst Gabriella Santaniello, with teens
and millennials inspired by what characters wore on the '90s hit
television show that is now available on Netflix and YouTube.
For example, Urban Outfitters is selling the 'Urban Renewal Remade '90s
Shortall Overall' and the 'New York minute corduroy skirt', which
resemble clothes worn by Rachel Green, a popular character played by
Jennifer Aniston on "Friends".
"There has to be something that is forcing teens to get out there and
shop and I think there hasn't been something for such a long time. So
that's why I think this (trend) is a positive shift," Santaniello said.
The back-to-school sales period is the busiest shopping season behind
the year-end holidays, and can contribute a third of profits for
retailers.
Shoppers will be doling out an average of $284 on clothing and shoes
compared with $186 on electronics, a 28 percent increase over last year,
according to a survey by RetailMeNot Inc, a website that tracks coupons
and promotions at major retail brands.
Deloitte's annual back-to-school survey shows that shoppers will spend
more on clothes and accessories, about $15 billion or 55 percent of the
total $27.6 billion expected to be spent. https://bit.ly/2tfYgGx
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Clothing is seen for sale in an American Eagle Outfitters retail
store in Manhattan, New York, U.S., May 13, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Retailers are in a pretty good spot, especially in North America, where the
economy is healthier than a year ago, NPD's lead retail analyst Marshall Cohen
said.
(Click here https://tmsnrt.rs/2MrWMCu for an interactive on back-to-school
quarter performance of apparel retailers)
OLD BECOMES NEW AGAIN
American Eagle's global brand president Chad Kessler said it is bit of an
evolution, with high-rise mom jeans and crop tops influencing shoppers this
year.
"I do think the 90s are a big influence," Kessler said.
Because Urban Outfitters targets both adults and young shoppers, with its
Anthropologie and namesake stores, BlueFin Research analyst Rebecca Duval said
she expects the company to be one of the strongest brands this season along with
Gap Inc <GPS.N>.
Urban Outfitters is expected to post same-store sales growth of 5.6 percent in
the third quarter, while American Eagle could report a 4.6 percent rise,
according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S data, marking the best growth in three
years.
Although Gap and Nordstrom are not expected to show the same same-store sales
growth, overall sales for the four retailers are expected to be the highest in
at least four years.
U.S. apparel retailers struggled after millennials, born between 1986 and 1996,
switched to fast-fashion trends from European labels like H&M <HMb.ST> and
Inditex's <ITX.MC> Zara.
The shift forced retailers to diversify inventory and rely less on once popular
logo emblazoned apparel.
Social media is also having an impact, with retailers using the medium to market
and rope in younger buyers.
"Every twenty years fashion comes back ... You stay away from something long
enough and you crave it," Vanessa Valiente, personal stylist and the creator of
fashion blog V-Style, said.
(Reporting by Nivedita Balu in Bengaluru; Editing by Bernard Orr)
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